COVINGTON, Ky. — Seeking to preserve on-street parking for the small businesses who need it to survive, the City of Covington announced in a news release Wednesday that they will begin enforcing parking meters on evenings and Saturdays.


What You Need To Know

  • The City of Covington will begin enforcing parking meters on evenings and Saturdays

  • The change takes effects immediately, but there will be a grace period as the public gets used to the new rules

  • The new hours are 8 a.m. to 9 p.m., Monday through Saturday

  • There will also be an increase in metered rates from $1.10 to $1.50 an hour and an increase of $5 in monthly passes at several public parking garages and surface lots

The long-overdue change brings Covington in line with surrounding cities and is partly in response to complaints from business owners about spots being monopolized by drivers who leave their cars parked throughout the weekend and evening hours.

“As downtown grows and becomes busier, we want to ensure that our businesses have parking for their customers and clients,” City Manager Ken Smith said in the release. “These metered spots are designed for constant turnover. That’s their purpose. If a car is left in a spot every late afternoon or from Friday afternoon until Monday morning, that hurts surrounding businesses.”

The change takes effect immediately, although there will be a grace period—i.e. “courtesy tickets” or warnings—as the public gets used to the new rules and the meters are recalibrated and relabeled. The city will work with merchants near metered parking to find ways to educate their customers.

The new hours are 8 a.m. to 9 p.m., Monday through Saturday. Previously, the meters weren’t enforced on Saturdays and after 5 p.m. on weekdays.

The new enforcement was approved by the Board of Commissioners on Tuesday night as part of a raft of changes related to parking.

According to the release, those changes include “an increase in metered rates from $1.10 to $1.50 an hour, an increase of $5 in monthly passes at several public parking garages and surface lots (which brings most to $55 or $60 a month), language ‘cleanup’ in ordinances to continue refining the authority of the Covington Motor Vehicle Parking Authority and its status of legal owner and manager of parking assets and the hiring of an executive director that will handle administrative duties for the parking authority and help the city take a more strategic and analytical approach to its parking challenges.”

Drivers will still be able to pay with cash at the meters or with the free PassportParking app following the price increases.

Other changes are possible down the road, including the return of parking meters to business areas like the MainStrasse Village and better signage.

The changes were recommended by consultants who undertook a comprehensive analysis of the City’s parking, by the parking authority itself and by city staff working in areas like economic development and public works.

The city is in the process of updating a webpage to reflect the changes and show the locations of the public parking available in Covington.

While small, the fee increases will enable the city to make more robust investments in upgrading its parking, Smith said.

“We definitely need more parking garage space, and we need to upgrade amenities, such as kiosks,” he said. “But you can’t modernize or add facilities and options without revenue, and we’ve been falling behind.”

The perceived lack of parking is an ongoing source of complaints in Covington.

“On-street parking is a commodity, clear and simple,” Smith said. “We have a lot of parking downtown, if you know where to look, but there will never be enough spots along a busy street to accommodate three to four cars per household, plus visitors, plus customers going in and out of stores.”

The city manager called the parking changes “growing pains” as Covington’s economy continues to gain momentum.

“If you have an abundance of parking downtown, that’s a sign of a ‘dead’ city,” he said.