clapham_gull
Legacy Fan
- Aug 20, 2003
- 26,437
someone had to ruin it didn't they
.3% of society are suffering from cerebral palsy ?
.3% of society are suffering from cerebral palsy ?
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ditchy said:Am i reading this right ? surely the dosey twat who parked opposite the bay is at fault !!
clapham_gull said:
Rangdo said:
What I really object to is parent/child spaces. Why should you get to park close to the score just because you were stupid enough to have children? I should get preferential parking for not over-populating the planet.
Thats fine but they should put you at the other end of the car park. Serves you rightGUNTER said:
These are really for parents who struggle with kids and shopping and need a bit more width for pushchairs and getting kids in and out of carseats. Unfortunately, they get filled up with selfish, lazy people who can't be bothered to walk a bit further.
5) single mums who think they deserve to park wherever they like because they can shout really loud and they've got 4 kids and the mother and baby spaces are fullLush said:Our local Sainsburys' disabled spaces and mother and baby spaces are RARELY taken up by people with disabled badges or mother and baby stickers.
They are usually 1) people who are "just popping in" 2) people who don't give a f**k 3) people who are elderly (not disabled, but consider themselves old enough to deserve special treatment) and are quite able to push a trolley load of Sanatogen and Jamaican Ginger Cake round the supermarket 4) obese people who wouldn't be fat in the first place if they walked a few extra steps carrying their bumper tubs of icecream and Multi-Buy packs of Mars Bars.
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they usually do where i work , the customer just goes in ,complains and they cancel itoriginally posted by lushI wometimes wonder why the supermarket doesn't stick a note on where there is no disabled badge or childs car seat in a car. I guess they don't want to upset customers. Meanwhile the rest of us tut past from the back of the car park.[/b]
Braders7 said:
they usually do where i work , the customer just goes in ,complains and they cancel it![]()
Lush said:3) people who are elderly (not disabled, but consider themselves old enough to deserve special treatment) and are quite able to push a trolley load of Sanatogen and Jamaican Ginger Cake round the supermarket
As far as the numbers of spaces are concerned - with disabled parking spaces, the numbers should be such as to ensure that, at the very busiest times, a space is available for every disabled person who arrives in the car park.
Lord Bracknell said:The point about Parent & Child parking spaces is NOT that they need to be near the store entrance.
Parent & Child spaces are designed to allow more space between the parked cars to allow parents to get access to the child seats that are fitted inside the vehicles.
Westdene Seagull said:whole point is that they should be wider. Put them at the far end of the car for all I care but please make them wide.
Oh and those people who choose to park right up tight to the side of my car so I can bearly get my son in - don't blame me for the lovely dents I leave on your wing with my door !!!!!!![]()
clapham_gull said:Having had to drive somebody around who is disabled...
( and lets remember that also a lot of old people and others who may be able to physically walk but with difficulty are registered disabled )
.. it's frustrating having to wait until some selfish arsehole has moved from the disabled space.
Disabled people don't have a choice where to park you see - its next to the shop in that place or forget it.
Maybe the reason it seems that there are TWO many disabled parking spaces it that disabled people can find it generally very difficult to get around. Think about your place of work, could a person in a wheel chair get there easily? I very, very rarely see people in wheel chairs in London.
The tube is completely out, and the buses are supposed to be adapted. But if you ever witness the hassle that a person in awheelchair has to go through, you can understand why they choose to drive.
So let them have a few spaces.
edna krabappel said:People moaning about too many disabled spaces should count themselves lucky- having to drive around for a bit longer and walk a bit further to the shop sounds a hell of a lot better to me than a lifetime in a wheelchair, for example, or being completely blind.