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PARKING TICKET AMNESTY: LV may offer chance to violators

Fines waived during certain periods

The average parking violation in Las Vegas sets a driver back $50, which makes the current $9.8 million in unpaid tickets and fines fairly eye-popping.

The city isn't likely to see most of that money but hopes to at least get a slice of it with a parking ticket amnesty that's set to be adopted today by the Las Vegas City Council.


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The moratorium would allow people to pay only the original fine to clear a parking ticket. Amnesty would be offered during two time periods: July 29 to 31 and Aug. 5 to 7.

"We've never done this before, so we're not sure how it will go," said Mark Vincent, the city's finance director.

"We carry these things on our books. We have years and years and years of these things that we might never collect."

He estimated that about $500,000 of the backlog could be cleared during the amnesty period. Because late fees and other penalties would be waived, the city would actually collect about $175,000.

The $9.8 million figure "sounds more dramatic than it really is," Vincent added, since it represents the total of fines and penalties owed. The amount paid when someone settles a late ticket is usually less than the official amount.

Of the total $9.8 million in unpaid parking tickets and fines, about $1 million is owed by out-of-state drivers. The city uses a collection agency to go after those. Another $2.8 million represents cars that aren't registered, so it's difficult to find out who the owner is.

The people most likely to take advantage of parking ticket amnesty are those with tickets less than a year old, Vincent said, which represents about $3 million.

A simple parking ticket carries a $20 fine. Others are more expensive: a fire lane violation can cost as much as $250, as does parking in a handicapped spot without a permit. With late fees, the amount of a ticket can double or triple.

Current information on the worst parking offenders was not available, but city officials did have examples of fines that had spiraled out of control.

One driver had three fire lane violations that, with late fines, ran up to about $1,800.

Vincent noted the example of a woman who owed $2,250 for parking in handicapped spaces. She, in fact, was allowed to park in the spaces but hadn't displayed her permit on those occasions. She ended up owing only a $25 administrative fee.

While most penalties will be waived on the amnesty dates, there will be a $10 fee if an unpaid ticket has been sent to bill collectors or there's a Department of Motor Vehicles hold on the vehicle. Parking tickets can be paid at 417 N. Seventh St. in downtown Las Vegas.

Henderson has offered parking ticket amnesty before. North Las Vegas has not. Neither city has plans to do so now.

Las Vegas has offered amnesty programs for traffic tickets before.

Those programs have been largely discontinued because people came to rely on them, but Las Vegas revisited the idea of traffic ticket amnesty last fall. More than 1,700 people visited the Las Vegas Municipal Court, which closed 821 traffic cases and collected $223,000.

"A number of those would not have been closed if we had not done this," said court administrator Jim Carmany. "We were satisfied."

Contact reporter Alan Choate at achoate@reviewjournal.com or 702-229-6435.

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Typical wrote on July 16, 2008 07:17 PM: I used to go to Nevada from Los Angeles but I would never go there again after that cop shot that poor woman in Henderson. It is all nasty behind the glitter. No thanks.


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Kay wrote on July 16, 2008 10:13 AM: This is another reason Nevada has turned into a bad place to visit or live. Peck at the tax payers. Gouge them any way you can. Use cops to establish bad community relations.

This is petty. If law enforcement wern't such a pain, maybe people would follow the rules. Now its just a matter of how much we can get away with.

We blame the city and cops for this FAILURE. Especially when your running a tourist destination. Why anyone would want to come to a police abusive city boggles the mind.


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CJJames wrote on July 16, 2008 08:30 AM: A collection agency should be used for in-state tickets that have not been paid buy the deadline.


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zebra123 wrote on July 16, 2008 08:14 AM: O.K. then why have so many been collecting a paycheck, (ticket jockeys, admin staff, court personnel, police etc...)to turn around and reduce the fines, which contribute to those salaries?

Why are people who park in fire lanes, with all the implied violations getting a break?

This is an example of a hugh waste of everybody's time.