Privatized meters don't make sense
Many in Chicago criticize Mayor Richard Daley's deal to privatize the parking meters, a move that's made parking an expensive burden. Adriene Hill explores whether privatizing public services has any noticeable financial benefits.
Failed parking meter at night (ryan muir/flickr)
More on Fed. Budget/Govt. Spending
TEXT OF STORY
Bill Radke: In Chicago, the cost of parking has as much as quadrupled since the city leased control of its meters to a private company. The deal is raising questions about when it makes sense to privatize public services and when it doesn't. From Chicago Public Radio, Adriene Hill reports.
Adriene Hill: If you want to hear Chicago drivers get all worked up, just ask them about parking meters.
Hill: There looks like it's $3.50 an hour though, what do you think about that?
Stanley King: Oh, that's absurd!
That's Stanley King. He's parking a silver Lexus in Chicago's downtown and trying to figure out how to use one of the new parking meters.
King: I only need a half an hour, and that's what, $1.75? Seven quarters, how many did I bring . . .
He calls city's rush to privatize a joke. And drivers aren't the only ones expressing frustration with the deal -- for which the city was paid nearly $1.2 billion.
Chicago Mayor Richard Daley's been called out by the city inspector general for rushing the contract that gives control of the meters away for 75 years. But Daley stands by it. He says the money he's made leasing out pieces of the city's infrastructure is essential to Chicago's financial health.
Richard Daley: Now if we didn't have these, if I didn't have the Skyway deal, the parking garages, the parking meters, we'd be in terrible positions.
In addition to leasing some of the city's tollways and parking structures, Daley's also pushed to privatize Midway Airport -- in a deal that fell through at the last minute because of the collapse in the credit market.
It's a rush to sell that Columbia University economist Elliott Sclar calls shortsighted:
Elliott Sclar: You have a government that doesn't want to deal with the question of raising taxes to provide services. So it's essentially, it's a short-run expedient. After they've sold everything off, what do they do in the second year? What's the next act?
Hill: Do members of the public ever benefit from these privatization deals in terms, I mean do fees actually ever go down when infrastructure is privatized?
Sclar: I . . . conceptually anything can happen, but I'm not aware of it.
Sclar says he thinks we'll start seeing a move away from cities and states selling their assets to private companies as the public starts to realize there are things the government can -- and should -- do well.
In Chicago, I'm Adriene Hill for Marketplace.






Comments
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From Los Angeles, CA, 06/14/2009
Selling capital assets to pay operating expenses is a sin and burdens the next generation with our debts. Plus, the new owners have no clue about how to operate parking meters. No wonder sales of super clue have increased in Chicago. Too bad they don't clue the pols mouths shut. They are giving our profligate mayor bad ideas.
From Venice, CA, 06/13/2009
It is profitable for a private company to buy a public asset such as parking, roads, water supply, because the private company promptly raises the prices. People hate it, but they mostly pay, because as the comment by Fentley said, it's a monopoly. If the public entity had kept ownership and raised the prices, we might not have to be firing teachers and police officers for lack of money to pay them.
From NY, 06/11/2009
Here's how to cheat any digital parking meter: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xRNcmTZ4HKQ Hold a coin in the slot but don't let it go in. Keep it for about a minute until the unit says it's out of order. Experiment on a unit you HAVEN'T parked in and see if it says out of order 3 hours later and your IN BUSINESS! Never pay ever again!
From Collinsville, CO, 06/11/2009
Privatization isn't the problem. (Honest! Keep reading!)
The problem is that they privatized and then dealt with one company. They created a monopoly.
I'll repeat that: privatization is not the problem.
A MONOPOLY is the problem!!
That's why you'll pay $3.50. If different parkinglots were run by different companies -- even individual meters -- you'd see market forces bring the price down to a reasonable level.
(Pick on whether or not this is unworkable, I don't care, but the central point about a monopoly stands)
From Chicago, IL, 06/11/2009
Talk Around the Water Cooler? ...
Not anymore. Now, I overhear talk around the parking meters.
And it's nice.
The saying is, "Don't be nickeled and and quartered."
Joe Lake Chicago (Bucktown)
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