Downtown Parking
It should not go without saying that we are dealing here with a problem that many cities would like to have -- and this city is now happy to have -- which is a greater demand for parking than the currently shrinking supply. This is a problem of success, including the changeover in new businesses, new infill development, and exciting projects like Trader Joe's, Cultural Arts Village and the Museum expansion, to name three in the immediate vicinity.
We would not be sitting here with this problem if we were committed to the traditional way of dealing with parking. Under the old way of doing it, if you opened a new business or a new cultural facility, you had to supply all your own parking. Under that approach, the proposed Cultural Arts Village would not happen, Trader Joes would not happen, nor would the Museum expansion. All three of them are expecting to have the problem of parking solved under the new way of doing business. That’s what we call the “park-once” strategy where we maximize efficiency by sharing all the parking – the structure parking, the surface and the street parking whether it’s public parking or private parking. Instead of someone putting a chain link lock across their parking lot when they aren’t using it, we assume that parking has value and it should be shared.
The difficulty is that once we move to this new way of looking at parking as a shared resource that we ought to manage and maximize, everyone says, “Oh, this is great! I’ll be the first beneficiary of this new system and my problem is now solved, because ‘the city’ will provide the parking.”
Clearly we can’t go from the old way of doing business, which all parking was the responsibility of the business or institution to the new way and have the taxpayers of the City of Ventura be on the hook to pay for that solution.
The only way we get to the new way is by having everyone who is a beneficiary of the new system contribute to the success of the new system. That is going to require more from everyone than just pointing across the street saying, “Gosh, I’m in great need of parking, so I sure don’t want my neighbor to take away any of the parking I am expecting he will continue to provide -- at city expense.”
So, we are probably going to have to make some tough choices. We’re also probably going to have to pay for those choices, but not out of the taxpayer dollar, instead out of a long-term, paid parking management strategy. That is what we are bringing you on March 19, in the form a new Downtown Specific Plan. That includes not only a plan for a “park-once” method where we maximize public and private parking through a shared arrangement, but also a long term investment in adding to the parking supply. Adding to it is going to mean we’re going to have to make choices about where we allow new retail, commercial and residential development and where we have to sacrifice some of those development opportunities for parking to serve the entire area.
I want to emphasize that the key is making sure this is equitable. It is not fair for people to say, “I want to develop my property to the maximum and have somebody else provide the parking.” Everyone is going to have to contribute in some meaningful way to making these trade offs work. If everyone pushes the parking off on to the next block over, we’ll have no place left for people to park except the fairgrounds at Seaside Park. If that happens, I guess everyone will have to park down there and walk or maybe bike to Downtown.
So, if it is going to work it has to be equitable. Now, on March 19 we will also be bringing to you three actions to implement the Downtown Plan if you approve it. Number one, we are going to recommend someone to immediately begin working on implementing the park-once parking management strategy. Number two, we will recommend updating the parking demand study. That’s not because we need another study, since everyone knows we need more parking, both to replace what is being lost as well as to meet the growing demand. But we do need a much more precise baseline so we can equitably apportion the burdens and responsibility for providing the needed parking for both today’s usage and tomorrow’s demand. Number three, we will recommend that we set aside redevelopment funds for the acquisition and feasibility engineering of one or more public parking structures in the area we are talking about right now. There certainly needs to be at least one and probably more than one. “Public” may not mean city-owned, but it needs to be publicly accessible. It could be a public/private partnership.
We will be bringing those to you because we think the issue of parking is serious, and the opportunity is there. If we’re prepared to make the transition from the old model -- which would not allow any of these exciting new opportunities to happen -- to the new model, which would allow those things to happen, we need to pass that new model on March 19, including serious implementation steps to make sure those things come to pass. Certainly if we allow surface parking lots in the downtown area to be developed, whether it’s for office, residential, or retail, we are going to have to find a way to replace that parking. That means structured parking that’s convenient to the new and rising demand for parking in our downtown.
I apologize for the length of my answer but given the importance placed upon this issue, it is important to clearly describe our perspective. Having a parking problem is actually a great opportunity, but we have to rise to that opportunity and create solutions.




