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As Baltimore ramps up parking enforcement, citations for one offense are skyrocketing

As Baltimore ramps up parking enforcement, citations for one offense are skyrocketing

Yahoo13-05-2025

Baltimore is issuing thousands more parking citations this spring than it has in previous years after launching overnight enforcement. City data shows agents are writing the most tickets for one particular violation — parking with expired tags.
Parking agents have issued over 13,000 citations for lapsed registration stickers in the two months since the Baltimore City Department of Transportation launched its '24-hour parking enforcement' plan on March 10, promising to clear up streets with overnight enforcement.
That's 17 times as many vehicles with expired registrations cited for parking on city streets as during the same period last year, when agents only wrote 800 citations for expired tags.
The targeting of expired tags this spring appears to be driving the recent bump in overall parking citations.
Public data on parking violations shows that at least 51,000 citations have been issued this year since March 10, up 10.5% from the same period in 2024. A mayor's office spokesperson provided figures suggesting the jump in parking citations was actually twice that but did not respond to questions asking to clarify that data.
The new overnight ticketing shifts allow parking agents to be 'more focused' on the job, Baltimore Mayor Brandon Scott said in a March statement, making enforcement 'more effective and responsive' and giving crews 'the tools they need to get the job done.'
Aiming at 'habitual offenders,' the city has ticketed some vehicles dozens of times. One vehicle has received over $1,200 in tickets since March for expired tags and parking in the same tow-away zone in South Baltimore.
Cars with Virginia tags made up over 10% of recent citations. The most ticketed make of vehicle? Hondas, followed by Toyotas and Nissans.
The crackdown on illegal parking was set to get even tougher, with new fines taking effect Monday aimed at repeat violators in Residential Permit Parking areas.
While a first offense for illegally parking in a residential permit area remains at $50, a second offense within the same 12-month period will net a $70 fine. A third and fourth will cost $100 and $150, respectively.
Have a news tip? Contact Dan Belson at dbelson@baltsun.com, on X as @DanBelson_ or on Signal as @danbels.62.

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These Toyotas Prove the Brand Has a Seriously Fun Side
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These Toyotas Prove the Brand Has a Seriously Fun Side

Toyota: Reliable? Sure. Boring? Not even close. Toyota's built its name on bulletproof reliability. But beneath all those dependable sedans and sensible hybrids lives a wilder side, one packed with tire smoke, turbo whistles, and design choices that make you do a double-take. This is the same company that gave us Le Mans winners, mid-engine icons, drifting legends, and concept cars straight out of science fiction. So if you think Toyota is just for folks cruising in beige Camrys, buckle up. You're about to meet the Toyotas that prefer redline to red lights. This isn't a list of commuter champs or fuel-sipping hybrids. We didn't care about MPGs, resale value, or how many cupholders it has. Instead, we looked for Toyotas that make enthusiasts perk up — the ones with turbochargers, T-tops, butterfly doors, or legendary engines that sound like they belong on a racetrack. 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Toyota: Reliable? Sure. Boring? Not even close. Toyota's built its name on bulletproof reliability. But beneath all those dependable sedans and sensible hybrids lives a wilder side, one packed with tire smoke, turbo whistles, and design choices that make you do a double-take. This is the same company that gave us Le Mans winners, mid-engine icons, drifting legends, and concept cars straight out of science fiction. So if you think Toyota is just for folks cruising in beige Camrys, buckle up. You're about to meet the Toyotas that prefer redline to red lights. This isn't a list of commuter champs or fuel-sipping hybrids. We didn't care about MPGs, resale value, or how many cupholders it has. Instead, we looked for Toyotas that make enthusiasts perk up — the ones with turbochargers, T-tops, butterfly doors, or legendary engines that sound like they belong on a racetrack. 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In Series 3, the show tested a Hilux to destruction, yet no matter what they did, it always came out and was still running. The Hilux was also the vehicle of choice when Jeremy Clarkson and James May went to the North Pole, racing Richard Hammond on his dog sled. Making the Hilux even more awesome was the fact that it was guzzling jet fuel for this mission, a better option in extremely cold conditions. But no, this won't make you drive any faster on the highway. Toyota introduced the MR2 in the 1980s, and it soon became one of the best and most enjoyable sports car experiences while not breaking the bank. Under the hood was a 1.6-liter engine, either naturally aspirated or supercharged, and in the second generation, Toyota brought in a 2.0-liter powertrain. Many have felt the demise of the original, although Toyota filled the gap somewhat with the Supra and the GR86. Rumors have persisted for a couple of years that Toyota might bring the MR2 back. 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Under the hood, the G16E-GTS 1.6-liter turbocharged three-cylinder engine produces 300 hp and 273 lb-ft of torque across all the trim levels. Like the GR Yaris, it offers superb handling via the GR circuit-tuned suspension, and gearheads will revel in the six-speed manual transmission. All-wheel drive is another bonus with the GR Corolla. I'm currently looking at my 2015 Corolla with 132 hp and weeping. For every beige Corolla you see in a school pickup line, there's a GR Yaris lighting up a rally stage. For every practical RAV4, there's a Supra chasing supercars or an LFA screaming past redline at 9,000 RPM. Toyota doesn't always flaunt its fun side, but when it does? It leaves a mark. Whether you're into sideways-driving drift machines, world-conquering off-roaders, or supercar science projects with V10s, Toyota has built something for you — even if you didn't realize it yet. 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Trump tariffs help push U.K. auto sector to worst production figures in more than 70 years

The U.K.'s auto sector is reeling from its worst month for production since 1952—when the Morris Minor ruled the country's roads and Queen Elizabeth ascended to the throne—as Trump's tariff war added to a bearish environment for the country's biggest carmakers. U.K. plants producing cars like Range Rovers, Bentleys, and Toyotas pumped out 59,200 models in April, marking the lowest monthly output figure in more than 70 years, according to data from the Society of Motor Manufacturers and Traders (SMMT). Carmakers are set for their worst start to the year in production terms since 2009 and the depths of the Great Recession. Commercial vehicle exports fell by more than 75% in April as automakers digested the fallout of Donald Trump's tariffs on the car industry and his more sweeping plans announced on 'Liberation Day.' Cars bound for the U.S., which took around a sixth of the U.K.'s car exports, experienced a slight decline in April, with EU exports fuelling the biggest drop. U.K. luxury carmakers, including Rolls-Royce and Aston Martin, were regarded as being particularly vulnerable to a trade war because much of their appeal comes from keeping most production from its historic local plants. Jaguar Land Rover said in early April that it would be pausing U.S. shipments while it assessed the fallout from Trump's tariff announcements. The carmaker sold more than 128,000 cars to the States, its biggest market, in 2024. The end of March also marked the closure of Stellantis-owned Vauxhall's factory in Luton, where the carmaker employed more than 1,000 workers. Employees at the 120-year-old factory faced a stark ultimatum: a 140-mile relocation north or accepting a redundancy package. A calendar quirk of the Easter break falling later in 2025, which accordingly shuttered production for an extra two days over the bank holiday, also contributed to depressed production figures, the SMMT said. Indeed, March production figures showed nearly 80,000 vehicles being produced in the U.K. that month. April's awful production figures are likely to be an anomaly, and not just owing to the quirk of the calendar. Earlier in May, the U.K. and U.S. hammered out a landmark trade deal that would see import tariffs on cars to the States reduced from 25% to 10% for the first 100,000 vehicles. The development is expected to prevent a lot of pain in the U.K. auto market, and SMMT chief executive Mike Hawes is taking a victory lap after demonstrating the sector's influence on the U.K.'s international relations. 'Government has recognised automotive manufacturing's critical role in driving the UK economy, having successfully negotiated improved trading conditions for the sector with the US, EU and India in the space of a month,' said Hawes. 'To take advantage of these trading opportunities we must secure additional investment which will depend on the competitiveness and confidence that can be provided by a comprehensive and innovative long-term industrial strategy. Get this right and the jobs, economic growth and decarbonisation will flow across the UK.' This story was originally featured on

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