The car that's been in the same spot for three days. The truck blocking the sidewalk every Thursday. You've seen it. You've thought about it. The PS Ambassador Program gives you a simple, safe way to act on it — and PS handles everything else.
Not because they don't care. Because they know nothing will happen if they do.
Call the Sheriff? On a public street like Kenton Road, parking complaints are low priority — response times run twenty minutes to several hours. The car is gone long before anyone arrives.
File a complaint with the HOA? It goes into a form. The form goes into a folder. The folder goes nowhere — because on HOA roads, the Sheriff was never coming at all.
And tomorrow night, same car, same spot.
There's a word for what's missing here. It's not rules — we have rules. It's not awareness — you're aware. It's consequences. Specifically, the kind that arrive before the car drives away.
The garbage truck reaches your street, finds it blocked, and keeps driving. Twelve families drag their bins to the corner. Or they don't — and miss pickup entirely.
The mail carrier skips the cluster because she can't get through.
A parent rushing their kids to the bus stop squeezes past a car that shouldn't be there.
A mom pushes her baby buggy with a toddler in tow off the sidewalk and into the street — because the sidewalk is blocked again.
A child walks out from behind a parked car in the golf cart lane on Kenton Road — and nobody sees her until it's almost too late.
One car. Every single time.
A child walked out from behind a car parked in the golf cart lane while parents were at the playground. The Sheriff can issue a ticket here — but parking complaints are low priority. Response times run twenty minutes to several hours. The car is always gone by then.
A car pulled out of a stop sign into oncoming traffic — sightline completely blocked by parked cars. The driver had the right of way. Three inches. On this road, the Sheriff has no jurisdiction. There is no ticket. There is no consequence. There is nothing.
The alternative most communities reach for is towing. It costs the driver $300 to $500. It hauls a neighbor's car to an impound lot across town. And under Florida Statute §713.78 — the same law used right here in Pasco County — if storage fees go unpaid, the towing company can place a lien on the vehicle and auction it. A parking violation becomes a lost car.
And the driver who parks there tomorrow night? They were never the one who got towed. Nothing changed.
PS Community Parking Solutions exists because one resident decided that "someone should really do something about that" wasn't good enough anymore. Smart immobilization keeps the car on the property, sends a consequence that actually lands, and gives the driver a straightforward way to resolve it — without a tow truck, without a neighbor knowing who reported them, and without the community trusting each other a little less than it did yesterday. Research consistently shows that neighbor-driven accountability changes behavior more effectively than punitive enforcement. The ambassador program is why.
A car blocking the mail cluster delays delivery for your entire street. A truck on the sidewalk forces a mom pushing a baby buggy — toddler in tow — off the curb and into the street. A parent rushing kids to the bus stop squeezes past a car that was never supposed to be there. A vehicle in the golf cart lane puts children at risk at the playground. These aren't minor inconveniences — they are safety failures happening on our streets right now, to people who did nothing wrong.
Every report an ambassador submits goes through a verification process before any enforcement action is taken. No report — no matter who submitted it — results in enforcement without confirmation. That's what makes this program fair to everyone in the community, including you.
The whole process — from spotting a violation to submitting your report — takes under five minutes. You don't need any special equipment, training, or experience to get started.
Some ambassadors walk a patrol route a few mornings a week. Others just report what they happen to notice on their normal day. Both are valuable. The only ask is that you care about your community enough to take the photo when you see something wrong.
The ambassador role is intentionally simple. PS handles the enforcement. You handle the eyes. That separation is what keeps you safe and keeps every enforcement action legally clean.
No experience required. No application to impress anyone. The only qualification is that you live in this community and you care what happens to it.
Every PS sign in the community has a QR code. Anyone can scan it and submit a report — no account, no application, no commitment. The same AI verification standards apply to every report we receive, regardless of who sent it.
You don't have to join the ambassador program to make a difference. If you see something, scan the nearest sign and report it. PS takes it from there.
Submit your application and you'll receive a text with your temporary password within minutes. Use your phone number to sign in — no username to remember. PS currently accepts ambassadors from Mirada and Medley at Mirada, with more communities coming soon.
Tell us a little about yourself. We'll take it from there.
You'll receive a text with your temporary password within minutes of submitting.