For decades, Larry Reed and his neighbors had squeezed their cars into tight, sloping driveways in San Francisco’s Dolores Heights neighborhood. Often the tail ends of the vehicles would extend to the sidewalk. Nobody ever protested, Reed said.
Until about six months ago, when the first complaint rolled in.
“This has never happened in years past,” Reed said, recalling how a somewhat apologetic parking control officer rolled up one day, to assess a report that someone on the unit block of Chattanooga Street had parked a car over the property line. After leaving a warning notice for the culprit, the officer swept the block for other violators, including Reed’s gray electric BMW…