Anonymous wrote:UMD issued me a parking ticket 15 years ago. Other than that one trip, I am never on the College Park campus. I ignored the ticket and there was no follow-up from the University’s PD.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I dropped off my daughter for a Georgetown University high school program last week and it was a complete chaotic mess -- people were parking everywhere to unload bags, no signage, no staff to ask questions, long lines of cars.
I parked my car at a curb that seemed out of the way, went to drop her off with bags, and returned to find a $250 ticket on the window!!
Do I have to pay this? It says if I don't, my vehicle registration may be flagged by the DMV and my registration could be blocked from being renewed. Seems bogus.
Thanks for input from anyone who's had this experience! It seems outrageously out of line with a normal parking citation fee.
Seems like waiting in those long lines of cars might have been the way to avoid a ticket!
Appeal the ticket if you don’t think it was issued correctly/fairly. But I would not just ignore it. I work at Georgetown; believe me when I tell you that they will chase down some pretty ticky-tack stuff. You don’t want to get caught up with a collection agency.
Anonymous wrote:I pay my tickets in all instances, whether in my home state or elsewhere. $250 fine for a university infraction is outrageous and no way would I pay it. I probably would, however, contact the program or the university and ask them drop it or lower it. But $250, no.[/quote
+1
Anonymous wrote:I also dropped off a child last Sunday for the high school program. Unlike you, I simply waited in the line, following the entrance, instructions provided, and dropped off our daughter without incident. I then found a public parking space, paid the meter, fee, and walked back to meet our daughter to say goodbye, and ensure she was doing well. It was not hard, specific instructions were provided, And, no, you are not special in your desire to avoid paying fees for violations that were clearly flagged in advance.
Anonymous wrote:DC should take it back in university property that isn't bolted down.
Anonymous wrote:I dropped off my daughter for a Georgetown University high school program last week and it was a complete chaotic mess -- people were parking everywhere to unload bags, no signage, no staff to ask questions, long lines of cars.
I parked my car at a curb that seemed out of the way, went to drop her off with bags, and returned to find a $250 ticket on the window!!
Do I have to pay this? It says if I don't, my vehicle registration may be flagged by the DMV and my registration could be blocked from being renewed. Seems bogus.
Thanks for input from anyone who's had this experience! It seems outrageously out of line with a normal parking citation fee.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Feel free not to pay it if for some reason you think you shouldn't have to, but for what it's worth, they will probably send you to their contracted collection agency, which will likely keep coming after you:
"Citations unpaid after 30 days from the date of issue will be forwarded to the University’s ticket control agent, Data Ticket Corporation, for processing. Citation information forwarded to Data Ticket is subject to additional late fees assessed by Data Ticket acting as the University’s agent in the collection of outstanding citations due the University. The right to appeal is waived after failure to pay or request an appeal within 10 days from the date of issuance and applies for outstanding citation information submitted to Data Ticket."
You can always appeal and still not pay. Let their agency sue to enforce the debt if they want to. If they did do that, I'd sue locally over the debt incurred due to their lack of staffing
Anonymous wrote:Feel free not to pay it if for some reason you think you shouldn't have to, but for what it's worth, they will probably send you to their contracted collection agency, which will likely keep coming after you:
"Citations unpaid after 30 days from the date of issue will be forwarded to the University’s ticket control agent, Data Ticket Corporation, for processing. Citation information forwarded to Data Ticket is subject to additional late fees assessed by Data Ticket acting as the University’s agent in the collection of outstanding citations due the University. The right to appeal is waived after failure to pay or request an appeal within 10 days from the date of issuance and applies for outstanding citation information submitted to Data Ticket."
Anonymous wrote:I parked illegally and got a ticket. Do I need to pay it?
No snowflake, you're special, you get to ignore it.
JFC, yes you pay it.