Wednesday, January 15, 2014

Chicago to start enforcing Illinois new disability parking law in 2014

These new 'meter-exempt' disabled parking placards are expected drastically reduce number able-bodied drivers who illegally use placards park for free.
By CHRIS FUSCO Staff Reporter; Chicago Sun-Times
Starting Thursday, the city of Chicago will begin enforcing a new state law aimed at stopping able-bodied drivers from illegally using disabled-parking placards to avoid having to feed parking meters.

Under the law that took effect Jan. 1, only drivers who have a yellow-and-gray “meter-exempt permanent placard” can park free at metered spaces. To get those placards, drivers must have their doctors attest that they are physically incapable of feeding meter payboxes.

Until now, anybody who hung a conventional blue or red disabled-parking placard or had handicapped license plates could park for free all day long in any metered spot in Illinois.

As of Thursday, people who display the blue and red placards without feeding meter payboxes will be hit with “expired meter” parking tickets, which carry fines of $65 downtown and $50 elsewhere in the city.

The new law was designed to keep drivers from using relatives’ placards — as well as stolen and fake placards — to avoid paying parking rates that have been rising since 2009 under a meter-privatization deal championed by former Mayor Richard M. Daley.

That deal also requires City Hall to reimburse Chicago Parking Meters LLC — the private company that took over metered parking from the city — for any free parking provided to drivers who displayed disability placards or plates — payments that have totaled about $55 million.

http://www.suntimes.com/news/metro/24974732-418/city-of-chicago-to-start-enforcing-new-disability-parking-law-thursday.html
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We would like to acknowledge  CHRIS FUSCO with the  Chicago Sun-Times in their coverage

Q&A on new disabled parking law



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