Jump to content

Recommended Posts

Does anybody own or know who does a grey VW Golf reg CA20 JYO parked in Ulverscroft Road?


I have been saving three car spaces needed for access today by Geobear to do resin injection under my bay.


Somebody has moved a bin which was clearly marked with the reason why it was in the road, and Geobear cannot park.


I have posted on our road's WhatsApp group but I'm pretty sure it doesn't belong to anybody in the street.


ETA: I have been waiting over a year for this further remedial work to be done 😭😭😭

Link to comment
https://www.eastdulwichforum.co.uk/topic/282913-car-blocking-access/
Share on other sites

The midday prayer is not till just after 1 at the moment so if this happened earlier I don?t think it would be them. Frustratingly a similar thing happened to us when we were expecting work done, turns out it was a morning commuter (who drove over from wherever, parked and cycled into the city) who arguably and understandably didn?t take well with my frustrations at the end of the day when I still had to pay a fee for taking up a days work when no work could be done.


Maybe place a polite note on their windshield if all efforts are wasted. These things are frustrating especially when you?re not hogging a parking space for personal ease but I do hope you can find the owner soon!

Sorry, I'm not going to sound sympathetic here. If you want guaranteed access, then pay to suspend the parking bay for a fixed period. If not, then you have no right to ad hoc reserve a space, nor do you have the right to deny other people spaces. They were perfectly entitled to park there if it was a legal parking space.


While frustrating, if its not suspended, they are entirely within their rights to park there whether its convenient or not to you.

jimlad, whilst what you say may be true, sometimes it doesn't come down to having a right or feeling entitled but it comes down to being polite and understanding. If the poster has put a note explaining the situation it does seem like the polite thing to do to just drive down the street or round the block and park elsewhere. The driver could also drive away with a few choice words to let their disappointment out, but it's okay because in the end of the day, they'll find parking somewhere locally.

I can assure you, planned work not being carried out after waiting such a long time is more of an inconvenience for the poster than the person who moved the bin and parked.

That's a very un-neighbourly way of looking at it jimlad48. It's not like Sue is reserving spaces with cones every day just because she feels like parking outside her own house.


Sometimes people with free parking outside their property need works done on the house, or to move in or out. It's just life and is one of those occasions when the "rules" don't fit.

I'm not being unneighbourly, I'm being pragmatic. There has been a big growth in many areas with 'bin staking', particularly by builders, or in some cases residents reserving what they perceive to be their space for parking during the day.


These arrangements are not legal, and the car owner is entirely within their rights to see a pegged out area, and move them so that they can park.


I absolutely understand that its frustrating, and I also get that its causing a lot of problems, but I must stress that legally the car owner has done nothing wrong, even if morally they are on more dubious ground.

You're right in as much as the driver of the Golf was within their legal rights to move the bin and park their car there. But we are in a sorry state if that really is the only yardstick by which we measure our behaviour.


Sue, I hope that matter was resolved and the work was undertaken.

Unfortunately no it wasn't sorted. The car driver didn't return and Geobear eventually had to leave - with their massive van parked round the corner - because we couldn't get sufficient space near enough to my house. They waited until the very last minute but then they couldn't have got the job done in time even had the car owner come back.


A space became available on the other side of my car which we saved with a bin hoping that the car the other side of that might move, but that caused my neighbour to shout and swear at me when he returned and couldn't park, though I was trying to explain why the bin was there.


My other lovely neighbours have now saved spaces the other side with cones and a pallet.


Re people saving space outside their house, for some weeks I have been doing that when I've driven to my allotment, purely because I knew Geobear were coming in the near future but I didn't know exactly when.


Unfortunately the original day they were due a month or so back was when Thames Water were doing emergency work outside my house due to a burst sewer which flooded mine and my neighbours' cellars and filled the area in front of my bay with sewage 😭


ETA:Geobear had a smaller van which they have parked behind my car the other side in the hope that one way or another we can find enough space.


Extremely luckily and unexpectedly, they are coming back on Monday, so it's fingers crossed all round now.


In a bid for sympathy, I will add that this insurance claim was first made in July 2018, following which there have been innumerable errors and delays.


The job should have taken six weeks. At one point I had to live in my kitchen for five months or else go to bed. I was ill at the time 😭


And then after it was supposedly finished, the cracking reappeared in the same places.


As you might imagine, I have been extremely stressed.

Tough one this. Car owner technically within his or her rights, but how is anyone ever going to get any emergency work done if people can't on occasion sort parking space for specialist vehicles?


Have you considered hiring a few of these barriers Sue?


https://www.hss.com/hire/p/pedestrian-barrier


Cheap enough to hire and far harder for a driver to move in order to park. Look more official too ;)


You shouldn't have to go to that length of course, but it might be a solution.

No help in this case of course but . . . . In advance of filming on location I've seen people putting out cones and keeping one man on the site, usually in some sort of fake official yellow jacket, staying in his car for maybe 24 hours - even overnight. He jumps out and moves cars along as needed.

George Orwell Wrote:

-------------------------------------------------------

> No help in this case of course but . . . . In

> advance of filming on location I've seen people

> putting out cones and keeping one man on the site,

> usually in some sort of fake official yellow

> jacket, staying in his car for maybe 24 hours -

> even overnight. He jumps out and moves cars along

> as needed.


If I observed that, I would not only park there for a day or two but would also report them to the council - totally appalling behaviour and probably illegal.

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
  • Latest Discussions

    • Every year they ask for more and every year it is an exhausting process pushing back on that for local residents and councillors. What annoys me is that at the post event consultation/ feedback this year, I specifically asked them if the rumours around applying for two weekends next year were true. They told me no. So that was a lie. Anyway, we go again. 
    • Double In New or great condition  Or super comfortable air bed Any1 pls
    • Rant ahead: You're not one of them but unfortunately, there's a substrate of posters here that do very little except moan and come up with weird conspiracy theories. They're immediately highly critical of just about any change, and their initial assumption is that everyone else is a total fucking contemptible idiot. For example: don't you think that the people who run the libraries will have considered the impact of timing of reconstruction on library users? (In fact, we know they have - because they've made arrangements at other libraries to attempt to mitigate the disruption). After all, these are the people that spend their whole working week thinking about libraries and dealing with library users (and the kids especially). You don't go into the library game for the chicks and fame - so it's fair to assume that librarians are committed to public service and public access to libraries, including by kids. Likewise the built environment people (engineers, architects, construction managers, project managers, construction contractors, subcontractors or whoever is on this job) are told to minimise disruption on every job they do. The thing that occurs to us as amateurs within 30 seconds of us seeing something is probably not something a full time professional hasn't thought about! Southwark Council, the NHS, TfL, Dulwich Estate, Thames Water, Openreach - they're not SPECTRE factories filled with malevolent chaosmongers trying to persecute anyone. They're mostly filled with people who understand their job and try to do their best with what they've been given - just like all of us. Nobody is perfect or immune from challenge, and that's fair enough, but why not at least start from the assumption that there's a good reason why things have been done the way they have? Any normal person would be pleased that their busy, pretty, lively local library is getting refurbished, and will have more space and facilities for kids and teens, and will be more efficient to run and warmer in winter. But no, EDT_Forumite_752 had kids who did an exam 20 years ago, and this makes them an expert on library refurbishment who can see it's all just stuff and nonsense for the green agenda and why can't it all be put off... 😡😡😡
    • I completely misread the previous post, sorry. For some reason I thought the mini cooper was also a police vehicle, DUH.
Home
Events
Sign In

Sign In



Or sign in with one of these services

Search
×
    Search In
×
×
  • Create New...