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Key Points from the Village Council commissioned parking study prepared by Walker Associates

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File photo by Boyd Loving

Key verbatim assumptions/findings taken from the Village Council commissioned parking study prepared by Walker Associates:

Easing crowding does not, in and of itself, create a new revenue stream; it transfers revenue
from other metered spaces in the Village. The garage will likely encourage people to come
downtown who have been avoiding it due to parking constraints, but this is not a quantifiable
revenue stream and is not included in our analysis. More conservatively, we project the
following net new revenue streams for the garage:

• The 72-space Brogan Cadillac lot on South Broad Street at Essex Street and at the 92-
space Ken Smith Motors lot just east of the train tracks and north of Franklin Avenue are
going to be demolished for development. Both of these dealerships have closed and
lease out their parking. The Ken Smith Lot is permit parking for downtown employees.
The Brogan Lot accommodates commuters during the day and is leased out for
restaurant valet parking at night. We anticipate these demand streams would transfer
to the garage.

• We understand from Village staff that there are other restaurants downtown that use
valet services in private lots that would use the garage instead (probably doing away
with valet service since self-park options would be easier).

• The Village used to have 120 non-resident commuter permits, but doubled non-resident
permit rates because there was not enough space for these commuters. Currently
there are very few non-resident commuters parking in the train station area. The Village
plans to reduce the non-resident commuter rate to $875/year to increase that demand
stream again.

It is typical in downtowns that the revenue stream in a given garage is not sufficient to cover its
operating costs and debt service. Downtown parking systems are just that – systems – that rely
on pooled revenue from all resources, and especially the on-street meters (which tend to
have the highest turnover), to cover the higher cost associated with building and operating a
garage. This is the case in Ridgewood, where the net new revenue projected for the garage
is not projected to offset its expenses.

Therefore, our revenue projection includes all downtown revenue and all expenses associated with the parking system.

To operate the garage and have a revenue-positive parking utility (with funds available for other parking lot
maintenance projects), we project that the Village will increase meter rates as follows:

• In 2016, meters will be extended until 9 p.m. and meter rates on key downtown streets
will increase to 75¢.

• In 2017, 75¢ meters will be increased to $1 and the rest of the on-street and off-street
meters will increase to 75¢.

• If needed, rates would increase by 25¢ after five years.

• Commuter permit rates would increase by $25 in 2021 and 2025.

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Reader says the downtown will become even more of a place to avoid than it is now

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I hate them all so much. Throughout the state of NJ and country (taxes, tolls) and now the town, everything goes on the back of the average person.

Now they want money from people eating breakfast and dinner at all the restaurants–lunch wasn’t enough. I suspect that the restaurant owners will not be pleased.

Thursday evenings when many stores were open and the meters were “off” used to be a convenient time to shop. That’s gone.

Can I “afford” a dollar? I can afford a dollar. Am I willing to pay it? No. I also happen to detest valet parking for a long list of reasons–including that they change your radio settings and I simply don’t want strangers in my car or to tip someone for a service that I don’t need in the first place (parking in my own town).

For me and surely many others, the downtown will become even more of a place to avoid than it is now. And we’ll be stuck paying for the garage that’s being built only to absorb lost parking spaces when the apartments go up.

If we were paying more for parking to maintain Schedler as a nice park, or rebuild the dam at King’s Pond, or some other project I could support, I might feel differently. Who wants that stupid, ugly garage, anyway? Last week I advised Sook to move as soon as her lease was up (soon).

I may do the same.

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Reader says , All this for No Net Gain in Parking Spaces

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I said there is no net gain, because there is no net gain. In the case of Brogan, those spaces are being lost because the Council majority approved the introduction of ordinances which allow for development of the property. That same majority is touting a net gain in total number of parking spaces due to this garage plan; they’ve conveniently forgotten about the lost spaces at Brogan caused by their approval of development there. And you seem to have conveniently forgotten about the loss of street spots on Hudson Street. If the garage is full of those who now park at Brogan and Ken Smith, and who could perhaps park there for years if it were not for the Council majority’s rush for massive development, where’s the net gain for use by shoppers and restaurant patrons? I oppose this plan because it is asinine, expensive, and nothing more than a shoot from the hip attempt buying the good will of and future campaign contributions from major property owners in the Village.

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Reader says , Restaurant owners who lobbied for Village Garage stick Patrons with more Parking Fees

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file photo by Boyd Loving

It is quite ironic that the restaurant owners who lobbied so long and hard for this garage (Saraceno, Sullivan, & Vagianos) screwed themselves and their patrons in the process by demanding a structure so large (i.e., expensive) be built that the only way to pay for it is by extending metered parking times until well into the evening.

I can’t wait until they come running back to the Council a few years from now asking that the metered parking be pushed back until 6 PM because their businesses are suffering.

Lesson to be learned John, Ed, and Paul – You can’t have your cake and eat it too!

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Ridgewood Police unable to issue parking summonses at meters?

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September 16,2015
the staff of the Ridgewood blog

THIS JUST IN:

Ridgewood NJ, Ridgewood Police Department patrol officers are reportedly unable to issue any summonses for unlawful parking in metered spaces because none of them have access to the ParkMobile database.  Without access to the ParkMobile database, patrol officers have no way of knowing whether a vehicle is lawfully parked.

Rumor has it that only the three Ridgewood Parking Enforcement Agents are able to issue summonses in connection with metered parking offenses.

There goes a sizable revenue stream; an additional burden for taxpayers to assume in connection with the parking garage construction.

One step forward, five steps backward , well Roberta?

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Parking meter debacle on North Walnut Street

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July 14,2015
Boyd A. Loving

Ridgewoood NJ, If you’ve ever received a summons for overtime parking at meter #218 on North Walnut Street alongside the Post Office, this may be your lucky day.

Meter #218 is currently configured to allow 15-minute parking only.  However, the current Village Code stipulates that particular parking spot should be equipped with a meter that permits up to 3-hour parking.

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Section 265-29 of the Village Code specifically designates only two (2) 15-minute (1/4 hour) parking spaces on the East side of North Walnut Street between East Ridgewood and Franklin Avenues.  Meter #218 is the third in a series of three (3) 15-minute (1/4 hour) spaces there.

So, if you received a summons for overtime parking at meter #218, and you were parked for less than 3-hours, your summons may be bogus.  I suggest you visit the Violations Bureau at Village Hall if you think that you might have been bamboozled.

Village Council members are expected to introduce & approve a revision the Village Code authorizing an additional 15-minute parking space alongside the Post Office, but that could take months.  Until then, just remember that any summons issued for overtime parking (for less than 3-hours) at meter #218 may not be legit.

 

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Ridgewood forum focuses on parking , parking and more parking

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JUNE 18, 2015    LAST UPDATED: THURSDAY, JUNE 18, 2015, 2:04 PM
BY MARK KRULISH
STAFF WRITER |
THE RIDGEWOOD NEWS

The sixth in a series of Central Business District (CBD) forums took place on Wednesday night.

Residents and local business owners gathered to hear a comprehensive overview on the parking changes that have been made over the past few months, as well as a review of the current progress on the potential parking garage projects downtown.

One of the most noticeable changes made to the parking process in the CBD is the implementation of ParkMobile, which went live in the second week of May. ParkMobile is a pay-by-phone application and is currently in use at the downtown parking lots. It is also exclusively in use at the Chestnut Street lot and Route 17 Park & Ride.

Village officials expect to add this service to street meters no later than July 1, according to Janet Fricke, assistant to the village manager.

The village has also overhauled its hourly parking rates as well as the options for parking available to residents and non-residents during the first half of 2015.

The Ridgewood Parking Permit (RPP) is available for all Ridgewood residents and gives them unlimited parking in all lots at a cost of $750 per year, prorated monthly depending upon the point during the year in which it is purchased. Non-residents can purchase unlimited parking at either Cottage Place or the Park & Ride for $1,500 per year.

Employees working in the CBD can purchase a permit for $80 per month or $40 for half of a month. These permits are interchangeable among employees if they wish to split the cost. The pass must be displayed in the windshield and can be used at either Cottage Place or the Ken Smith property.

Eight hour parking has also become available at Cottage Place for 75 cents per hour, using coins or ParkMobile. Metered times are 10 a.m. until 6 p.m.

 

https://www.northjersey.com/community-news/ridgewood-forum-focuses-on-parking-1.1358689

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Parking is focus of Ridgewood forum

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Parking is focus of Ridgewood forum

MARCH 26, 2015    LAST UPDATED: THURSDAY, MARCH 26, 2015, 4:51 PM
BY BY MARK KRULISH
STAFF WRITER |
THE RIDGEWOOD NEWS

Parking – and lack thereof – was the main focus of a Central Business District (CBD) forum held at Christ Episcopal Church on March 18 as village officials, residents and Ridgewood Chamber of Commerce representatives gathered for an informal panel discussion.

Over the course of the 90-minute session, the panel and audience covered strategies for building garages on municipal land, the parking space deficit in the CBD and the implementation of paying for parking with mobile phones.

The evening forum was hosted by Deputy Mayor Albert Pucciarelli and featured a panel that included Mayor Paul Aronsohn, Chamber of Commerce President Paul Vagianos, Citizen Safety Advisory Committee Chair Charles Demarco and Janet Fricke, assistant to the village manager.

https://www.northjersey.com/community-news/parking-is-focus-of-ridgewood-forum-1.1296682

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Village Council formally approved the use of Smartphones as a means of paying for parking

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Village Council formally approved the use of Smartphones as a means of paying for parking 

Ridgewood allows use of phones to pay for parking

MARCH 13, 2015    LAST UPDATED: FRIDAY, MARCH 13, 2015, 1:21 AM
BY CHRIS HARRIS
STAFF WRITER |
THE RECORD

RIDGEWOOD — Depending on your technological prowess, paying for parking in the village is about to get either a whole lot easier or much more complicated.

The council formally approved this week an amendment to Ridgewood’s code to include smartphones as a means for paying for time at parking meters downtown.

Ridgewood officials have been mulling a possible contract with Atlanta’s Parkmobile for weeks. Users of the company’s app can pay for spaces with their phones.

Village officials are still in negotiations with Parkmobile, but say that if all goes well, the system could be in place by May.

Officials said stickers with Parkmobile’s information would be affixed to each meter. They will still accept quarters.

The app is already in use in Glen Rock, Fair Lawn and Newark, and links directly to a credit card, debit card or PayPal account.

https://www.northjersey.com/news/counciloks-use-of-phones-at-meters-1.1288381

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Ridgewood to purchase canisters to collect coins from meters

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Ridgewood to purchase canisters to collect coins from meters

FEBRUARY 27, 2015    LAST UPDATED: FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 27, 2015, 12:31 AM
BY STEPHANIE ALBERICO
STAFF WRITER |
THE RIDGEWOOD NEWS

The Village Council moved forward on Wednesday with a new parking policy for Cottage Place and a resolution to award a contract to purchase secure canisters for meters.

The council also agreed to begin using Park Mobile, the cell phone application that allows people to use an online account and credit card to pay for parking.

New collection mode

The village will be replacing buckets with enclosed canisters and carts with lock boxes to transport coinage from Ridgewood’s parking meters.

The move comes in response to a theft of approximately $460,000 worth of quarters by former public works employee Thomas Rica, who stole the coins from a locked room in Village Hall. A recent audit released in early February revealed that an additional $377,000 had vanished from the coin room, totaling approximately $850,000.

New collection containers and the corresponding cart system will better secure the coinage that is collected twice a month from village parking meters, said Village Manager Roberta Sonenfeld.

https://www.northjersey.com/news/canisterswill-keepquarterssecure-1.1279203

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Ridgewood’s priority should be securing money

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file photo Boyd Loving

Ridgewood’s priority should be securing money

Securing money should be priority

To the Editor:

Re: “1.5 million more quarters are missing,” The Ridgewood News, Feb. 13, A1:

Thomas Rica was arrested over two years ago for stealing several hundred thousand dollars worth of unsecured quarters from a storage room at Village Hall.

However, I was shocked to learn that village officials still routinely store thousands of dollars worth of quarters in the same storage room for two-week intervals. This despite the massive theft, and their full awareness of a NJ State law requiring municipalities to deposit all cash within 48 hours of receipt.

Furthermore, although it was apparent to village officials from the onset that Mr. Rica’s crime was facilitated by lax coin collection, handling, and storage procedures, a secure coin collection and handling system has not yet been implemented.

Current village officials seem very eager to quickly cast blame for the “coin caper” on those who preceded them. Ridgewood’s taxpayers would be better served if these same officials would dispense with efforts to preserve their respective public images, and instead focus on taking whatever steps are required to ensure that every last cent of cash collected by village employees is safely secured and accounted for.

It’s been over two years since the fox sneaked into the hen house and the hen house still hasn’t been completely secured. Time’s a-wasting.

Boyd A. Loving
Ridgewood

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Ridgewood moving ahead with pay-by-phone parking option

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Washington DC phone pay 

Ridgewood moving ahead with pay-by-phone parking option

FEBRUARY 17, 2015    LAST UPDATED: TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 17, 2015, 10:05 AM
BY MARK KRULISH
STAFF WRITER |
THE RIDGEWOOD NEWS

The first wave of new parking ordinances designed to help downtown Ridgewood was introduced at the Village Council’s public meeting on Feb. 11.

An ordinance establishing regulations for paying parking meters through a wireless cellular provider, as well as the fees associated with using cell phone technology, is scheduled for adoption on March 11.

The council also passed a resolution authorizing an agreement with Parkmobile USA for a pay-by-phone parking system to be installed in various locations across the village.

One resident, Diane Palacios, said she is very cautious with her credit card and would not feel comfortable using it in conjunction with Parkmobile, especially at the Route 17 Park & Ride, which she said she occasionally uses.

Palacios suggested that kiosks, which can accept both cash and credit cards, be installed at the Park & Ride instead of going completely wireless to alleviate concerns with seniors who may not be comfortable with using their cell phone to pay for parking.

https://www.northjersey.com/news/business/ridgewood-council-moves-ahead-with-plans-1.1272742

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Auditors Report on Ridgewood Parking Utility raises serious questions as to whether other people also participated in this theft against the Village

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Auditors Report on Ridgewood Parking Utility raises serious questions as to whether other people also participated in this theft against the Village

Ridgewood NJ, In a statement released by the Mayor ,Council and Village Manager  :

On March 19, 2014, following an investigation by the Bergen County Prosecutor’s Office, former Ridgewood employee Thomas Rica admitted in Bergen County Superior Court to stealing $460,000 from the municipality’s parking utility over about a 3-year period – from 2010 to January 2013. At that hearing, Mr. Rica entered into a plea agreement in which, among other things, he was required to repay the amount of $460,000.

Following that hearing and a subsequent July 10, 2014 sentencing hearing, the Village of Ridgewood’s insurance carrier, the Municipal Excess Liability Fund, hired a forensic accounting firm, Nisivoccia LLP, to undertake a comprehensive audit of the loss incurred by the Village’s parking utility. That audit is now complete.

Yesterday, we received Nisivoccia’s final report, which concludes that over a similar period of time, approximately $850,000 was stolen from the Village. The auditor’s conclusion is very disturbing and raises serious questions concerning the scope and method of the crime or crimes that have been committed against the Village. Most notably, it raises the question as to whether other people also participated in this theft against the Village, acting independently or in cooperation with Mr. Rica.

Although we have taken and continue to take several concrete steps to strengthen controls on parking utility revenues, we believe that it is absolutely necessary to try to determine the full extent of the theft[s] committed during the 2010 to January 2013 period.

We are therefore exploring all of our legal options, including possibly starting a Ridgewood Police investigation into this matter. We will make a determination as to next legal steps within weeks.

We are continuing to work with Nisivoccia LLP to review our processes and controls – past and present – to determine if negligence and/or procedural violations contributed to the theft[s} and what steps, if any, still need to be taken to prevent theft going forward.

We are continuing to work with the Municipal Excess Liability Fund to recoup all of the monies stolen from the Village. This is a top priority.

 

posted on the VOR web sit:

https://mods.ridgewoodnj.net/pdf/manager/2015Report.pdf
https://mods.ridgewoodnj.net/pdf/manager/2015Rica.pdf

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Ridgewood officials: Probe finds another $377,000 in meter quarters stolen

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Ridgewood officials: Probe finds another $377,000 in meter quarters stolen

FEBRUARY 10, 2015, 11:24 AM    LAST UPDATED: TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 10, 2015, 8:33 PM
BY CHRIS HARRIS
STAFF WRITER |
THE RECORD

Auditors found that nearly $850,000 was in fact stolen from the now-infamous coin room where collected parking meter quarters were stored. Thomas Rica, the village’s former public works inspector, admitted pilfering fistfuls of quarters from the room last March.

Rica said he stole $460,000 and received no jail time, according to a plea deal  he reached with the county prosecutor’s office. A judge upheld the agreement for five years’ probation, which disappointed local officials who were pleased, though, that Rica would be forced to pay back at least half of the money.

Rica’s former attorney scoffed at the notion his client stole more quarters, and even village officials suggested there might be an accomplice.

The audit, released by the village Tuesday and delivered to its insurance fund the day before, uncovered a timeline of theft that started in 2010 — a year earlier than previously reported by authorities.

Using information from interviews with village employees as well as Rica’s own financial records, which were turned over to the village by the Bergen County Prosecutor’s Office, auditors determined Rica deposited $471,815.05 to his various bank accounts between 2010 and his arrest on Jan. 13, 2013.

In the first two weeks of 2013 alone, the findings show Rica stole $10,413.51. In 2012, the audit report indicates he took $375,647.84 in quarters. The audit estimated $297,234.34 went missing in 2011, and that Rica pocketed $166,045.89 in 2010.

https://www.northjersey.com/news/ridgewood-officials-probe-finds-another-377-000-in-meter-quarters-stolen-1.1268169

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Village Engineer’s Office Proposes 16 Additional Spaces in the CBD

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Village Engineer’s Office Proposes 16 Additional Spaces in the CBD
February 6,2015
the staff of the Ridgewood blog

Ridgewood NJ,According to a Village Engineer’s office flyer that was distributed to Village Council members at Wednesday night’s meeting.16 additional CBD parking spaces could be created with minimal disruption.

EASTBQUND FRANKLIN AVENUE; South curb between Walnut and Cottage Streets. REMOVE “No Parking”~ADD 7 SPACES. (Same concept as in front of B.O.E. where metered parking already exists).

EAST RIDGEWOOD AVENUE: South curb at traffic light with North Maple Avenue. Reduce bus stop to 60 feet (conform to NJ Transit standard for near-side stop). ADD 2 SPACES.

HUDSON STREET: Add a parking box and ONE parking space.

GODWIN AVENUE: South curb. East of Pomander Walk around strip mall. ADD 3 SPACES

EAST RIDGEWOOD AVENUE: ADD ONE space in front of It’s Greek to Me.

NORTH BROAD STREET; ADD 2 SPACES. Taxi company can park north of the building.

Some readers note : If I recall correctly, the spaces along Franklin Avenue across from the Stop & Shop were previously proposed and ruled out due to safety concerns associated with the number of active driveways along that side of the street.

With respect to the proposed spot in front of It’s Greek to Me, how will a passenger(s) be discharged with those flower boxes sitting there?

Is NJ Transit okay with reducing the length of the bus stop in front of Arthur Groom/Ridgewood Running Company?

Godwin Avenue & Hudson Street – Will the line of sight distance be dangerously reduced for drivers pulling out of the adjacent parking lots?

Has the taxi company been informed about the proposed reduction in their on street parking?

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