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People who think they own the street - Parking - HGV ~ P Valentine

Parking row erupts with 'park in your own street' notes left on car windscreens (msn.com)

For all of the regular people you know how I monitor the attitude and actions of people, the short version of this article is a person who thinks they have the right to police who can park on this street.

The law states that you must not block emergency access, that and the lines are the only parking restrictions that is law, for those who understand the highway code or have in fact bothered to read/update themselves with it, there are 2 sections, must and must not is law which is punishable by a fine, jail, points or any combination of the three.

The bit that people seem to get confused about is the advisory part of the good book, which is not law and has no penalty.

You do not own the street outside your house, you cannot tell anyone or stop anyone from parking on the road outside your house, or for that matter on any part of the public highway ( including gras verges ) that go beyond your fence, this is called public area for a reason, in that it is not yours.

In my job as a hgv driver I have come across this several times, and told this woman who done exactly what the person in this article did, I told her that providing the car is legal anyone can park outside her house, and what more THEY DO NOT NEED TO LIVE ANYWHERE NEAR. For example a person who lives Scotland can park their car in Devon and leave it there.

there is nothing in the law that tells us that we have to live near where we park. And if you park in the same public spot regularly, IT STILL DOES NOT BECOME YOUR PARKING SPOT.

Edited by HGV ~ P Valentine on 07/03/2023 at 12:01

People who think they own the street - Parking - _

We have just that here. we have two cars, both live on the road as it is awkward to get into our drive with a neighbours large twin axle van parked on the pavement opposite, their car parked right up to the white line that is supposed to mean leave my entry/exit clear and now the 18yr old has bought his first car, and they shuffle the cars around so that nobody can park in front of their house.

we are a small cul de sac with 9 houses and most people have done their front gardens to park on. People on the main road with parking restrictions come in, as do those who park for the day while they go into town. and still driveways get blocked and one regular offender has no tax or mot and someone says not insured , but plod and parking enforcement don't care.

I just let it all pass as I have seen some of the others having arguments and have no wish to be involved.

People who think they own the street - Parking - sammy1

""""You do not own the street outside your house, you cannot tell anyone or stop anyone from parking on the road outside your house, or for that matter on any part of the public highway ( including gras verges ) that go beyond your fence, this is called public area for a reason, in that it is not yours."""

Well the council in the town near where I live exclude out of town motorists/or indeed other town residents with resident only restrictions. Usually on terraced streets near the centre where people might expect free parking. They do pay a small fee to the council which gives them exclusive parking which is a bit of a nonsense. You have plenty of parking spaces free in the day when people are at work but you cannot park! It does not necessarily mean that they park outside their own house but in the zone. I expect other councils operate the same.

People who think they own the street - Parking - Bolt

there is nothing in the law that tells us that we have to live near where we park. And if you park in the same public spot regularly, IT STILL DOES NOT BECOME YOUR PARKING SPOT.

Actually don`t have a problem with that here, what we do have is drivers wherever they live leave a massive distance between parked cars.

so if they parked a sensible distance between each car, more could park, we have two wheels on kerb and two on the road parking as the road is narrow and sign posted as such, but plenty of room for a buggy or wheelchair to get past all cars, assuming drivers leave enough space.

and I notice the same problem almost everywhere where spaces are not marked out, ie a large area is marked out but not individual spaces

that imo is worse

People who think they own the street - Parking - FP

"... you cannot tell anyone or stop anyone from parking on the road outside your house..."

Yes, pretty much, except if you have a disability and have a marked spot outside your home.

An interesting situation arises near airports, where parking almost by definition is an issue. Residents complain of vehicles left for a week or two in "their" street. While many of us would probably feel the same, it's not illegal and unless the local authority introduces a resident's parking scheme nothing legally can be done to prevent it.

I once parked for a week near my step-daughter's home in Luton - not close to the airport at all; we had to get a fifteen-minute taxi ride. Shortly after I returned and drove away I was contacted by the police as the car had apparently been reported as "abandoned". They assured me no legal offence had been committed.

People who think they own the street - Parking - RT

"... you cannot tell anyone or stop anyone from parking on the road outside your house..."

Yes, pretty much, except if you have a disability and have a marked spot outside your home.

As a Blue Badge holder myself, I've often wondered what happens if a different disabled person parks in one of those marked spots, eg a visitor to the town?

People who think they own the street - Parking - _

As a Blue Badge holder myself, I've often wondered what happens if a different disabled person parks in one of those marked spots, eg a visitor to the town?

It happened to us a good few years ago, when we lived in Watford when we got married.

My brother in law came to visit, saw the disabled space and parked in it. When he left a bit later, got a tirade from a lady who said he was in "her" space. Pointed out it said disabled parking. But we said sorry to calm her down and she saw the blue badge, she was ok.

People who think they own the street - Parking - badbusdriver

For all of the regular people you know how I monitor the attitude and actions of people

What a very odd statement!.

I'm a regular, and as it happens am not aware how you, "monitor the attitude and actions of people".

As has been pointed out, there are plenty of areas with resident only parking, so it is not the case that you can park wherever you want as long as the vehicle is legal and no double/single yellows.

But parking problems are an inevitable result of the ever growing amount of cars on the road along with cars themselves, for by far the most part, getting ever larger. It is only going to get worse as long as people choose to buy big cars.

I have two problems which directly affect me, first of which is the width of the road I live on. There is parking on both sides, but there really isn't the room* unless the cars are narrow and/or they are partly on the pavement. When we moved here we had a Hyundai i30, a car roughly the size of a Golf or Focus. Since then, our choice of cars has been dictated by the need to get something as narrow as we could while fitting our needs. So the first change had us in a Honda Jazz, second in our current Suzuki Ignis, both of which are just under 1.7m wide. I have always parked my van (the Caddy is 1.8m wide, the Transit Connect was just under) a 'tyres width' on the pavement**. But looking down our street, it is plain to see that most people are too selfish to consider what would be the most appropriate car for them to own, given how narrow the road is, the only consideration is what they want. Lady across the road for example has a mid size Merc SUV. Chap at the top of the road next door to me has a Merc coupe which is usually about a foot away from the kerb (fortunately it is very rare for anyone to park opposite)!.

Second problem is the 'Heritage centre' directly across from the chap with the Merc coupe. Now there is no reason I need to park my van where I do overnight (beside my garden gate), I do need to park it there to fill my water tank in order to work the next day though. But a few times a month I come home and find I can't park because there has been something on in the Heritage centre and any spare spaces have been taken. So I then have to park in an adjacent street (not beside someones house) and keep a close eye on when the space next to my gate becomes available. When it does I immediately move the van in case someone else jumps in.

It is annoying when it happens but I accept that have no more right to park next to my gate than anyone else.

Because it is on route to a supermarket, I often walk along a street fairly close to mine. Terraced houses on one side and a large open park area with a couple of football pitches on the other. I have noticed signs on the windows of one of these houses telling people, "If you don't live here, don't park here".

*Amazingly the bin lorry manages down most weeks, though he does have someone guiding him.

People who think they own the street - Parking - Sulphur Man

An amusing, and somewhat pitiable thread.

Might as well raise a thread about the right to a bench in the local park.