Jun 30th, 2010, 15:35 | #1 |
Senior Member
注册日期: Jul 2004
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公寓房客停在公寓的visitor parking的票如何处理
就停了10分钟回家放东西,下来就看到吃了一张停车单子。 谢谢 |
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Jun 30th, 2010, 21:03 | 只看该作者 #6 |
Senior Member
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Due to the enormous number of tickets issued every year, and the number of people who seek to challenge those tickets, the Courts cannot possibly provide enough timely trial dates in response to all the people seeking one. As a result, people who have chosen to challenge their parking tickets have been waiting years for their trial date.
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Jun 30th, 2010, 21:06 | 只看该作者 #7 |
Senior Member
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The official name for a parking ticket is a “Parking Infraction Notice” issued by the City of Toronto. This tickets (thin waxy paper) are spit out from a hand held computer unit (once all of the information has been entered) and are canary yellow in colour. These tickets are approximately 20 centimetres long and are 7.5 centimetres in width and paper thin.
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Jun 30th, 2010, 21:09 | 只看该作者 #8 |
Senior Member
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At the very bottom there is a “Notice”: this notice informs you to pay your ticket, within 15 calender days of the “infraction date” (in this case the so-called “infraction date was July 17, 2006 – 15 days later – August 1, 2006) or to choose to another option by August 1, 2006 (deliver a Notice of Intention to Appear ; in court and seek a trial). The notice goes on to state that if you do not pay your fine or if you do not appear in court for trial that you will be deemed not to dispute this charge (violation of Code No. 29) and a conviction may be entered against you (they will have a trial in absentia and you will be convicted in absentia). It further states that “upon conviction, you will be required to pay the set fine ($30.00) plus court costs. An administrative fee is payable if the fine goes into default (you don’t pay it) and the information may be provided to a credit bureau. You must attend one of the addresses (Parking Tag Operations – 4 locations Downtown, East, West or North) on the reverse to request a trial or discuss this Notice (the ticket). Go Mon-Fri. during the hours between 8:30 am. to 4:30 p.m., they are not open on Saturday, Sunday, Statutory Holidays or Civic Holidays. The four locations in Toronto in which you can bring your ticket, to request a trial which will most likely never be scheduled and will never take place: Parking Tag Operations - Central 55 John Street (John south of King) 3rd Floor, Metro Hall, Toronto, Ontario Hours of operation: Monday to Friday: 8:30 a.m. – 4:30 p.m. Parking Tag Operations – East 1530 Markham Road Main Floor, Scarborough, Ontario Hours of operation: Monday to Friday: 8:30 a.m. – 4:30 p.m. Parking Tag Operations – West York Civic Centre, 2700 Eglinton Avenue West Main Floor, York, Ontario Hours of operation: Monday to Friday: 8:30 a.m. – 4:30 p.m. Parking Tag Operations – North North York Civic Centre, 5100 Yonge Street Ground Floor, North York, Ontario Hours of operation: Monday to Friday: 8:30 a.m. – 4:30 pm |
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Jun 30th, 2010, 21:10 | 只看该作者 #9 |
Senior Member
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The Best Option: Attend one of the four locations (North, Central, East or West – the most convenient one for you) and indicate that you want to proceed to trial. Fill out the “Notice of Intention to Appear” indicating that you want a trial and will be challenging the Officer’s evidence (we will talk about disclosure” later and why it is very important that you always challenge the Officer’s evidence in any trial). Also ensure that you indicate what language you want your trial to be held in, if it is other than English (this is your right under section 14 of the Charter). Upon filling this out and providing it to the clerk at one of the four Parking Tag Operation’s offices, you will be told that you will be receiving a “Notice of Trial” in the mail. The City of Toronto has stopped issuing trial dates for $30 parking tickets. Anyone who gets one can still request a date for trial to contest the parking ticket – and will be told a trial date will be coming in the mail – but the letter never arrives and no conviction is registered. The city figured out it’s far less costly to give people who have received tickets the impression that that will eventually have their case heard in court and to offer the option of having a trial, then just forget about it and to have to actually administer justice. If you receive a parking ticket, you must request a trial in order to have the parking ticket thrown out; if you ignore it, you will be convicted in absentia and will receive an even bigger bill in the mail. All trials for parking tickets issued in Toronto are heard at one of the nine (9) Court Rooms located 1530 Markham Road, Ground Floor (on Markham Road, north of Highway 401)(also known as the “Highway of Heroes”). |
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