The city's Department of Planning and Permitting says it needs to review the measure after complaints from property owners about potentially disastrous effects on businesses.
Since World War
II, American cities have been built for cars, with garages and pavement dominating the landscape. Economist Donald Shoup has spent his career arguing that it doesn’t have to be this way.
In a live online event hosted by the University of Hawaiʻi Better Tomorrow Speaker Series, Shoup will explain how simple fixes to parking policies, such as charging fair market prices for on-street parking and removing off-street parking requirements, can reduce housing costs, bolster public transportation, decrease carbon output, advance social justice, and generally make cities more enjoyable places to live and work.
Donald Shoup