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Revenue from traffic, parking tickets increases
Comments 0 | Recommend 0Colorado Springs
city government could have a windfall this year, thanks to more traffic
enforcement and less discretion in dismissing parking tickets.
In the first quarter, revenues collected by the Municipal
Court jumped by $324,000 compared with the first three months of 2007.
A court official predicted the rising caseload - including a
72-percent rise in parking tickets - would continue through the year.
"There's nothing that would cause me to think it wouldn't
continue," said Municipal Court Administrator Rick Lewis.
If it does, the city would receive roughly $1.5 million more
than it budgeted this year from fines - money the city is likely to need during
an economic downturn that's eroded sales tax collections, the city's primary
money source.
Councilwoman Margaret Radford said it's impossible to
speculate where any extra money would be applied, but her greatest priority is
public safety.
"It's premature in April to make a projection like that," she
said. "A park building could burn down. The (Prospect) lake could go empty. A
bridge might fall down."
Or, the city might spend the money to keep its police
helicopters in the air another year. Air One cost the city $360,000 this year.
In an April 4 report to the City Council, Lewis said court
filings increased by 36 percent in the first three months of 2008 compared with
the same period in 2007.
Traffic cases went up by 16.5 percent; parking tickets, by
72.1 percent.
Colorado Springs Police Lt. Skip Arms said part of the
increase - 15,214 traffic cases so far this year, up from 13,063 during the
same time last year - could be due to from the motorcycle traffic unit being
back on the streets after being assigned last winter to guard the Castle West
Apartments, which were destroyed by arson in January 2007.
Parking tickets have soared to 14,931 this year from 8,678
last year for two reasons:
c The City Council changed city ordinances in December to
prevent court referees from dismissing tickets after Councilman Jerry
Heimlicher discovered referees voided 8,010 of the 50,726 parking tickets
issued in 2006.
c The Police Department filled three parking enforcement
positions in March of 2007 after they had been vacant for several months.
In the year's first three months, the court has brought in
$2.2 million in fines and court costs, compared with $1.88 million for the same period last year.
That's a difference of about $324,000, and the next two
quarters could bring in more money, Lewis said, because court activity tends to
pick up during the spring and summer tourist season.
The city budget has $7.4 million in revenue from fines this
year.
CONTACT THE WRITER: 636-0238 or pam.zubeck@gazette.com





