is the food good at Niki's?
is the food good at Niki's?
I had their Feta Pizza last weekend. It was delicious, and while I am glad I tried it sans toppings, I will try adding JUST onion next time.
The posters must all be from suburbia, cornfield country. A Detroiter would have a handicap plate or placard. If they forgot to display the placard, they simply would not pay the fine.
THAT is the difference.
You should know by now, meter maids are like roaches. The world may be coming to an end but they will still be giving out tickets. The most conscientious and dogged civil servants ever. If they ran the rest of the city this way, they'd be making money instead of losing it. Learned my lesson a long time ago about those guys.
I think that both city folks and suburbanites [[like myself) find your comments appalling...
I don't know which is redder.... the look on Sumas's face when she got the ticket... or the back of your neck!
Ah try $65 on Broadway and 196th. And $119 within a certain distance from a fire hydrant.
You can get a ticket if you run out and re-load the meter. When meter readers check the meters sometimes they mark the tires then come back and if they see where the owner came out before the meter expired and loaded it up they will give you a ticket for staying past the 1 or 2 hour limit. It happened to me. The judge said staying parked in the same spot over the posted time is a violation. I had to pay the ticket.
Here are two of my Detroit ticket experiences from several years back.
1.) I visited the Renaissance Center in the early eighties. I parked on Jefferson.
The ticket was for about $25.00, and I was sure I was validly parked, but paid
the ticket anyways. [[It might've been only $10 that I paid.)
Around that time I also went to the Paperbacks Unlimited bookstore in Ferndale.
I browsed for a little too long, and when I got back to my car, there was a parking
ticket, which I paid immediately for $3.00. I was sure I stayed in the store for
too long so I felt better about the Ferndale ticket than the Detroit ticket.
Keep in mind that at the time most shopping was done at shopping malls, where
a big draw luring shoppers from all of the old downtown districts was that you
could park at the mall for free for all day long if you liked.
2.) Right after I moved to Detroit, street cleaning was still in effect. This was
admittedly very occasional, maybe twice a year. Once I missed seeing the "street
cleaning tomorrow - do not park in the street" signs until I looked for them, AFTER
getting a ticket on my car in front of my house.
Dream tickets...
Ehh, what? I'm from the D. Midtown are dead center of the city... I have a handicapped tag as I have problems walking, though I don't always park in handicapped. I've gotten tickets in the past. If you overstay your time you ARE getting a ticket - handicapped tag or not... '4-5' dollars worth or more. Though I have faught a couple of them and won.
Last edited by Zacha341; November-12-14 at 02:11 AM.
There was a story on the radio today about a new TowStop idea. Funding for its development is being sought on Indiegogo.
It's basically a simple way for someone to contact a driver via their improperly-parked car — an attempt to avoid being towed.
I'm skeptical about it but it's interesting. Maybe it will spark another idea.
This is a little off-topic, but I couldn't find the thread on it. Over a number of
years one of the biggest issues in Dearborn politics was whether the parking
lots behind the West Dearborn shopping district along Michigan Avenue should
be paid parking or not. The Little Professor Bookstore owners there went out
of business complaining long and loud about the instituting of paid parking in
the city owned parking area by the bookstore. It was an issue for the
Dearborn City Council elections as well.
If it were up to me I would neither charge for parking nor would I give out parking
tickets in a shopping district [[especially so long as there are malls). In general I feel
that the increase in visitors to the stores would make up for money gained by parking
fees and fines. I can't prove this. I can only point out malls to you.
But Detroit does have the particular problem of having more car breakins and thefts.
[[Side note one. I thank all of the Detroiters who over the years have placed warning
notes on my car to not leave belongings in sight in my car while I have been in shopping/school/medical areas within Detroit). [[Side note two. My Dad the GM retiree showed me the neat
trick of how to replace a broken car side window very easily. Of course he makes it look easy).
So what I would do for Detroit instead of tickets are VOLUNTARY visitor contributions
specifically for breakins, thefts, and petty issues that would bother visitors. I would have
the businesses and visitors themselves be participants. So within the business there would
be some little kiosk where for five dollars you could enter a raffle to win a used bait car after it has been used a few times in that business district. For another five dollars you would get a ten dollar coupon for a future purchase [[maybe anywhere in the area?) [[more foot traffic DISCOURAGES crime). If the VOLUNTARY visitor contribution requests are placed on
windshields instead, I would have some way that, if and when you make your contribution,
you are asked to report any immediate problems in that area, or receive notifications of
immediate problems in that area. For comparison there are notices on doors in public
restrooms showing checks of the restrooms as well as who to contact if there is any
problem.
I actually like the voluntary idea. My poor sweety got a ticket while doing jury duty. Paid for parking and the bozos put his car in the street. he got a ticket. Actually too funny. Civic duty aside, that was insult on injury. Paid that ticket too.
I really do remember when a a nickel did pay for an hour at a meter. God I am getting old.
As to restrooms, gross stuff. People don't seem to have common decency.
Although I live in a "backwards cornfield community," we have old fashioned meters in some parts of town that cost a nickel for 12 minutes or a quarter for an hour of parking. In other parts of town we have smart meters that are somewhat more expensive, but the station where you pay the meters is solar powered, and if you have a smart phone will alert you if your meter is about to expire. You can simply add more time to your meter via your cell phone and you're good to go. I would assume that Detroit has a similar system in place. Am I correct? I only shop in the areas that have old meters because I don't enjoy standing in line at a kiosk that has a line of people trying to figure out how it works. When I'm downtown, I'm usually just running into a business to grab some quick carry out or grab a few quick items from a store. Doesn't the D have this type of system? Cornfield type guy..........
Attachment 24909 I always thought this was a good way to get people to feel comfortable utilizing a shopping, food area. My son was at an area restaurant a few years back in Colorado. It took a bit longer to get their food at a restaurant and they were a few minutes late returning to their vehicle. They found this on their windshield. He conveyed to me that it gave him a good feeling about the community. If you didn't plug the meter after about 15 minutes, they would issue a ticket.
$45 sucks but it's lower than most cities.
That's true. I think the adaptation from the long-standing $20 [[$10 if you paid withing 10 days) past rate is what was initially unsettling. Now when I see a meter I think $45 mula and go find a lot or leave and do my business or dining elsewhere.
What a lame comment. If you had a brain in your head it would be lonesome. Really now, 27 posts and you try to be insulting. I truly enjoy witty re-posts and you sure don't qualify.
Last edited by sumas; November-12-14 at 03:55 AM.
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