The Majority Of Brexit's Impact On...
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No best answer has yet been selected by Enforcer. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Well doubtless when the whingers and moaners stop him being a mechanic and starting his own business he might become one eh Gary?
Most people trade from home before they buy their first premises, it's no big deal. I did it and had I not I would have had no option but to sign on as I couldn't get a job.I now own three garages and a property developement business amongst other things, but I'd have had so and so all had I not traded from home and got some money behind me. Maybe this guy is in the same situation.
I think the polite thing to do would be at least go and have a chat with him and explain your not happy not try and get him into as much trouble as possible, that's just nasty.
There are some businesses you just cant run "from home" and with good reason. If he was painting little pot cottages in his front room nobody would care, but he's running a vehicle repair business in the street!! What does he do with waste oil for example. I suspect he doesn't pay to have it removed. It'll go down the drain most likely, same with used batteries - where does he store these. The noise, the mess. the disruption in a residential street. Get real noxlumos!
The man clearly has no consideration for his neighbours. The question about oil was retorical noxlumos, mentioned to create discussion rather than requiring a direct answer. However if he had been the gentle thoughtful neighbour who just needs to be able to make a living, that you feel he is, you'd have thought he would have canvassed his neighbours opinions before he filled all the available parking spaces with scrap metal. If he's that desperate to make a living then he'd rent premises and turn it into a proper business.
Do you have a premises from which you sell cars noxlumos, or do you sell them from the comfort of your own driveway?
It is quite obvious that carrying out emergency repairs like changing a tyre etc would be acceptable. What the law is there for is to stop people carrying out servicing etc.
As an aside, it is an offence to park a vehicle on the public highway unless it is parked in place set aside for parking. Ask anyone who works for highways and they will tell you the same.
As with most laws, common sense is needed. I have someone who lives near me who carries out all sorts of vehicle repairs in the street and it makes the place look like a scrapyard at times. I therefore sympathise with Enforcer. That said, I think the way to approach it is to speak to the person concerned and point out your grievances.
My parents lived next door to an obnoxious scrote who spent all day and evening using a sledge hammer on his banger racer or reving up his mates cars that he was repairing in the road to a background of loud music and constant swearing and shouting.
The place looked a tip with scrap metal in the front garden, oil every where and his eyesore trailer blocking the road. My mother was not well and the stress of all this every day finished her off at aged 62. I can understand the problems.
If someone is repairing their own car or running a business on their own property there is no problem and you live and let live until the noise and mess forces you to complain to Enviromental Health, the Planning Enforcement Officer and the Highways Department.
You have no right to park or repair a car on a public road. This can be a trespass against the Crown who own the land under the roads, you can be moved on by the council the same way as unauthorised burger vans. A right of way is all you legally have.
Running a substantial business like car repairs from home or a road requires planning permission for a change of use which is very unlikely to be granted. If he is charging sensible rates then he should be able to afford proper premises by now, the council often have lists of cheap vacant premises to rent.
Stanleyman - what are you ranting on about? If the cars are taxed and not a danger to the public they can be parked ANYWHERE on the public highway, except in the case of restrictions.
It is legal to repair cars on the highway (even as a business), but not to leave any mess such as oil, scrap etc. Thats flytipping.
Theren. Can you direct me to the legislation confirming these claimed rights on the road in your statement or are you a believer in myths?
I repeat again, under section 137 of The Highways act 1980 you only have a right of way on any highway, no more, parking, which is an obstruction to free passage and any other activity is just tolerated although some activity might be considered incidental to your use of the highway like repairing a broken down car but not general servicing and repairs.
http://www.tameside.gov.uk/tmbc5/trafficcalming/parking. htm
Have you also not heard of planning regulations in regard to businesses?
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