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Give Me A Signby Eli George |
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James Flynn has left a note for you in front of his Tracy Street home: No Parking
James Flynn has a history with this city. A mail carrier for 30 years, he’s owned and rented the three-unit house at 30 Tracy Street for 27 years. Seven years ago, he left his home in the country and moved into 30 Tracy Street himself. Since then, he has fought for parking in front of his house, a struggle that culminated in a sign.
After fighting for years to get some kind of permission from someone in City Hall to allow him to park in front of his home, Flynn eventually erected a sign of his own creation. The sign states: “These 3 Homes of Italianate Style 24, 30, and 32 Tracy Street, are historic homes, built in the Mid 1800’s, they have been preserved and maintained by the present owners. Please do not park here. This side of the street is reserved for the owners and occupants. Thank you.”
With a restaurant opening around the corner, an apartment building across the street, the new M&T building right around the corner, and a commercial building on the same block, there is a tight competition for parking spots. The street used to have parking meters used to be on the street, but they were removed, which Flynn thinks was a mistake. “I’m entitled to be here and I live here 24 hours, not just eight,” he says. “The business is pushing us out of our homes. I spend the afternoon looking out the window to see if I got a parking space.”
Early in 2005, Flynn appeared before the Council to make a case for special parking privileges. Certain councilmembers—namely Bonnie Russell, Brian Davis, and Michael Kearns—were sympathetic, according to Flynn. “The facts were so overwhelming,” Flynn says. “You give a guy a home, he puts $100,000 into it, and now he can’t get to it.”
Trying to find out who gave Flynn permission to erect a sign was a daunting task. Not surprisingly, every person he came in contact with seemed to recall him vividly, even though they’d met him more than three years ago. Flynn says Councilmember Bonnie Russell “took him by the hand” to the director of parking because she felt so strongly about his predicament. Russell says, “I remember him well. He tried to get privatized parking or something. I know he raised hell about it. He went to the mayor’s office and everything. The only thing I did was get him an appointment with Lenny Sciolino [the city’s director of parking enforcement]. I don’t touch anything in anyone else’s district. I let the councilmember handle that.”
Flynn says that Councilmember Kearns spoke up when his item came up during the Council’s meeting on the matter back in 2005. Flynn says that Kearns talked about parking problems by Mercy Hospital and felt that he could relate to Flynn’s problem.
“I probably did say what I said,” says Kearns. “It’s true we still have parking problems. Everyone’s fighting for a parking spot.” Kearns says that with Trocaire College, Mercy Hospital, and a grammar school so close to one another, parking can be scarce. But Kearns adds, “I don’t think he [Flynn] did get permission.”
Flynn’s district councilmember is Brian Davis, who Flynn described as “spearheading” the initiative to get something done. Davis says, “I recall this vividly. He came and requested from the Common Council residential parking. They were still looking at options at that time.”
Leonard Sciolino, director for the division of parking, also remembers Flynn. Sciolino says he remembers trying to help Flynn gain some kind of release for his parking situation, especially since Flynn and his wife are both handicapped and in their mid 60s. “I would make sure the parking enforcement officers would know Mr. Flynn lived there,” Sciolino says. “I knew he wanted to put a handicap parking meter there, but I can’t do that.” Even if he had, it would not have helped Flynn, since any handicap person would be able to use it. “I understand where he’s coming from,” Sciolino says, but adds, “For him to tell people they can’t park there, I can’t see that. That doesn’t make sense.”
A sign on a sidewalk is a matter for the Department of Public Works. Michael Murphy, an assistant engineer with the department, says, “I don’t recall getting Council approval. We would need to approve the overall location.” Murphy explains that when a sign is located in the right-of-way, it may need to be insured in case someone trips over it. Eric Schmarder, another assistant engineer, says, “Well, they probably have some sort of permission to put the sign up, but as for the verbiage of the sign, I don’t know where they would get permission for that. It’s not a legal sign as far as a regulatory sign.”
At first Flynn insisted that the Council approved his sign. Eventually he allowed that really he just kept complaining to different departments in City Hall. He has complained to the Planning Board, for example, because it continues to okay buildings in his neighborhood that have too few parking spaces available. “You have to come in with an equation that fits,” says Flynn.
Eventually, Flynn ended up on the third floor of City Hall, home to the Department of Economic Development, Permit and Inspection Services. He says, “I was sitting on the third floor in City Hall; a guy come up to me and asked, ‘What’s your problem?’ And I told him, and that’s when we come up with the idea of the sign.”
Flynn only knew the guy who helped him by the name of “Doc.” Luckily, David Granville, assistant to the department’s commissioner, remembers the guy Flynn is talking about. “He was here as a volunteer,” Granville says. “When he was here, he would answer the phone, that kind of thing. What I think he did is he saw this man who was trying to give recognition to this property. I even said it couldn’t be a permanent sign unless the Council approves it and it can’t be in the right-of-way unless the Council approves it. ‘Please do not park here’ is not a sentence that I would say got approval.”
“Doc” is Anthony Gensicki. Gensicki lives on the East Side, volunteers at Saint Luke’s, and volunteered at the Department of Economic Development, Permit and Inspection Services for about a year. He stopped volunteering when a job opening came up in the department and he didn’t get it, due to his lack of computer literacy. He got involved with the department to begin with when he’d come in to try to get some derelict buildings in his neighborhood knocked down. Gensicki says he was asked to volunteer, and that his main tasks were running errands and answering phones. However, he acknowledges he did more than that to help Flynn when he saw him sitting there in the hall.
“He didn’t know where to go,” says Gensicki. “He was about at wits’ ends. I listened to him and I got pretty involved with what he was doing. We went through the whole thing. We went through all the city channels. Finally I said, ‘Heck with this. There’s somebody who lives here.’ Councilmembers can agree with him, but no one wants to take a chance. Everyone ignored him.”
Gensicki and Flynn tried the Preservation Board, which gave them the history of the homes but, of course, was unable to give Flynn a parking spot. After all avenues had been attempted, Gensicki and Flynn went to a sign company on Elmwood after spending hours coming up with what the sign should say. After the sign was made, Flynn put up stones around it, and filled in the area around the stones with dirt so that the sign could not be yanked out. “Jim was the one who built the little foundation around it,” Gensicki says. “I think it’s pretty. It fits right in.”
The sign, for all its good intentions, may not be legal. Granville says, “I would say if someone complained about this…that he could be required to remove it.”
Though Buffalo Police Chief Donna Berry of the B District, in which Flynn lives, say that there have been no complaints about the sign, there have been complaints as recently as March 25, 2008, for a blocked driveway.
Turns out Flynn’s home has a narrow, gated driveway attached to it—one Flynn has trouble using because he and his wife are handicapped, not to mention that it blocks an entrance to another apartment in the home. However, Flynn says he does use it on occasion while waiting for parking on the street to open, and that he does not hesitate to call police to ticket a car that may block it unknowingly.
“They didn’t have driveways back then [when the homes were built],” Gensicki explains. “There were no cars. Space between houses—that’s not a driveway.”
Though odds are Flynn’s sign will be removed, it raises the serious issue of parking availability in the city. Flynn argues that he pays city taxes and deserves a spot in the vicinity of his home. The people who prevent him from parking nearby generally drive in from the suburbs every day, do not pay city taxes, and park for free all day long, preventing Flynn from using his home comfortably.
Flynn cares about his street. He lamented over a beer can and small liquor bottle on the sidewalk, saying that he had cleaned the yard hours ago only to come out on his porch and discover this more recent trash in front of his home.
Does a man like Flynn deserve a parking spot? Can the city do anything about it or will Flynn’s own attempt to alleviate his parking situation be torn down?
Flynn says many do not listen to the sign’s plea anyway. “It’s something you got to do and hope for common sense.”
Reader Comments
Paul 19 Jun 2008, 17:17
Ummm, ok, park a couple blocks away and walk. It's a city, not the
suburbs. Stop complaining that people need to park to go to nearby
businesses, isn't that what Buffalo wants anyway? Mr Flynn has to get used
to the idea that he is not entitled to a spot in front of his house, it is
a public property - that's simply the way it is.
StreetWise 19 Jun 2008, 18:20
I don't have too much sympathy for a person who owns a house for 20 plus
years as a landlord, then lives in it for 7 years and suddenly decided he
wants a personal street parking spot, despite having a driveway. The
attempt to get a handicaped spot in front of his house is creative, but the
involvement of elected officials in this mess is patronage politics at the
worst. The sign should come down, it is an attempt to intimidate legal
parkers. Sorry dude, but it seems like you need to invest in some driveway renovations on your property. Or build a gagage. Or work it out with the renters, neighbors. You can apply for a variance to build the garage/driveway.
Slow News Week? 19 Jun 2008, 21:29
Was this a serious article? On and on and on about a parking? Reads almost like something from The Onion. http://www.theonion.com/content/node/47214 Man's Streak Of Getting Great Parking Spot Ends At 37 April 12, 2006 | Issue 42•15 CHICAGO, IL—Self-described "Michael Jordan Of Parking" Tim Llewelyn saw his personal record of consecutive "awesome" parking places end Monday at 37, sources close to the junior accounts manager said. "He had a damn good run," said coworker John Billups, who was in Llewelyn's 1999 Toyota Camry when he spent an hour fruitlessly circling the Hyde Park area. "In fact, were it not for all the road work near the [University Of Chicago] campus, he might've made it to 40." As of press time, Llewelyn's streak of parallel-parking attempts without making bumper contact stood at six.
Unca Bobbo 21 Jun 2008, 08:45
I have to go along with "Streetwise"...you knew the parking situation when
you purchased the house. What about the renters..they are paying the rent,
no? The businesses are paying their taxes, no? I am the only one on my
street with a driveway...and a garage. I wouldn't have bought this place
if I had no parking. The other owners and renters on the street have to
get lucky to get a spot. That is kind of obvious when you look at the
houses...no driveway...no parking.
Snarkus 21 Jun 2008, 21:25
Downtown workers gobbling up all of the sidestreet parking spots is a
serious problem for the West Village neighborhood. Many larger cities institute a system of resident-only parking permits during business hours in densely populated neighborhoods near daytime activity nodes like downtowns. Telling this guy to suck it up and park 3 blocks away may sound easy to you, but this is Buffalo, a spread out city with shitty mass transit that forces many residents the need to drive to go shopping, visit friends and commute to work. (if not downtown). Having resident-only permits during workday hours would actually help this neighborhood out a lot. It'd make it more attractive to pioneers to move in and fix up the houses and transform this neighborhood into something much nicer than it currently is. The West Village could use some gentrification.
StreetWise
22 Jun 2008, 11:12
No problem here with resident only parking. Other cities have residents buy
parking permits. Of course, Buffalo would have to create a system so
nonresidents could not use a lookhole to buy a permit (I can already
imagine city and county workers using fake addresses or political
connections to buy them. Maybe residents should petition the city or county to put a referendum on the ballot to create such a system. Maybe the common council could just create a ballot initiative process so people could get these things done. :) Residential parking by permit only, that is so obvious. That would fix the problem for everyone. That said, the guy still needs to take his sign down. Leave a Comment:
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