Very quietly last Monday night, while most Chicagoans were asleep in
bed, a fleet of 10 booting vans departed their parking lot staging
areas located at 2735 N. Ashland Ave. for the very first sortie of
overnight booting.
The first boot van pulled out a several minutes after 10 PM and
began slowly prowling northbound on Ashland Ave., hunting scofflaw
vehicles for just over a mile before catching it's first prey of the
night at 10:30 PM.
On Ashland Ave., just past Irving Park Rd. and directly in front of
Lakeview High School, the very first victim of this new overnight
initiative, felt the tight grip of cold yellow painted metal on its'
front driver's side wheel.
13 minutes and another mile and a quarter later down Ashland, the
same booter hit pay dirt again catching another scofflaw just south of
Foster Ave.
The first night of overnight booting looked to be a very productive one.
With a black hole of a city budget deficit looming for 2010 and for as
far as the eye can see, the Daley Administration, desperate to find
revenue quickly, seems to be pulling out all the stops to bring in as
much of the over half billion dollars in outstanding parking ticket
and red light ticket fines owed the city.
The Department of Revenue hired and began training 12 new booters in
September to beef up their ranks and prepare for the new around the
clock vehicle immobilization strategy.
Up until recently, booting crews in Chicago started at 6 AM and
continued into the early afternoon, ending around 2:30 PM. Additional
shifts began in the early afternoon, with booting still continuing, but
with a mild emphasis on releasing booted vehicles after owners paid the
city what they owed for parking and red light camera tickets. In
general, the bulk of boots applied during a day came during the morning
and early afternoon.
Many Chicago drivers who utilize city streets to park their
vehicles, understood this ebb and flow to booting. Boot eligible
drivers who left for work early and then got home in the evening for
dinner, had very little chance their car ever being caught in the jaws
of a bright yellow boot. Because their cars were almost never parked
when boot vans were prowling the streets of Chicago, they could go to
sleep every night without fear. But that sense of security is now gone,
with Sunday the sole day of the week without boot vans on the street.
"Now that's messed up," said a recently booted west side resident
Greg Smith when asked about his thoughts on this change in enforcement
policy. "Yes, I felt safe at night before. I was just shocked (when he
was booted a few weeks ago), but I knew it was coming but didn't know
when."
This new third shift, solely devoted to booting from 9:30 PM to 6 AM
five days a week, will amount to an over 50% increase in the total
hours of booting enforcement.
BOOTING BY THE NUMBERS
Year Boots % Increase
2005 48,365 7.1%
2006 55,641 15%
2007 58,898 5.8%
2008 63,515 7.8%
2009 65,420* 3%*
*Estimated
SOURCE: Chicago Dept. of Revenue
Over the past several years, the Department of Revenue has
gradually improved the speed and efficiency of the booting process
which has resulted in impressive increases in vehicle immobilization
since 2004.
24 hours a day, seven days a week booting was introduced at city
owned parking lots located at both O'Hare Airport in 2002 and Midway
Airport in 2005.
2007 saw the DOR invest $1.5 million to outfit 26 boot vans with
license plate recognition units that allow each boot van to scan
several thousand license plates per shift, instead of having to
manually enter license plates into a database. The resulting increase
in booting productivity was immediate.
Then in July 2008, a Saturday shift was added to further expand booting hours.
Additionally, changes in booting eligibility has increased the
number of target vehicles for boot crews. Last fall, Mayor Daley and
the City Council passed an ordinance that lowered the booting threshold to two unpaid tickets more than one year old. Of course, three unpaid tickets in final determination will get you on the seizure list immediately.
However, this seemingly mild change in boot eligibility has
increased the number of boot eligible plates by 39% or 191, 655
additional vehiles in seizure status as of August 2009.
It stands to reason that because the estimates for 2009 do not
reflect booting numbers for November and December with the new
overnight shift, total boots applied will be substantially higher when
final numbers are tallied for the year.
In addition, while official DOR budget estimates for total boots
applied in 2010 is a paltry 66,000, based on the city's aggressive new
round the clock booting initiative, this massive increase in booting
hours should translate into a number closer to 100,000 immobilized
vehicles next year.
Financially, this additional enforcement should help reduce the budget deficit by a couple of million bucks just
in booting fees and perhaps rake in tens of millions of dollars in
unpaid tickets next year when booted drivers pay to get their vehicles
released.
Unfortunately, if you are booted overnight, the very
earliest your vehicle can be released, even if you pay immediately, is
6 AM. Late night/early morning payments are accepted at both Midway and O'Hare
DOR facilities 24 hours a day.
Department of Revenue payment facilities
open at 8 AM Monday through Friday, with the Addison St. location
offering the latest hours until 6:30 PM. On Saturdays, only the Central
Hearing Facility is open from 8 AM to 3:30 PM.
In the meantime, scofflaw motorists are either going to have to pay
up or find a way to stay out of sight from the now omnipresent boot van.
"Now you're going to have people looking out their windows all
hours, hiding their cars or sleeping in their cars," exclaimed Smith.
"Swear to God!"
Department of Revenue spokespeople declined a request for comment.
7 Comments
Scooter Libbby said:
I can't wait for the first boot crew to get mugged one night.
It's gonna happen!
Juliejwels said:
Your an ass. Pay your tickets. And this would not happen.
Richard S. said:
With all the technology out there, why hasnt anyone come up with a way to defeat the boot?
abrown said:
Isn't this a violation of the (fair debt collection act)?...even people in debt have a right to a good nights rest!
Juliejwels said:
You must be 1 of those people that think you deserve everything handed to them. Don't park where you shouldnt, pay your tickets on time. You will not get the boot.
Juliejwels said:
Entitled people make me sick.
James Reyes said:
I am trying to get the city to provide a temporary city sticker.It would cost maybe $20 a month.Most people that don't have city stickers have financial problems.It might be easier to scrape up money for a temporary sticker in the short run and remain compliant.The budget shouldn't be balanced on the backs of the poor.
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