Quizzes & Puzzles10 mins ago
Using disabled badge
31 Answers
Hi, I am trying to find out if the 30 minute and 1 hour parking restrictions apply to disabled drivers where they have sign at side of road. If I park on the double yellow lines I can park for 3 hours, yet nowhere in the booklet can I find out about parking at these other signs. I have asked local council but they say they only enforce the rules not make them. Thanks for any help.
Answers
Best Answer
No best answer has yet been selected by theshedman. 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.I have a disabled badge and also wondered about this so I asked a traffic warden who said that I could park in these places for 3 hours and I didn't need to pay the usual fee. the only thing is it might be different for different councils, I live in Surrey but all councils should have a parking office, mine is listed under Guildford Borough Council in the phone book so your borough should be listed as well. HTH
My Mums got a disabled badge and when I took her on holiday to Dorset recently we parked in Poole High Street and on the sea front at Weymouth for 3 hours,both these locations are limited to 1 hour parking and no returning within an hour for able-bodied cars and passengers.
I checked with the on-street parking attendant in Weymouth and he told me we were ok for 3 hours.
I checked with the on-street parking attendant in Weymouth and he told me we were ok for 3 hours.
This applies to paid for parking bays:
Badge holders may park for free and for as long as they need to at on-street parking meters and pay-and-display machines, unless there is a traffic sign specifying a time limit for holders of Blue Badges.
So, if you can park for as long as you need at a paid for bay, it stands to reason you can park as long as need in a free bay- unless the sign specifically says the time restriction applies to blue badge holders.
Badge holders may park for free and for as long as they need to at on-street parking meters and pay-and-display machines, unless there is a traffic sign specifying a time limit for holders of Blue Badges.
So, if you can park for as long as you need at a paid for bay, it stands to reason you can park as long as need in a free bay- unless the sign specifically says the time restriction applies to blue badge holders.
-- answer removed --
this may be of some help:
http://www.direct.gov.uk/en/disabledpeople/mot oringandtransport/dg_4001061
x
http://www.direct.gov.uk/en/disabledpeople/mot oringandtransport/dg_4001061
x
I'm so delighted people can tell merely by a passing glance what disabilities a person does or doesn't have.
Many disabilities that prevent a person from walking very far, or carrying even one shopping bag any distance, are hidden.
I know somebody with one leg that can't get the badge - and rightly so. He is very proficient with his false leg.
I know somebody else with angina - looks very healthy, but can barely walk 50 steps. He works full time in an office in the middle of a big city. Without his badge he couldn't work.
Many disabilities that prevent a person from walking very far, or carrying even one shopping bag any distance, are hidden.
I know somebody with one leg that can't get the badge - and rightly so. He is very proficient with his false leg.
I know somebody else with angina - looks very healthy, but can barely walk 50 steps. He works full time in an office in the middle of a big city. Without his badge he couldn't work.
Hi and thanks for all the replies. From what some of you have said there seem to be different rules in different parts of the country but all seem to give 3 hours at least. It's just that if you are going to be a few minutes later than the sign allows for then you don't want to come back to a yellow sticker stuck on your windscreen. I do agree with jd_here
though that having a blue badge shouldn't allow us to park all day in these spaces as like he or she says they are in short supply and by definition are not for long term use.
though that having a blue badge shouldn't allow us to park all day in these spaces as like he or she says they are in short supply and by definition are not for long term use.
Just a question that I have wondered on a couple of occasions (usually when I cant get parked lol).
I understand the whys and wherefore's of disabled badges etc but what I cannot understand is why, for the most part, someone displaying a badge does not have to pay for their parking space?
Also, why are some exempt from paying road tax?
These are just questions that I am curious ot know the answer too
I understand the whys and wherefore's of disabled badges etc but what I cannot understand is why, for the most part, someone displaying a badge does not have to pay for their parking space?
Also, why are some exempt from paying road tax?
These are just questions that I am curious ot know the answer too
You can claim exemption from road tax if in receipt of the higher rate of mobility allowance(as far as I know),we don't claim it as the taxed car has to be for the sole use of the disabled person,my fiance drives his car to work daily so we would be ineligible for this.I don't know about the free parking because regardless of whether we are parked in a free disabled bay I always insist on paying any fees relevant to non-disabled bays in whichever car park we are in.