Quizzes & Puzzles14 mins ago
car parking hogs
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No best answer has yet been selected by bob57. 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.Legally nobody has a "right" to park on the public highway unless it is an area specifically set aside for that purpose; outside of these areas all parked vehicles technically constitute an 'obstruction' under Section 137 of the Highways Act 1980.
http://www.havant.gov.uk/havant-208
However it is very unlikely that a local authority will enforce this parking restriction on public roads where vehicles have traditionally been parked, so everyone has the same "non-right" to park in front of your house as you do.
then answer one more question the hospital in my area charges for parking (I have no problem with that) but a few years ago residents around area complained about people parking on the roads outside their houses and there was a big hullabaloo about it inthe papers and plenty done about. so it must be one rule for one rule for another thanks for your answers
bob57
Even Hammer�s suggestion is not fool-proof. The Highway Code (para 217) covers this situation.
- �DO NOT park your vehicle�where it would inconvenience or obstruct other road users or pedestrians. For example do not stop [among other places] in front of an entrance to a property.�
However, this is not a �MUST/MUST NOT� obligation (that is, one that is backed up by law). If the road where the driveway is has no parking restrictions, the existence of the driveway does not preclude anybody from parking there. It certainly does not, in law, reserve the space for the occupant, though most drivers respect the right of property owners to have access to their property.
If not, the inconvenienced property owner would have to find a constable, persuade him to locate the driver of the vehicle causing the obstruction, and persuade him to move it. His only powers would be to invoke the principle correctly outlined by Kempie. However, the officer�s answer may well be that, as he has not chosen to enforce the law elsewhere (i.e. those parked without causing an obstruction) he would be exceeding his powers to enforce it selectively.
All most unlikely and, taken together, most unsatisfactory.
we have the same problem where i live as i live just off the main stretch of shops, banks, hairdressers etc....
im glad to say we are getting residential parking soon, with no waiting times.....
i'v only been driving 2 years but my father has been driving 22 and we have lived in the same house for 19 years.......
the bad news....... it has taken him and many others in the street 19 years to get it!
you may be in for a wait!
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