Here in my fair city of Chicago, the a 75-year franchise for the operation of 36,000 parking meters was recently sold to “Chicago Parking Meters, which is part of a joint venture led by the financial services giant Morgan Stanley” for $1.2 billion dollars.
But the plan has gotten off to a rocky start.
Chicago is sending out its own mechanics–and billing the private company now responsible for operating parking meters in the city–in a belated effort to catch up on a torrent of problems that include broken meters and inaccuracies in signage about parking rates and enforcement, officials said today.
I’m not a fan of selling off infrastructure or future cashflows for those sorts of time periods, but I guess Mayor Daley couldn’t find my number when he was asking around for opinions.
Regardless, I’d noticed that the meters in front of my house had gone from being basically 100% utilized, 24-by-7 to 25% utilized or less. I didn’t think too much of it until I noticed the new stickers on the front which informed me that the price to park had been quadrupled from $0.25/hour to $1.00 an hour. Hey, I thought, The demand curve is real after all. I should blog about that. Good Econ 101 example there. But I never got around to it.
Then something funny happened. I tried to park at a couple of meters and noticed that they were flashing “Out of order.” I didn’t think too much of it. Then, I had a couple of experiences where I saw that every meter around an intersection was “Out of order,” with either a quarter or other object jammed in them. Perhaps I’m showing my pessimistic/security paranoid side, but I thought, What are the odds that every meter at this intersection is out of order? I wonder if someone is sabotaging them?
Now, though, I find that this is just Hanlon’s Razor in action
The concessionaire is working “as quickly as possible'’ to fix meters that are jammed with coins because they were not emptied, Ed Walsh, spokesman for the Chicago Department of Revenue, said Wednesday.
They quadrupled rates, and even with the decreased demand, they still can’t keep them emptied. I wonder if they even considered the risk of having meters knocked off-line due to inadquate coin storage capacity?