Tuition and textbook prices
are going up, so it only seems
fitting that the price of parking
may also about to go up in the
near future.
EC Police Chief Mike Trevis
proposed an increase in price to
the daily parking permits and
parking violation tickets on Feb.
14 to the Associated Students
Organization Senate (ASO).
“They (parking prices)
haven’t really kept pace with the
price of inflation or similarly
the cost of doing business,” Dillan
Horton, vice president of the
ASO, said.
The proposition would increase
the price of daily parking
permits from $2 to $3 and the
price of parking tickets from $38
to $43.
Prices for parking and parking
citations were originally set
over 15 years ago, but EC has
not kept up with inflation since.
“The parking fines and tickets
go to public safety, keeping up
with the police polls and maintenance
of different safety features
across campus,” Horton said.
The majority of the revenue
that comes from parking permits
and citations goes toward public
safety as well as the refurbishment
of parking lots and signs.
“In an effort to get new revenue,
the state enacted a law
which they get a percentage of
all the parking fines for any local
agency. That can be any sheriff’s
office, any police office, and of
course campus police,” Horton
said.
In the past two years, the state
of California passed a Senate bill
which states that any agency that
issues parking tickets must give
the state $9.50 of the total ticket
price, Horton added.
That amount required by the
state is significant and could be
a factor in why fees are added.
Parking tickets at EC are $38,
however the school only receives
$28.50 for each ticket issued,
Horton said.
“That’s created additional
cost on to the normal amount
that they would take in,” he said.
As for the parking permits,
Trevis said that there were
225,000 daily permits sold last
year, totaling $450,000 and that
adding a dollar to this price
would significantly raise more
revenue.
Cost of maintenance for permit
machines is very expensive
and the extra dollar would benefit
the upkeep for the parking
lots greatly, he said.
EC is also hoping this will
encourage students to purchase
the semester parking permits in
order to save money, Trevis said.
The bulk of those who purchase
daily permits are those
who come to attend concerts,
sporting events or handle a single
transaction, not everyday
students, Trevis added.
Trevis must now take his proposal
to more bodies before going
before the board again and is
hoping this change will take effect
in the fall of 2013.
“From his (Trevis) explanation
these prices are