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Baltimore workers petition for special permit program that allows overnight city parking
Baltimore workers petition for special permit program that allows overnight city parking

CBS News

time23-04-2025

  • Automotive
  • CBS News

Baltimore workers petition for special permit program that allows overnight city parking

Baltimore business owners and their employees hope a petition will help them start a special permit program to allow residents with smaller trade or commercial vehicles to park overnight near their homes. In March, the Baltimore City Department of Transportation launched 24-hour parking enforcement to reduce traffic congestion and boost safety. However, Baltimore business owners and their employees believe the stricter enforcement and rules disproportionately impact contractors, technicians, and other blue-collar professionals who rely on their commercial vehicles, work vans, and smaller service vehicles to make a living. Workers fined for violating overnight parking rules Garrett Porte, the vice president of Town Group, started the online petition and said his family's fleet of work vans is more than a mode of transportation — it's their livelihood. "All the companies, commercial vehicles, they take them home. They sleep there," Porte said. "They get up in the morning, take the car, and go right to the job site." But after his employee received a $250 parking ticket in mid-April, Porte realized there isn't a convenient place for their work vehicles to park overnight. "Right now, it's affecting people who are parking at their homes," Porte said. "There's no permanent place for them. So, they are getting $220-$250 fines per night with the new law." Porte's family owns Town Group, a security, locksmith, and alarm company, so their work is always on the go, especially in Baltimore City. "There's really not too many [people] that drive these vehicles down there," Porte said. "So, we like to keep the ones down there that work. I mean, they service the city. They help build it." The former Baltimore City resident believes the crackdown on overnight parking deters skilled workers who want to live and work in Baltimore. "There are definitely mixed opinions," Porte said. "But I think the mixed opinions are more to do with what kind of vehicle or how big, because when someone thinks of a commercial vehicle, they could think anything really large or very small." What would the permit program accomplish? Porte hopes that creating a special permit program will allow residents with trade or commercial vehicles to park overnight near their homes. "Here is a perfect example of what we're trying to get a permit for, under 3,000 to 4,000 pounds, very small," Porte said. "It's only about eight to nine feet in length, if that. I mean, you're talking smaller than a Chevy Tahoe." Porte also told WJZ he has contacted Baltimore city council members about this parking matter and hopes to work with the city to find a balanced, fair solution that supports both sides.

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