TL:DR
Chicago’s struggle to reclaim its streets from a 75-year private parking lease has morphed into a what-not-to-do case study for city planners across the U.S. While the deal originally provided a $1.2 billion “quick fix” for a 2008 budget crisis, Mayor Brandon Johnson told Straight Arrow News that the cost to buy back the meters now is “far too high.”
Experts told SAN that the situation serves as a high-stakes warning for other cash-strapped cities: An upfront cash infusion today could result in a loss of local control and revenue that can last for generations.
City officials have been forced to retreat from plans to buy out the lease for the parking meters it sold nearly two decades ago. The lost revenue and increasing ticket prices for Chicagoans has made the deal, set to expire in 2083, burdensome to residents.
The meters went up for a bid last summer, and multiple bidders, including the city, were interested. But Johnson told SAN that the city decided against it due to the cost.
“The final purchase price is far too high, much more than we initially received for the sale and higher than most reasonable assumptions would support,” Johnson said.
Why did Chicago sell off its parking meter revenue?Why did Chicago sell off its parking meter revenue?
Under Richard M. Daley in 2008, the city inked a deal with a private company, Chicago Parking Meters, LLC, in which the company paid $1.2 billion upfront for 75 years worth of parking revenue. According to the Chicago Sun-Times, the investors recouped their investment by 2022 and have since turned a profit.
The city is now facing a $1.2 billion budget shortfall for the 2026 fiscal year, with a $146 million deficit that must be filled by the end of the year. A city-commissioned audit commissioned indicates that the parking meters generated $160.9 million in income for the parking meter owners in 2024.
Chicago Parking Meters, LLC — operating as ParkChicago — is a partnership consisting of Morgan Stanley, Allianz Capital Partners and the Sovereign Wealth Fund of Abu Dhabi. In addition to plugging holes in the budget, the 2008 deal was also prevented a rate hike on Chicago’s historically high property taxes.
Chicago resident Kyle Cotsones told SAN he is both frustrated and angry about the long-term damage caused by the deal.
“This is like having our own land sold out from under us,” he told SAN. He added that the city is staring down “75 years of money that could be put back into our own communities.”
Alderman Scott Waguespack — one of five votes against the 2008 parking meter deal — told SAN the deal has panned out even worse than he anticipated.
“This was the worst deal of the century for any [American] municipality. It locks the city into a lease for several lifetimes that nobody can break,” said Waguespack, the only naysayer from 2008 who is still in office.
Waguespack’s ward, which consists of upper-middle class neighborhoods like Wicker Park on the west side of the city,has seen parking meter rates increase from $0.25 an hour to $4.25, he said. Now, an hour of downtown parking can cost $7.The city has the highest parking fees in the country and second highest in the world only behind Amsterdam.
As meter costs rise, so does the amount of meters in previously free areas. As many as 400 meters were installed in the West Loop in 2024 alone, with more planned throughout the city.
Justin Marlowe, a public policy professor at the University of Chicago, told SAN that while privatization deals can allow a government to leverage private sector expertise and save money over time, the city’s deal was far too costly and put Chicago at a massive disadvantage.
A lasting legacyA lasting legacy
“I think it’s fair to say the Daley administration did not understand what they were giving up. There was no good benchmark for these types of deals, and they really didn’t have any leverage in the negotiation,” Marlowe said. “The investor group knew the city was desperate to take down the upfront payment and leveraged that to full effect.”
Cotsones said he’d like to see the city remove meters, or simply stop enforcing them. But that would be legally damaging: According to the deal, Chicago must compensate the parking meter company for lost revenue if metered spaces are removed or rendered unusable, due to street construction, bike lanes, bus lanes, festivals or for other public uses.
Attempts to break up the deal in court have also fallen short, with the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit striking down an antitrust challenge in 2023. Last year, the city settled a lawsuit with Chicago Parking Meters, LLC over its lack of parking meter enforcement during the pandemic.
In addition to the parking tickets, red light and speeding cameras — which issue tickets to motorists going even 6 miles over the speed limit — also generate a high number of tickets and frustration. In recent years, Chicago issued more tickets to drivers than there were people living there.
And those tickets aren’t always distributed equitably. Black and Latino motorists are far more likely to be issued fines for traffic lights, parking meter enforcement, vehicle booting and traffic stops, even in white areas of the city.
“I’m very fortunate to be more than gainfully employed, but I can’t imagine how it affects those in a less fortunate position,” said Cotsones, who pays about $20 a week in parking. “We are giving money away to already rich groups for the privilege of parking on our own streets. This makes no sense.”
Like many Chicagoans, he has a list of stories about friends parking in what they thought was a legal fashion, only to face a steep ticket or three-figure impound fee after being towed.
“It’s not the cost that bothers me,” Cotsones said. “It’s the fact that our streets were sold out from under us and the fees we pay are only enriching the wealthy, and not going towards our city. I feel a moral obligation to be fully against this.”
Public-private partnerships are not inherently bad ideas, Marlow said. They can address numerous fiscal issues such as aging infrastructure, constrained budgets and deliver projects while shifting financial risk to private investors.
“Privatizations like the Chicago parking meters, Chicago Skyway and Indiana Tollway have generally not worked well in the U.S.,” Marlowe said. “That model is much more common in Europe and in other places where those types of public infrastructure have been provided mostly by the private sector.”
My Thoughts 💭My Thoughts 💭
First thing first why did this article have to use blacks and Latinos as some sort of victimized group who gets more tickets than the whites. So annoying when politicians use race for their incompetence.
I remember hearing about this years ago and finding out in 2026 the chickens have come home to roost and now the city of Chicago is recognizing how god awful a deal this is! Plus the wealth extraction that is going to the elites like Morgan Stanley and Abu Dhabi is so fitting!! The fact they aren’t doing enforcement is no surprise. I think they should of completely privatized it and took a small percentage of every transaction then the city and the private sector could have benefited but these monopolies by government decree leads to results like this!
Completely privatizing it would mean allowing that physical space to be used for things other than parking cars, if that's the most highly demanded use.
The reason market prices for streetside parking are so expensive is that it's often an insane use of that space.
Yeah which makes me think parking could be priced out no?
I think it largely would be, which would lead to people naturally adopting alternative forms of transport, instead of subsidizing both parking and its alternatives.
This is a pretty wild story. The bit about new parking meters going up makes me wonder what the deal actually says.