HomeLocalNewport Residents Win Big as Council Kills City Manager’s Parking Plan, Implements...

Newport Residents Win Big as Council Kills City Manager’s Parking Plan, Implements Its Own

Call it what it is: a full-blown rejection.

The Newport City Council on Wednesday night dismantled City Manager Colin Kennedy’s deeply flawed residential parking proposal — including his tone-deaf push for fees as high as $100 — and replaced it with a common-sense plan that actually works for residents.

And make no mistake: this didn’t happen in a vacuum. This was the direct result of Newport residents — and Newport Buzz readers — speaking up, pushing back, and refusing to let a bad policy slide through.

Take a bow. You earned it.

The moment of the night came from Councilor Xay Khamsyvoravong, who cut through the bureaucratic fog with a simple, devastating question to Kennedy:

“Why? Why are we doing this?”

It’s a question the City Manager couldn’t answer.

Kennedy, once again, defaulted to vague bureaucratic talking points — the kind that sound official but say nothing. The council wasn’t buying it. Neither was the public.

Khamsyvoravong then stepped in with a key amendment, raising the cap to three passes for non-resident property owners — a move that brought the proposal back into the realm of reality.

What Passed — And Why It Matters

  • Instead of Kennedy’s overengineered mess, the council approved a streamlined plan designed to actually serve residents:
  • Automatic renewals: If you got a permit last year, you’ll get one again. No hoops, no nonsense.
  • Online applications: First-time applicants can apply digitally starting in April.
  • Three FREE permits: Residents — including those with properties in trusts or LLCs — can receive up to three permits annually.
  • Flexibility for real life: Leased and company vehicles are now explicitly allowed.
  • Longer validity: Permits now run for two seasons (May 2026–Dec 2027).
  • No fees. Period.

That last point is the knockout punch.

The $100 fee scheme? Dead.

A Rebuke, Plain and Simple

Let’s not sugarcoat it — this was a stinging rebuke of Colin Kennedy.

Again.

From the rushed rollout… to the lack of data… to a proposal that created more problems than it solved… this was a textbook case of bad governance. And once again, it fell apart the moment it was exposed to public scrutiny.

What residents got instead is something far more valuable: a system that keeps things simple, fair, and accessible — without nickel-and-diming the people who actually live here.

Credit Where It’s Due

To the council members who listened: well done.

To the residents who emailed, called, and spoke out: this is your win.

And to Newport Buzz readers — who saw through this from the start and made sure their voices were heard loud and clear:

We won this one.

Take a bow.

 


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Christian Winthrop
Christian Winthrop
Christian Winthrop is a media publisher and journalist and the founder and editor of Newport Buzz, the leading news platform covering Newport, Rhode Island. He is also the creator of Palm Beach Buzz, expanding the same community-focused journalism model to South Florida. A fifth-generation Newporter, Winthrop previously worked in national politics and later as an entertainment producer in New York City before returning home to launch Newport Buzz in 2011.
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