What Do Jerry Brown, Steve Jobs And Kamala Harris Have In Common?
By NPR StaffWhat Do Jerry Brown, Steve Jobs And Kamala Harris Have In Common?
By NPR StaffIf you got a parking ticket in the city of San Francisco between 1995 and 2012, you may be owed some money.
The San Francisco Municipal Transportation Agency says it has identified a total of $6.1 million in overpayments — in other words, vehicle owners who sent the government too much money — for some 200,000 tickets.
San Francisco issues 1.5 million tickets a year, Paul Rose, a spokesman with SFMTA, tells NPR’s Robert Siegel.
From now until March 3, people can get their money back. After that, the government will keep the money.
A quick glance at the list reveals that parking citations strike everyone, no matter how rich or powerful.
Among the notable parking scofflaws now owed money:
Kamala D. Harris, California state attorney general and candidate for U.S. Senate: $60
Steve P. Jobs, Apple co-founder (who died in 2011): $174
Peter Thiel, investor and PayPal co-founder: $170
Edmund G. Brown Jr., aka Jerry Brown, governor of California: $33
- NPR received the following response from Brown’s office: “Thanks for the email. Unfortunately, Gov. Brown isn’t available today, but we’ll certainly be checking on the $33 he’s owed.”
Travis Kalanick, CEO of ride-hailing company Uber: $510
- The company told NPR the parking citations must be old: These days, Kalanick avoids parking altogether — he takes an Uber.
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