The number of calls to Ottawa Bylaw last year was up slightly over the year before.
In a report, the City says Bylaw responded to 76,642 requests for service, which is up 1% over 2014.
40% of all bylaw calls were for parking-related issues.
354,676 charges for parking violations were issued last year, bringing in $19 million to city coffers.
93,861 calls, or 27% of all parking-related calls, were for people parking on private property. 40,846 tickets were handed out for parking longer than posted time limits, or parking at expired meters. Snow-related offenses led to 12,900 calls.
Enforcement of the City's taxi bylaw in 2015 resulted in 168 charges against 75 people and over $47,000 in fines.
Animal-related complaints made up 15% of last year's bylaw calls. Noise complaints accounted for 14% of calls. Another 13% of calls were for property standards. Overall, these numbers are down slightly compared to recent years.
A category the City lists as "other" made up 18% of bylaw calls. "Other" calls are for issues such as graffiti, parks-related calls, and use and care of roads and licensing.
The City says there was a 137% spike in calls for licensing inspections last year (from 519 in 2014 to 1,229 in 2015), but they attribute that jump to formalizing the the service request for licensing.