7 thoughts on “Town Upholds New Canaan Woman’s $25 Parking Ticket

  1. As Executive Director of New Canaan library, I would like to provide factual information about the parking situation at the library.
    With daily visitors to our building of 800 to a 1000 people per day, it is true that our parking lot is full most days, most of the time and also that people create new spaces, parking where they oughtn’t.
    However these people are indeed using the library and not going elsewhere. We monitor the parking lot consistently and place warning notices on any car we find overstaying the 2 hour maximum. While the parking situation at the library is challenging there is no doubt that the cars do in fact belong to library visitors.

    • Thank you for these clarifications. It was sort of strange during the hearing to watch the appellant criticize library parking while detailing her own volunteerism there as part of this failed effort to get out of a $25 ticket.

      • Micheal: I’m not sure that we are really interested in your opinions (“It was sort of strange during the hearing…”)

        I’m more interested in what Parking Commission Chairman Keith Richey said. In the end, he was the only commissioner to vote in favor of voiding the ticket.
        “She is volunteering, she just parked in an easy spot and it only happened once,” Richey said. You might also want to check with him about the comments he made to me about his fellow Commissioners vote.

        And, what happened to civility and fairness in New Canaan when an 80 year old person who volunteered thousands of hours to the library and in the past to the schools as well, gets one parking ticket in 50 years and gets stuck paying for it? The NC Police aren”t even that strict!

      • Upon further discussions a friend, it’s not surprising that you thanked the head of the library for her comments since you get the free use of a room there once a month for your coffees.

    • i know at least four people who at least once every two weeks stop at the library to read the Times and/or the Journal (which takes at least a half hour) and then, leaving their cars at the library, walk into town and have lunch with friends that takes at least two hours. I checked and none of them have ever gotten a warning notice from the library “police”

  2. A bunch of readers sent me that article, Tom. I wonder if the job of physically chalking tires could be done through license plate readers that simply record where cars are parked and when?

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