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Blue Badge Rule Change To Allow For People With Hidden Disabilities
Do people who are anxious really need to be able to park a bit closer to the shops?
https:/ /www.te legraph .co.uk/ news/20 19/08/2 9/parki ng-perm its-ext ended-p eople-h idden-d isabili ties/
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Of course they do, as does any other lazy sod who can come up with an "acceptable" excuse.
Here, all the natives have them. Apparently for some old granny who never leaves home, but ... she might. Doesn't matter. They park wherever they damn well please and nobody dare say boo.
Giant pickup truck ? That's good too - one of the best actually. Road rules of any kind do not apply.
Spicerack nailed it.
Here, all the natives have them. Apparently for some old granny who never leaves home, but ... she might. Doesn't matter. They park wherever they damn well please and nobody dare say boo.
Giant pickup truck ? That's good too - one of the best actually. Road rules of any kind do not apply.
Spicerack nailed it.
I can see a problem arising where there won't be enough disabled spaces for people with mobility issues that have problems walking. They will then have to park on double yellow lines where they can legally park for 3 hours with a blue badge but one has to then ask why are there double yellow lines, they are usually there for a reason.
I'm saying No. Anxiety isn't a disability. It will not affect your ability to safely walk across a car park, unlike being a parent with a child, or someone with a blue badge disability.
I sympathise with those with anxiety, sometimes feel it myself.. But i mean cmon, do you really think those who are anxious would actually benefit from a parking space closer to the shops?
I sympathise with those with anxiety, sometimes feel it myself.. But i mean cmon, do you really think those who are anxious would actually benefit from a parking space closer to the shops?
//I'm saying No. Anxiety isn't a disability. It will not affect your ability to safely walk across a car park,//
Rubbish. Approaching a place can bring out the worst anxiety, people watching you, will it be crwoded , will whatever your activity is go okay, what if you can't find something and so on. It can be difficult to bring yourself to get out the car, to then havc a long walk during which all these anxieties are magnified is an awful experience. Anxiety can be extremely crippling.
Rubbish. Approaching a place can bring out the worst anxiety, people watching you, will it be crwoded , will whatever your activity is go okay, what if you can't find something and so on. It can be difficult to bring yourself to get out the car, to then havc a long walk during which all these anxieties are magnified is an awful experience. Anxiety can be extremely crippling.
The test for a blue badge at my civic centre used to be a greeting in the ground floor lobby by the interviewer. She would invite you to accompany her to her office on the first floor by way of the staircase.If you used the stairs you failed the first hurdle. A lift was available. Once on Ist floor corridor she would walk to her office at a brief trot to the end of the long corridor. If you kept pace with her and did not have to use the strategically placed chairs in the corridor then you failed the 2nd hurdle. That was before the health inquisition and medicines check in her office.
My latest blue badge, having filled in all the renewal paperwork accompanied by all my tales of woe (Hospital Discharge Summaries), was waiting for me to collect at the Civic centre reception.
My latest blue badge, having filled in all the renewal paperwork accompanied by all my tales of woe (Hospital Discharge Summaries), was waiting for me to collect at the Civic centre reception.
It doesn't make much sense to me because the availability of parking and it's proximity to the shops or wherever is all about making things easier for people with physical disabilities.
On the plus side at least those hundreds of empty disabled parking spaces I always have to drive past will now see some use, but I'd be worried that people who really need them such as wheelchair users etc will struggle to find one.
On the plus side at least those hundreds of empty disabled parking spaces I always have to drive past will now see some use, but I'd be worried that people who really need them such as wheelchair users etc will struggle to find one.
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