Transportation

Watch out, Minneapolis: The tow truck cometh

Parked vehicles are seen
Minneapolis kept its word and ticketed over 2,000 cars and towed 200 during the first week of the winter parking restrictions.
Kerem Yücel | MPR News

Minneapolis has handed out more than 2,000 tickets in the last three days and towed more than 200 vehicles off of the even sides of non-snow emergency streets, as they pick up enforcement of a winter parking ban instituted last week. 

“What we wanted to do was to give people a grace period and also educate them, without starting right away, issuing citations and tagging people for it,” said Ahmed Adow, director of traffic control for the city, in an interview with MPR News. “We did three days where we issued warning citations.”

Parked vehicles are seen
The warning period is over. Tow trucks are hitting Minneapolis streets.
Kerem Yücel | MPR News

Adow conceded some people may have concluded that the city had been bluffing. 

The warning period is now over. The tow trucks are rolling. 

More than 1,000 cars were tagged on Tuesday alone, and there were another 1,000 tickets Monday and Wednesday together, Adow said. About 240 vehicles have been hauled to the impound lot as of the close of business Tuesday. 

“It didn’t have to be this way,:” says Dillon Fried, on-street parking manager for Minneapolis public works. “We don't want to ticket cars. What we want is compliance; we want the access for emergency vehicles; we want traffic to be able to flow.” 

Parked vehicles are seen
Confused where to park? Call 311 or check out the guide on the city website.
Kerem Yücel | MPR News

But Adow conceded compliance is still “spotty.” 

"We focused on education over that first weekend of the restriction by issuing the warning citations,” Fried said Wednesday, “But at this point, we feel like everyone should have gotten the memo by now.” 

Fried said many of the arterial streets and snow emergency routes are in good shape, but with near-record amounts of snow, bitter cold and, well, some indifference to the urgency of clearing the way after major snowfalls, some streets remain too narrow to get fire trucks, ambulances school buses through safely. 

“How clean the streets get depends on how people cooperate with the parking and get out of the way,” Fried said. 

Parked vehicles are seen
Residents park their cars on the odd sides of non-snow emergency streets in south Minneapolis, as seen in this photo on Wednesday.
Kerem Yücel | MPR News

Adow said the enforcement may seem spare compared to snow emergencies, but traffic staff typically drop all other tasks to work on snow emergencies and can’t keep that up long term. They’re taking on the winter parking ban piecemeal. So just because your car is where you left it on the even side of a non-snow emergency street before, doesn’t mean it’s going to stay there now. 

“We're definitely out there issuing actual citations and towing vehicles to make sure that we get adequate compliance,” Fried said. 

Wondering where to park? Check out this handy guide. You can also call 311 in Minneapolis.