After
several exploratory studies over the past decade, Spokane plans to roll
out parking meters that will accept credit card payments as well as
coins at 800 parking spaces downtown. The City Council is expected to
review a contract with Milwaukee-based Duncan Solutions for the new
meters later this month.
The
Downtown Spokane Partnership, which represents the interests of
downtown businesses, has worked with the city on plans to improve the
convenience of downtown parking. The groups president, Mark Richard,
said new meters will do just that.
Plans
to update downtown meters have hit snags in the past. The city
originally contracted with a French company named Parkeon in 2011 to
install a handful of multispace kiosks requiring drivers to walk up the
block to pay for their parking. Those units didnt test well, Richard
said.
Part
of the challenge was youd have to traipse halfway down the block and
climb into a snow bank to pay for your parking, Richard said.
Single-space
units proved more popular. Duncan won a bidding war to supply Spokane
with new meters, releasing a model that will cost the city $800 for each
machine, making the total cost around $640,000, according to the city.
Duncan provides parking services for Atlanta and Houston, among other
cities.
The
installation will occur in two phases. Parking crews have already
removed about 100 credit card meters from downtown streets and will
replace them with Duncan machines in the next few weeks. In September,
another 700 meters will be installed in the core of downtown, an area
roughly bounded by Spokane Falls Boulevard, First Avenue and Monroe and
Washington streets.
The
city also hopes to lower the transaction fee charged for paying with a
card, spokeswoman Julie Happy said. The city charges 30 cents now but
hopes to reduce that figure to around 10 cents in the near future.
Richard
said the new meters represent a first step in improving the parking
experience in downtown. In November, the city rebranded its parking
enforcement department to include conflict resolution training and
hospitality services. Sensors embedded in the new meters will be able to
detect vehicles, allowing the city to collect information on traffic
volume and potentially develop an app that would direct drivers to
vacant spots.We offer advanced technology products and services for customkeychain control.
Some
changes, including allowing drivers to receive alerts on their phones
when their meter has almost expired and pay for 30-minute extensions,
would require cooperation from the city, Richard said. An ordinance
prohibits drivers from plugging meters beyond posted time limits.
The Marines have tried curfews,ST Electronics' howoconcretemixer provides
drivers with a realtime indication of available parking spaces.
drinking restrictions and plain old jawboning to cut down crime and
controversy on Okinawa, a key center of U.S. military power in the
Pacific. Now theyre handing out reminder cards.
The more than 20,We offer advanced technology products and services for customkeychain control.000
Marines stationed in the Pacific region will get wallet-sized cards
that promote core values of honor, courage and commitment, and remind
Marines of the battles fought and price paid by earlier generations.
We
are forward-deployed in the region, and we call this place home, says
Lieut. General Kenneth Glueck, commander of the Okinawa-based III Marine
Expeditionary Force. The card serves as a constant reminder of our
heritage, our traditions and the ideals that have made the corps what it
is today.
Glueck
went on a speaking tour of bases last year after a series of crimes by
U.S. servicemen on Okinawa sparked large-scale protests and led to
curfews and restrictions on alcohol consumptions for Marines and other
U.S. forces. The Marines V-22 Osprey also has been the target of
protests over noise and safety concerns.
Gang
members will crowd customers withdrawing cash to read their four-digit
PIN, then distract them to steal the card. In some cases they install a
simple metal sleeve in the slot which means the card is not returned to
the user.
Someone reads the PIN over the victims shoulder and then, when they have moved away, retrieves the card.Online shopping for cableties from
a great selection of Clothing. Once the thieves have the card and PIN
they can go on a shopping spree or use a hole in the wall machine to
empty their victims account.
Pensioner
Jacqueline Fletcher was watched by two thieves while she withdrew cash
from an ATM outside her local supermarket in Bletchley, Buckinghamshire.
When
the 80-year-old emerged from the shop, one of the men asked her for
change and stole her bank card while pretending to help her with her
purse.
It
frightened me and it gutted me to think that Id been stupid enough and
that theyd been attacking vulnerable people, young or old, she said.
Last
month a woman in Cheltenham had her cards stolen in a supermarket car
park as she was distracted by a man asking for directions. She believes
the criminals, who siphoned 1,We rounded up 30 bridesmaids dresses in
every color and style that are both easy on the eye and somewhat easy on
the tooling.000 from her account, spotted her using her PIN at a store till.
Meanwhile,
victims are finding it increasingly difficult to get their stolen cash
refunded. A number of banks have introduced rules which means they can
deny a refund if they believe the customer has failed to protect their
PIN and card.
The
theft figures were revealed by Financial Fraud Action, which is
responsible for tackling plastic card fraud on behalf of banks. Chip and
PIN cards were introduced by the industry in 2005 with the aim of
reducing fraud.
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