Parking in Squamish is a problem of entitlement, privilege, and sometimes, inconvenience. The District of Squamish (DOS) intends to solve this problem by framing paid parking on our public streets and parking lots as a climate solution that is tourist-based.
This is misleading. Just like the tourist-based no-camping bylaw that targets working locals and visitors (but negatively impacts locals more than tourists), this is paid parking for everyone, tourists and locals alike. A cash grab aimed to profit off others while pricing certain people out, furthering the class divide and the commodification and privatization of public lands.
Increasing the cost of car ownership before alternatives are in place is a regressive approach, as it hurts those who rely on street parking and who are financially struggling while leaving the wealthy and their private parkades unscathed.
Ironically, Squamish vehicle residents have been asking for a paid permit system for years, yet the DOS rejected this idea. In the end, its about who is seen as more valuable and desirable, isnt it?
It is time the DOS address the realities of class and the colonial idea that land is a commodity to be used for highest value. Instead of further privatizing public land, focusing on practical mobility alternatives (more buses, bike lanes, a one-stop paid parkade, etc.), may be a better idea.
If paid parking proceeds, a project that will cost tax-payers $600,000-plus to implement and will result in locals having to pay to use the adventure centre and Smoke Bluffs parking lots, its time to think about future council candidates who care more about people than helping private parking corporations profit off public land.
We must also consider democracy and what that really means. I am referring to Squamish councils approval of a motion to prioritize the implementation of a paid-parking pilot, despite the fact that the survey is not yet complete. Like all DOS surveys, theres no box to check no, leaving no way to show quantitative objection, but in the comments. I will not be surprised that even if survey data shows that the public doesnt want this, they will proceed regardless in their patronizing we know better way.
Squamish is not Whistler, and Im sure many do not desire it to be so. Please say NO to paid parking.
Thomasina Pidgeon
Squamish