Showing posts with label road. Show all posts
Showing posts with label road. Show all posts

Thursday, 16 August 2018

New Zealander paints his own parking restrictions

A New Zealand man who has unlawfully painted yellow line parking restrictions outside his house in Wellington for the last 20 years says he has done so to improve road safety and to protest against gentrification.



Russell Taylor said it was necessary to stop cars from parking dangerously in an increasingly busy street. The city council says the lines are illegal and will be removed.

Mr Taylor has lived on Holloway Road since 1979, he says he has painted the lines intermittently over the last two decades when the parking problem in his street has become especially bad.

The roads have changed a lot since he has lived there and a lot more people now have cars. Mr Taylor sees it as a protest against the failure of the council to take action.

"Cars park on blind corners, and on occasions fire lorries and rubbish collection vehicles have been unable to turn around because vehicles are parked on both sides of the road.

"More recently we have had the additional problem of drivers going far too fast down our narrow street."

A city council spokesman, Richard MacLean, told Stuff New Zealand that it was aware there was a parking problem in Holloway Road, and it will shortly be discussed by residents and councillors.

The spokesman added that it was unlikely that Mr Taylor would be punished for his long-running, unofficial road-marking campaign.

www.parkingsensors.co.uk




Saturday, 18 November 2017

Car tax evasion triples after paper tax disc scrapped

Since the paper tax disc was abolished the number of unlicensed vehicles on the road has tripled.

The data, published every two years, shows that the government potentially lost out on £107m from 755,000 unlicensed vehicles last year.

The RAC said the decision to get rid of the paper tax disc three years ago has proved "costly" when it should have saved the Treasury £10m a year.

"It appears that having a visual reminder was an effective way to prompt drivers into renewing their car tax - arguably more drivers are now prepared to try their luck and see if they can get away with not paying any vehicle tax at all, or are simply forgetting to tax their vehicle when they are due to."

When the abolition of the paper tax disc was announced by then-Chancellor, George Osborne, the Treasury said it showed government was moving "into the modern age".

The RAC said a third of untaxed vehicles had changed hands since September 2016, indicating that many drivers were not aware that tax does not carry over when ownership changes.

The seller receives a refund of any full months of remaining tax while the new owner must tax the vehicle immediately.

www.parkingsensors.co.uk



Saturday, 16 April 2016

Driver wakes up to £110 parking ticket after council paint disabled bay AROUND his car overnight

Image: SWNS.com
When Matt Armstrong found his car parked in a disabled bay outside his home, he assumed he was the victim of an elaborate prank - because it wasn't there the night before.

Matt had parked his car lawfully on the road outside his south London home before bed, so was stunned to find Lambeth Council had painted the bay around his Renault Clio overnight.

Matt failed to see the funny side as he had been slapped with a whopping £110 fine due to the car being parked illegally.

The bay had been requested for Matt's neighbours husband more than two years previously — unfortunately he died earlier this year and she had called Lambeth council several times to cancel.

He said: "They put in this disabled bay which no one needs, painted it under my back wheels and then gave me a parking ticket.

"What can I do but pay the fine and hope to repeal it. If you don’t pay you get clamped or towed away"

Lambeth council confirmed Mr Armstrong’s fine had been cancelled after the authority was contacted by the Evening Standard.

A spokeswoman said: "We’ll cancel the fixed penalty notice and are investigating why there was some confusion around the marking of the disabled bays."

www.parkingsensors.co.uk

 For the fuller story and more images please visit mirror.co.uk