PEI

Bar owner concerned Charlottetown parking ban may deter business

Charlottetown bar owner Steve Barber is worried extending the city's overnight parking ban will discourage people from coming downtown.

'We don't want to scare people into not coming downtown'

Snow plow on Charlottetown street.
A proposal to start enforcing an overnight winter parking ban at 11 p.m. instead of 1 a.m. has bar owner Steve Barber concerned people won't come downtown for fear of being ticketed or towed. (Brian Higgins/CBC)

Charlottetown bar owner Steve Barber is worried extending the city's overnight parking ban will discourage people from coming downtown.

A proposed change to the bylaw this year will mean the on-street parking ban will be in effect starting at 11 p.m., rather than 1 a.m.

"The sore spot would be 11 to 1," Barber said. "It's going to deter somebody from saying ... let's go downtown and have a couple nachoes and a pint, boys?"

Barber owns three bars at the corner of Kent and Prince Streets — Hunter's Alehouse, The Factory Cookhouse and Dance Hall, and the Charlottetown Beer Garden, as well as John Brown Richmond Street Grille. 

He worries customers will choose establishments on the city outskirts that have parking lots.

"We don't want to scare people into not coming downtown," Barber said. 

Open parkades?

Public works crews have come into Barber's bars in the past to warn customers to get their cars off the street before the plows arrive.

Barber thinks the city could offer free parking in its parkades on nights the streets require plowing. (Stephanie Kelly/ CBC)

The councillor in charge of public works, Terry Bernard, said that will continue happening but that plows likely won't reach the downtown until 1 a.m. even with the change.

Barber thinks a good solution — one that might also discourage people from drinking and driving — would be to offer free overnight parking at city parkades on nights the ban is in effect. 

The city is exploring that option, an official said. 

The bylaw amendment still has to pass third reading in January before coming into effect. Charlottetown Mayor Clifford Lee has also expressed concern that the extended hours will alienate residents.