In the past week or so, I have seen many people visiting Lake Nokomis
who are being unfairly ticketed.  I want it to stop.  I describe here
what I have seen at Nokomis, but I think there is a good chance this is
going on at Minnehaha, Harriet, Calhoun, and other popular park
destinations.

The park system has instituted a new permit parking system at the main
Nokomis Beach that works something like this:

You drive into the Nokomis parking lot.  You see a blue sign with white
lettering telling you that you must purchase a permit to park in the
lot.  An attendant comes to your car and sells you a permit for two
dollars.  You put it on the dashboard, and you park legally.  The park
service has picked up some extra revenue, and you are operating within
the law.

However this tidy new revenue strategy has an ugly side.

I do not know the hours of the permit sellers, but I know that there are
great chunks of time during the week when there are no permit sellers to
be found.  I have been over there on weekday mornings as late as about
11:30 A.M., and saw no permit sellers.  Today (Saturday) I was at
Nokomis at 9:30 A.M. and 1:00 P.M., and saw no permit sellers.  There
are also no instructions on the sign on how to purchase permits when the
permit sellers are not there.  This means that for many, many hours of
the week you pull into the Nokomis parking lot, see a sign saying you
must purchase a permit, and have no way of purchasing a permit. 
Surprise surprise, many people park in the lot.

But parking at the Nokomis parking lot is akin to swimming at Amity
Island when Jaws is loose.  Because the park police are mounting the
most aggressive ticketing campaign at Nokomis I have ever seen. I am at
Nokomis about a half hour a day.  In the past week, I have seen police
at Nokomis ticketing vehicles four times.  Three times they were in the
Nokomis beach parking lot ticketing people for  not having permits, when
there was nobody to sell permits and there was no way for the beachgoers
to purchase permits on site.

The last two times I saw the police ticketing cars, I broke off my run
and walked onto the beach and told people that the police were ticketing
their cars.  To a person, they were all furious that they were being
ticketed for not having permits when they were not able to buy the
permits.

(For those who watch nature shows on T.V.: the great African Wildebeast
herds cannot hold a candle to the spectacular sight of a seething mass
of beachgoers rising in unison and thundering across the sand and into
the parking lot in a futile attempt to save their vehicles)

I am particularly bothered by the idea that it might actually be in the
financial self-interest of the park system to make on-site purchase of
the permits impossible much of the time.  Having it be impossible to
purchase permits and then writing a ticket for not having the permit
yields $30.  Buying the permit yields $2.

I have heard of speed traps before, but this is the first time I have
seen a parking trap.

A park police officer justified ticketing people who could not purchase
permits by pointing out that people could park along the side of the
road for free.  This morning at 10:30, every non-permit parking place on
the west side of Lake Nokomis was already taken.  People with children
or handicapped or seniors simply cannot park halfway around the lake in
a an effort or dodge this parking trap. And regardless of the parking
situation along the road, it is wrong to require a permit, make it
impossible to get the permit, and then ticket the person for not having
the permit.

An already bad situation is made even worse by this being the exact
opposite of park system policy in the past.

In past years, people who used the Nokomis parking lot had to pay a
fee.  they drove into the parking lot, and saw a blue sign with white
letters saying that they had to pay a fee to park.  The parking slots
were numbered, and people stuffed a dollar into a fee box.

During the off season, the park system put a tarp over the fee box, and
people could not pay the fee.  But I remember that the signs announcing
a fee area were left up long after the tarp went over the fee box.  This
meant that you drove into the Nokomis parking lot, saw a sign saying you
had to pay the fee, but could not pay the fee.  In all the years that
the park system used this system, I never saw a police officer ticket a
car for not paying the fee when the driver could not pay the fee. In
practice, the park system ticketed people only when the park system
provided the means to pay the fee.

Anybody acquainted with the old system - this means anybody who has ever
visited Nokomis beach before - would see the blue sign with white
lettering announcing that they had to buy a permit, not be able to buy
the permit, and assume that the park system would ticket them only when
the park system had also provided the means on site to buy the permit. 
But in fact the park system is following the exact opposite policy of
the old system. I cannot help wondering if the park police are
systematically targeting those people who cannot purchase the permits on
site.  It is like shooting fish in a barrel. And a great way to rake in
a lot of money fast.

I know that the park system is desperate to bring in new revenue.  But
this is not the way to do it. The park system should either find a way
to make permits available all the time on site, or they should not
ticket people for not having permits when the park system has failed to
provide those permits.  This new revenue scheme will drive people away
from Nokomis and other parks and will damage the credibility of the park
system and the park police.

This revenue scheme of ticketing people who cannot buy permits belongs
in the same dust bin as the strategy a few years ago of saving money by
allowing the grass to grow like weeds and then announcing that the park
system is restoring native prairie.

Jay Clark
Cooper

P.S.  I abandoned the main lake parking lots years ago when far too
often I saw the colorful sparkling green piles of glass that indicated
yet more car break-ins.
TEMPORARY REMINDER:
1. Don't feed the troll! Ignore obvious flame-bait.
2. If you don't like what's being discussed here, don't complain - change the subject 
(Mpls-specific, of course.)

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