Anonymous wrote:That is an absurd thing to do on a public street
Anonymous wrote:Some jurisdictions allow for those with a disability to apply for a permanent handicapped spot near their house. I don’t think it’s common, but I have seen that in certain locations with just street parking.
Anonymous wrote:My brother lives in a small town in Illinois and the town made a section of curb in front of his home “disabled parking” spaces, because apparently there was a lawsuit against the town by some advocacy group that said the town didn’t have enough disabled parking spaces per capita. So the town’s solution was to just go around randomly adding disabled parking spaces to every street, regardless of wether or not a disabled person actually lived early or not.
So now my brother and dozens of other residents can’t park in front of their own homes, and are ticketed by their town cops when they do.
Anonymous wrote:In Chicago, if there’s heavy snowfall and you spend a substantial amount of time shoveling out an on-street parking spot for your car, and then you’re just going to make a quick trip somewhere, you put cones or sawhorses or lawn chairs in your spot so you can park when you get back. It’s called dibs and it’s generally respected, although it’s not legal. If you move somebody’s stuff and park in the spot they shoveled out, you might return to your car to find your side view mirrors broken off.
Anonymous wrote:Is there some rule that allows people to put out cones to construct no parking or handicapped reserved spots? Sometimes getting to legal spots near them requires moving the cones.