Parking headaches abound Westwood, on campus
Students complain about limited space and costly tickets
By Naoki Naruse
Tomoko Yamura and her friend recently went to Westwood to buy
pizza. They took a car, assuming that would be more convenient than
walking. Before long, however, Yamura, a fourth-year economics
student, noticed that they had made a big mistake.
"While my friend went into a pizza shop, I had to wait in the
car. I couldn’t find a parking space," Yamura said. "I ended up
driving around the same block six times."
But many said even if you get a parking space, you still have to
worry about how long you can stay there. "Some of (the meters) are
30 minutes," said first-year political science student Brandi
Wojcik. "So I have to run into the store, get stuff, run back out,
put more money and run back in again. It’s kind of a pain."
Why is it so stressful to park in Westwood? One reason many
cited is limited parking spaces in the area.
"Because of much expansion of business, many private properties
can’t provide parking spaces. It’s really expensive (to build
parking spaces)," said Rafael Prepena, a transportation engineer at
the city’s Office of Parking Management.
Still, some people never have to worry about a lack of parking
space.
"If you have a preferential parking permit, you can park on a
street for 24 hours except during street cleaning," said officials
at the Department of Transportation’s western division. A
preferential permit, issued by the Department of Transportation,
allows residents in designated districts to park on certain
streets.
UCLA students have been ineligible to obtain these since 1979,
when residents in Westwood complained about non-resident students
parking and taking up their spaces, Prepena said.
Public vehicles owned by city or state agencies are also exempt
from parking restrictions  signified by a circled "E" on
their plates. They are cleared from both preferential parking
limits and meter parking restrictions, Prepena said.
Important foreign figures such as diplomats have similar
privileges. They can park at meter parking zones without bothering
to put in any quarters. They carry special license plates issued by
the United States government, officials at the Office of Parking
Management said.
Despite the benefits of parking permits, though, some
preferential permit holders are not as privileged as it might
sound.
Kenji Tanaka, a first year Ph.D. student in material science and
engineering parks his car, with his preferential permit, on Durant
Drive in Beverly Hills.
However, he has to move it every morning before 8 a.m. Sunday
through Wednesday for street cleaning. One morning he was 15
minutes late to move his car. "A parking enforcement officer is
waiting right there at the corner at 8 every morning," Tanaka said.
"I found out I had got ticketed at 8:07."
Tanaka was lucky in some respects, though. His $38 ticket was
comparatively cheap.
Parking in handicapped zones without a proper permit earns a
$330 fine, Fortier said. And the Parking Enforcement Office at
Transportation Services is instituting a new program regarding
fraudulent use of a disabled person’s placards or license plates.
Starting in January 1995, the fine will be $500, she said.
Even without tickets, though, parking is rarely  if ever
 free and simple.
When the university or its academic departments invite guests to
special events on campus, they arrange special parking services for
the guests beforehand. They can offer them courtesy permits. In
this case, the guests do not have to pay for the parking services,
but the university or the departments do.
No one gets free parking, no matter how important they are, said
Gary Streaty, field manager at UCLA Parking Services. President
Bill Clinton had to pay for the special parking services when he
came to campus last spring.
In fact, fighting potential tickets seems to be as difficult as
fighting the lack of space, students said. Yamura relayed a story
about the time she parked her car on a street over night. The
following morning she found a parking violation ticket resting on
the car’s front shield.
"I was surprised because I thought I was sure I wouldn’t get
ticketed," she said. "I didn’t see any signs on the street." It was
only after she got the ticket that she found a sign for two hour
limit parking far at the corner of Kelton and Gayley avenues.
According to the many stories frustrated students told, parking
problems know no boundaries. In addition to Westwood’s lack of
parking, students also suffer from limited parking spaces on
campus.
Jenny Manzer, who did not get a parking permit for this quarter,
has been parking her car on Hilgard Avenue, where there are no
limits.
But she has not used the car at all for almost the whole quarter
because she said she has been afraid to lose her parking spot.
"Once I moved my car, and it took me hours to find one (again),"
said Manzer, a senior anthropology student. "At times, I didn’t see
my car for weeks. I was afraid that it would get broken into."
Each parking structure on campus has to have empty spots (3 to 5
percent of the total parking space) for structure users, according
to Renee Fortier, associate director at UCLA Parking Services.
To solve parking problems on campus, Parking Services will issue
over 1,000 more parking permits in Lot 3 next fall mainly for
students. And after the Anderson School’s construction finishes,
about 200 spaces in Lot 4 and 6, which are now occupied by
constructors and construction workers, will be freed up for
students next fall, Fortier said.