The Republican Standard

MCCARTY: Eight Ways Local Leaders Can Fight Predatory Towing

Predatory towing helps keep people locked in poverty, discourages people from patronizing businesses, and sometimes leads to violence. To combat these and other problems, local leaders should work to find parking solutions and crack down on rogue towing companies.

Increase Parking Options

Rein in Rogue Towing Companies

Predatory towing companies often justify towing cars with flimsy or fraudulent excuses, such as an expired sticker, a flat tire, a hidden sign, etc. To reduce such tows, local governments should implement the following regulations.

Reform Towing Advisory Boards

Virginia law requires that localities that wish to regulate trespass towing must establish towing advisory boards, which make recommendations to local elected officials on towing rates and other towing-related issues. State law also dictates that the public is to be represented by only one member of these boards. Meanwhile, the law calls for the towing industry and police to have an equal number of members on these boards. The boards vary in size, but towing companies and the police typically have one to three representatives each. In other words, the towing industry has at least as much say on these boards as the public, and it often has a much louder voice.

When large numbers of vehicles are being towed over alleged parking violations, it should be viewed as a failure of community leaders. By implementing these eight policy ideas, local leaders can help reduce the harms caused by predatory towing and demonstrate that they are on the side of the public.


Richard McCarty is a native Virginian who works at a think tank in Northern Virginia and serves on the Republican Party of Virginia’s State Central Committee.

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