City to
Seize Homes Over a $5 Parking Ticket
Brooksville, Florida proposes to foreclose homes and seize cars over
less than $20 in parking tickets.
The Newspaper |
March 22, 2007
The city
council in Brooksville, Florida voted this week to advance a
proposal granting city officials the authority to place liens and
foreclose on the homes of motorists accused of failing to pay a
single $5 parking ticket. Non-homeowners face having their vehicles
seized if accused of not paying three parking offenses.
According to the proposed ordinance, a vehicle owner must pay a
parking fine within 72 hours if a meter maid claims his automobile
was improperly parked, incurring tickets worth between $5 and $250.
Failure to pay this amount results in the assessment of a
fifty-percent "late fee." After seven days, the city will place a
lien on the car owner's home for the amount of the ticket plus late
fees, attorney fees and an extra $15 fine. The fees quickly turn a
$5 ticket into a debt worth several hundred dollars, growing at a
one-percent per month interest rate. The ordinance does not require
the city to provide notice to the homeowner at any point so that
after ninety days elapse, the city will foreclose. If the motorist
does not own a home, it will seize his vehicle after the failure to
pay three parking tickets.
Any motorist who believes a parking ticket may have been improperly
issued must first pay a $250 "appeal fee" within seven days to have
the case heard by a contract employee of the city. This employee
will determine whether the city should keep the appeal fee, plus the
cost of the ticket and late fees, or find the motorist not guilty.
Council members postponed a decision on whether to reduce this
appeal fee until final adoption of the measure which is expected in
the first week of April.
The full text of the ordinance is available in a 605k PDF file at
the source link below.
Source:
Ordinance No. 743
(Brooksville, Florida City Council, 3/19/2007)
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