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Columbus will resume removing abandoned, inoperable vehicles March 1

If your vehicle is parked on a Columbus street and you haven t started it in a while, this might be a good time. On March 1, the city of Columbus will resume towing vehicles left on public streets for more than three days, after pausing enforcement of those violations last March due to COVID lockdowns and quarantines. The city initially intends to prioritize the most egregious violations, like vehicles that have been left on the public right-of-way unmoved for months, including those appearing to be inoperable or abandoned. From January to October last year, the city received 6,336 complaints about inoperable and/or abandoned vehicles left parked on Columbus streets, the most recent figure available, said Debbie Briner, spokeswoman with the city Department of Public Service.

ParkMobile Launches Major Enhancements to the Popular ParkColumbus Mobile and Web Apps

ParkMobile Launches Major Enhancements to the Popular ParkColumbus Mobile and Web Apps Users of the ParkColumbus App Will Now Be Able to See Open On-Street Parking Spaces around the City Monday, January 18, 2021 10:36 AM ParkMobile, the leading provider of smart parking and mobility solutions in North America, announced significant enhancements to the popular ParkColumbus mobile and web apps. This update, powered by Smart Columbus, includes the innovative new “parking availability” feature displaying open parking spaces around the city and a new mobile web version of the app. The new parking availability feature in the ParkColumbus mobile app displays pins on the map with colors to indicate the likelihood that a space is open. Green pins show that a space is likely available, while orange and red pins indicate a space is less likely to be available. This prediction is based on

Marked parallel-parking spots in German Village deemed success; Columbus will expand initiative in 2021

ThisWeek group A pilot parking initiative went so well in German Village that the city of Columbus plans to expand the effort in 2021. When the weather warms up this spring, the city will paint South High Street between East Livingston Avenue and Kossuth Street with T-shaped markings designating parallel-parking spots, said Robert Ferrin, assistant director of parking services with the city. The pilot initiative, which took place from Aug. 2 to Sept. 2 on South Third Street in German Village and included the special parking-spot demarcations, largely was deemed a success, Ferrin said. Looking to create more efficiency on the South Third corridor, parking-services workers used special T marks on both sides of the street between Columbus and Kossuth streets and Willow and Sycamore streets for the pilot initiative.

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