Do I have to pay a parking ticket if the police have not entered it? Recently while I had visitors borrowing my car they got a ticket in town. They tried to pay it at the clerk of the court on the same day but the office was closed. My visitors left and three days later I ventured into town to pay the fine as instructed on the ticket. To my surprise I was told I could not pay it because the police constable who wrote the ticket did not register it with another department. I was told to go to another building to do that, stand in line, pay, then go back to the clerk’s office, stand in line again and pay. I did all that because I do not want to be on the wrong side of the law, but it occurred to me that the police have to do their part as well and perhaps by law, I did not have to pay?


Auntie’s answer: Yes, if you get a parking ticket you have to pay and if you don’t, there will eventually be a warrant out for your arrest. According to Inspector Adrian Barnett of the Traffic Management Unit (TMU), the ticket is a summons to court and you should note how long you were given to pay by the officer who gave you a ticket. If you were polite you might get a month, but if you were rude to the officer he may only have given you a week.

Now, Insp. Barnett noted that after the ticket is written up, it does not get to court immediately but it will usually be there within a week — and if you were only given a week to pay, he assured me it would be there in time for that.

Apparently, about eight years ago, someone in government thought that it would be a great idea if the RCIPS had automatic ticket machines for traffic offences and about 16 were purchased for traffic officers to cart around with them. The idea was that, as the officer printed out the ticket for the offender, a copy would be automatically sent to the courts.

Four RCIPS officers were trained to be instructors so that they could teach other police officers here how to use them.

However, the software was all Americanised and had to be reprogrammed to be compatible with local laws, which — yes, you’ve guessed it — never happened. So the machines are now sitting in cupboards in the TMU, basically taking up space.