Oklahoma City, where parking meters began, modernizes system
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The city where parking meters were born more than eight decades ago is phasing out the last of the coin-operated contraptions that reshaped America’s downtowns in favor of the computerized models seen in many other places.
Parking meters came into the picture as the streetcar age gave way to the era of the automobile, remaking urban transportation and the way civic planners and business owners imagined commerce centers for more than three generations. But old-school analog meters have been disappearing, as cities have been investing in the digital ones that take plastic, along with coins.
Wade Beal, a parking meter technician, uses a small crane in the back of his vehicle to remove the can which holds coins from parking meters, in Oklahoma City, October 11, 2017. /AP Photo

Wade Beal, a parking meter technician, uses a small crane in the back of his vehicle to remove the can which holds coins from parking meters, in Oklahoma City, October 11, 2017. /AP Photo

The changing technology has meant Oklahoma City’s parking meters have been operating on borrowed time. Their guts date to the 1960s and 1970s, and many companies that once serviced them have long been out of business.
“The companies just plain and simple don’t support the technology anymore,” says Cory Hubert, Oklahoma City’s parking services manager.
This oil-and-gas hub’s new solar-powered kiosks feature a “pay-by-plate” system, though it will still have some older models through the end of the year.
The mostly hate-hate relationship that motorists have with the parking meter began in 1935, when the first one sprouted here. The collective rage, like most things, worked its way into popular culture.
Wade Beal, a parking meter technician, removes a container of coins from a parking meter into a collection can in Oklahoma City, October 11, 2017. /AP Photo

Wade Beal, a parking meter technician, removes a container of coins from a parking meter into a collection can in Oklahoma City, October 11, 2017. /AP Photo

Paul Newman’s beer-swigging title character in the 1967 movie “Cool Hand Luke” lops the heads off parking meters lining a nearly deserted downtown drag.
“It was an iconic opening scene; it was this act of rebellion,” says Bob Blackburn, executive director of the Oklahoma Historical Society, where the inaugural Park-O-Meter No. 1 is on display. “That director knew that everyone hated parking meters.”
A pain, maybe, but Blackburn said their influence can’t be overstated.
“The parking meter is a perfect example of a pivot point on how people got around in American urban areas,” he said. “It sparked a renaissance in our inner cities.”
Wade Beal, a parking meter technician, inspects a parking meter, in Oklahoma City, October 11, 2017. /AP Photo

Wade Beal, a parking meter technician, inspects a parking meter, in Oklahoma City, October 11, 2017. /AP Photo

As automobiles became more common, downtown traffic jams irked merchants. Store owners complained that most of the cars parked near their storefronts were owned by people who worked downtown, alienating potential customers.
Commerce won out, and the parking meter was born, in part, to keep traffic moving.
Millions of meters began springing up in cities throughout the United States. Cities came to rely on the steady revenue from the meters – and the fines for failing to pay – to pad coffers.
Those fines aren’t going away. Nor are Oklahoma City’s five-meter readers, much to the chagrin of 20-year-old barista Marina Lozano, who says “they’re so ruthless.”
Stay-at-home dad Will Cross reads the directions on a parking pay station in Oklahoma City, October 11, 2017. /AP Photo

Stay-at-home dad Will Cross reads the directions on a parking pay station in Oklahoma City, October 11, 2017. /AP Photo

And not everyone thinks newer is better. Stay-at-home dad Will Cross was hunched over one of the new units on a recent afternoon, trying to find out where his ticket was before the machine finally spit one out.
“I like the older ones better,” Cross said. “A lot of people don’t understand the computers. I’m 48 and I don’t understand it.”
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Source(s): AP