Commission discusses stricter parking enforcement and temporary permits for special events amid East-side complaints

5522104 · August 1, 2025

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Summary

City Manager reported increased complaints about residential parking—semi trailers, multiple cars per home and blocked sidewalks—and commissioners directed staff to examine ordinance changes, temporary permit options and examples from other municipalities.

Boynton Beach commissioners and staff discussed escalating residential parking problems during an agenda-review meeting, with particular emphasis on recurring incidents on the city's East Side. The city manager described photographs and complaints of semi-trailer parking, homes with large numbers of vehicles, and damaged sidewalks that force pedestrians — including schoolchildren — into the roadway.

The discussion focused on possible municipal responses: updating local code to add enforcement ‘teeth,’ creating an online short-term permit for special events, studying caps on the number of vehicles per household, and mirroring policies used by nearby municipalities such as Wellington and Pompano Beach.

City Manager Dan introduced the topic after receiving numerous resident complaints and said staff had reviewed other municipalities’ rules. Commissioners emphasized safety concerns, noting problems with school drop-off and emergency vehicle access when streets are crowded. One commissioner cited visible sidewalk damage and said children were forced into the road because parked cars blocked sidewalks.

Staff discussed options that could be pursued administratively and by ordinance: (1) a graduated enforcement approach with warnings followed by citations and towing when necessary; (2) a simple online, short-duration permit for planned events (for example, a three-day event) to allow extra temporary parking; (3) targeted code updates to prohibit semi-trailer parking in residential neighborhoods; and (4) evaluation of limits tied to dwelling size or driveway capacity that some municipalities use. Commissioners asked staff to study specific legal mechanisms and return with recommended ordinance language and enforcement plans.

No vote was taken. Commissioners directed staff to analyze possible ordinance changes, review Wellington and Pompano Beach practices, and propose an implementation plan that would include warning periods, enforcement steps, and a public-education component. The commission also requested a follow-up on sidewalk repairs where parking regularly forces pedestrians into the street.