Article from: www.thenewspaper.com/news/01/191.asp
One-third of motorists who contest their parking ticket in Washington, D.C. are successful. The District maintains that "public demand" is responsible for the tripling of the number of meter maids in the city and doubling of ticket revenue since 1999. The city now earns $100 million a year from 1.3 million tickets issued.In the District, contesting tickets in person can require a morning or afternoon for the trip to the DMV's 65 K Street NE headquarters, where motorists slump in bucket seats in a windowless waiting room while a television intermittently repeats a public service announcement promoting photo-enforcement cameras.Source: That's Not the Ticket, Parkers Argue (Washington Post, 2/22/2005)
It's a place where people fight off drowsiness, roll their eyes and occasionally lash out in ways that leave the examiners wishing they had alarms to alert security, instead of switches behind their desks that turn on a light outside the door.