World Ends – Someone Agrees with PT Editor
Editor, Parking Today: I read your article on San Francisco (“Point of View: “Baghdad by the Bay,’ EVs and Charging Stations,” October 2011), and I
Editor, Parking Today: I read your article on San Francisco (“Point of View: “Baghdad by the Bay,’ EVs and Charging Stations,” October 2011), and I
Editor, Parking Today: It really amazes me how some business owners think. They go into a downtown business district, find a location and have dreams
Editor, Parking Today: Parking Vs. Pop Culture makes valid and accurate points. However, the reasons parking garages get such a rap, undeserved, is the abyssmal
Editor, Parking Today: Parking Vs. Pop Culture makes valid and accurate points. However, the reasons parking garages get such a rap, undeserved, is the abyssmal
Editor: This will comment on the Melissa Sterzick article (Amateur Parker, February 2011) “Why I Love/Hate Speed Bumps.” While I agree with her “hate” sentiments,
John, I just received the electronic version of Parking Today and was also able to listen to your personal comments about the National Parking Association’s
Re: Parking Today, September 2009 Issue “Point of View” and “Parking Operator Goes Down …” Editor, Parking Today: Your September 2009 issue was both interesting
Editor, Parking Today: Re: “Temperature can affect upper floors of precast garages” (March 2009) The aspect of camber increasing in the top level of parking
Editor, Parking Today: I greatly appreciate Parking Today’s efforts to promote market-rate parking. However, I disagree with your objections to using parking fees to fund
Editor, Parking Today: I really don’t know where some business-minded people get their smarts. Here in Florence, AL, our meter rates are a steal. We
Editor, Parking Today: This letter is in response to the comments made about SFpark in your column in the January 2009 issue of Parking Today.
Editor, Parking Today: After reading the article “He’s got that right, but they have it wrong,” I cannot understand why business owners and employees think
Mr. Van Horn: We’ve met at the IPI show a time or two. First, I sent my #2, Kathy, to the Parking Industry Exhibition (her
Editor, Parking Today: We were dismayed to find that some of the information included about UCLA in the June 2006 issue of Parking Today (PT)
Editor, Parking Today: The city of Sacramento, CA, has just spent hundreds of thousands of dollars gathering parking data in response to the perceived parking
Editor, Parking Today: We have a business owner here in our downtown business district who wanted two 10-minute loading zones in front of his restaurant.
Editor, Parking Today: I don’t get it!!! I am throwing down the glove and challenging what seems to be an acceptable and growing application in
Editor, Parking Today: As I was reading your Point of View column in the most recent issue of Parking Today, I realized that you might
Editor, Parking Today: I’ve been subscribing to Parking Today for the past three or four years. Thanks for doing all the work to keep the
You’ll Love This OneEditor, Parking Today:Last week, the Charlotte (NC) Police Department and a center-city development group asked parking operators for their help in improving
Editor, Parking Today:I read with interest your book review of “The High Cost of Parking” by Donald Shoup. Many of the ideas presented by Mr.
Editor’s Note: This article is in the form of a letter to the editor from George Levey, a former Parkeon employee and now president of
Editor, Parking Today: Referencing the article “On-Street Parking: A Primer”. A good overview, but you omitted some important points; 1) Any comparison of Pay and
Dear Parking Today: Regarding the story “San Francisco Mandates Revenue Control Among Operators” (PT, January 2002), I find it rather interesting how some employees will
I had been invited to speak before the California Public Parking Association’s 18th Annual Conference and Tradeshow in Monterey and accepted their invitation. While at