Through Sunday, there were 18 street-cleaning suspensions
for snow and holidays, compared with two at the same time last year.
But tickets are down just 2.4 percent citywide, and are up
in Brooklyn, Queens and The Bronx.
“This is really outrageous,’’ said motorist Dave Hoyt, 58,
of Woodside, Queens.
“You think, ‘Oh, look, they’re giving us a break, suspending
alternate-side because of the snow.’ But the city, being what it is, they
always find some other way to fine you.
“They’re not going to let a dime slip through their
fingers.’’
In The Bronx, the number of parking tickets issued jumped
8.4 percent, from 17,065 tickets so far this year to 15,736 for the same period
in 2013.
“I guess we’re just doing our job, ma’am,” a traffic agent
near the Bronx courthouse said when asked about the increase.
Manhattan parking tickets dropped from 39,160 to 33,524, and
Staten Island dipped from 3,056 to 2,922.
The NYPD did not respond when asked to explain the
statistics.
The city Department of Transportation coordinates with the
Sanitation Department to decide when to suspend parking regulations.
The DOT said it suspended the restriction again Monday —
despite only a slushy dusting of snow the night before — to remove that snow
and to allow Sanitation to continue spreading salt.
The regulations were suspended again Tuesday to allow more
salt-spreading and so workers could continue to chip away at the ice piled up
on curbs, a Sanitation rep said.
Because Wednesday is Lincoln’s Birthday, a holiday, the
rules will be suspended then as well.
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