Neighborhood Parking Zones Are Still Not Being Set Up. Here’s Why
Oahu residents covet neighborhood street parking, but a pilot study to manage and restrict those spaces has been stuck in limbo for five years.
In 2017, residents of a Kalihi Valley enclave known as Wilson Tract agreed to form Oahu鈥檚 first, experimental restricted parking zone. Only cars with the proper city tags displayed could park on the public streets there overnight 鈥 a move those residents hoped would free up more spaces and discourage loitering outside their homes.
The pilot worked well, and it signaled that the city might soon launch similar restricted parking zones, or RPZs, across an island where keeping street parking available remains a issue for many residents.
More than five years later, however, the Kalihi Valley RPZ remains just a pilot, with city officials struggling to make the zone permanent or set up others. It鈥檚 鈥渓imping along,鈥 as one city leader put it, with reduced enforcement against the cars that lack the proper tags.
The Honolulu City Council that would make it Oahu鈥檚 first permanent RPZ. Meanwhile, the Kalihi residents who have benefited from the zone have yet to pay any fees to support it, although some say they would gladly do so to sustain the program if such a system were set up.
鈥淲e鈥檙e willing to pay. That鈥檚 how much we believe in this program,鈥 said Lynette Kumalae, a longtime Kalihi Valley resident who lives on Aoao Street, which was added to the RPZ after its initial success. 鈥淚 understand 鈥 public parking is public parking. But if you鈥檙e willing to pay for that privilege (of restricted parking) it would take care of that program.鈥
The city鈥檚 transportation division says it would like to make the Kalihi pilot program permanent, plus eventually add as many as nine other RPZs in other neighborhoods where residents have expressed interest.
鈥淚t鈥檚 a long pilot and we鈥檇 like to make it institutionalized,鈥 Department of Transportation Services Director Roger Morton said. 鈥淏ut we need the ordinance authority to do it.鈥
Specifically, the City Council needs to establish the user fees for the Kalihi RPZ, according to Morton and a chief planner at the department.
Some 430 properties currently encompass that zone, up from the initial 200 or so properties when the pilot started, according to Honolulu City Council member Carol Fukunaga.
DTS estimates it would cost about $200 per property to cover the city costs to run the zone. proposed setting the specific fee for the Kalihi zone at $100 a year, which Kumalae called 鈥渕ore than reasonable.鈥 The city鈥檚 general fund would then likely cover the rest of the cost.
Part Of A Bigger Plan
Fukunaga partly blamed the RPZ hold-up on turnover within DTS as well as changes in committee leadership on the City Council during the past five years.
Key DTS staff members who were making progress toward the permanent Kalihi Valley RPZ retired and 鈥渢he entire division sort of disappeared,鈥 she said.
鈥淏y the time the new guys got here, they were more interested in analyzing (the zone) within the overall management plan, including commercial areas,鈥 Fukunaga said, referring to the city鈥檚 new
The Kalihi Valley RPZ, she said, 鈥済ot sort of pushed to the side.鈥
Last month, , a chief planner for the city, briefed the council鈥檚 Committee on Transportation, Sustainability and Health on that wide-ranging plan, which is still in the works. It aims to make travel across the island more efficient and better managed, as well as to cut down on car miles traveled. The plan also includes eventually forming RPZs.
The Kalihi Valley pilot zone falls largely within Fukunaga’s district but also partly within council member Radiant Cordero’s district. Cordero’s also the transportation committee鈥檚 latest chair.
Cordero asked during whether the city would have a 鈥渂asic foundation鈥 to create all RPZs instead of creating each one on a case-by-case basis, so that the zone rules wouldn鈥檛 be 鈥渁ll over the place.鈥
鈥淚 just want to make sure it鈥檚 structured in a way that it鈥檚 somewhat uniform, so that there鈥檚 an easier process鈥 to form them, she said.
Clark said DTS had rules ready to go that would cover all the RPZs, based on what they learned from the Kalihi Valley pilot. The department just needs the council to act on the fees in order to proceed.
In order to create an RPZ, the first step is for community members to approach the city in strong support, Clark said. DTS has already started to model how such zones would work in the nine or 10 communities that have come forward, including parts of Kaimuki, Palolo Valley, Liliha, Mcully-Moiliili and Haiku.
鈥淲e know that there鈥檚 appetite in those neighborhoods,鈥 Clark said.
He also told Cordero that making the pilot program permanent would lead to more consistent enforcement.
Cordero was unavailable on Tuesday and Wednesday to discuss the RPZ issue, according to a council representative.
Parking Restrictions, Or Neighborhood Watch?
One of the advocates who helped establish the parking pilot in Kalihi Valley was Max Sword, the former Honolulu Police Commission chair who was indicted earlier this year on federal conspiracy charges in relation to the city鈥檚 wide-ranging Kealoha corruption scandal.
City records show that Sword in support of the Kalihi Valley restricted parking program. Fukunaga said that Sword鈥檚 mother-in-law lived in Wilson Tract, and that the challenges she faced there led him and his wife, , to pursue the zone.
According to Kumalae, street parking is especially important in Kalihi Valley because the islands鈥 cost of living and scarcity of housing has led many of those decades-old family homes to be multigenerational.
鈥淵our regular garage鈥 is not going to fit all the neighborhood cars, Kumalae said. 鈥淧eople work hard and need a place to park when they get home.鈥
She said the RPZ also became a neighborhood watch program. Prior to the zone, the neighborhood saw frequent littering, loitering and abandoning of vehicles by people who didn鈥檛 live there, according to Kumalae and others.
Enforcing the RPZ dramatically reduced those separate problems, she said, making the program especially popular.
However, in recent years, with the program still stuck in its pilot phase, the police enforcement of the restricted parking there has been 鈥渇limsy,鈥 Kumalae said.
The Honolulu Police Department did not respond to requests Tuesday for statistics on its enforcement of the pilot program.
Fukunaga said her office has encouraged Kalihi Valley residents in recent years to work more closely with HPD for better neighborhood watch, apart from the RPZ. Meanwhile, Kumalae said that residents are currently working to develop an official neighborhood watch that builds off the progress they saw with the RPZ.
It remains to be seen when the Kalihi Valley zone might become permanent and others would get established. The zones could be priced and regulated differently even if they share the same basic rules, Clark said.
Currently, some 20% of the cars on Oahu are parked on city streets, representing about 200,000 vehicles, according to Clark.
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About the Author
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Marcel Honor茅 is a reporter for Civil Beat. You can email him at mhonore@civilbeat.org