Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If it’s on their own property, it’s not illegal. If it’s not, that’s illegal and you have the right to complain. You can report it to the city.
Is the space on the street in front of your house considered your property?
No. This thread is full of a bunch of entitled AHs who complain about kids playing outside in “their” beloved extra parking spot one minute and then probably turn around and complain about excessive screen time for kids and “why don’t kids play outside anymore?” the next minute.
Entitled a-holes like…the kind of person who would put up a basketball hoop in front of their neighbor’s house instead of their own?
The neighbor doesn’t own the street, even if it is *gasp* in front of their house!
No normal person would put it somewhere other than in front of their own house, unless they were an entitled a-hole
Exactly, it is a nuisance to others when it's in front of someone else's house.
Americans hate children, the outdoors, and physical activity. All are considered to be a nuisance.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is why you walk over and talk with neighbors.
Do this. And if they don't move it within 24 hours, I would consider it abandoned property and I would put it on the listserv/Nextdoor and saying free basketball hoop, yours if you move it.
But I can be a b1tch. YMMV.
Would you do the same if they parked their car on the public street in front of your house?
My neighbor growing up I parked in front of her house two hours once between classes and she slashed one tire
Around one year later I was moving cars in my long single car driveway to put my car at end as an early morning class My car was in front of her house two minutes with hazards on as I moved cars. I wake up she slashed all four tires blocking my driveway. My mom and brother and sister trapped and mom had work and sister and brother school.
Apparently the one tire slashed was the warning.
Every block needs a women like her.
Lucky for me my tire place took pity on me and said being four rims up I will pick the best four tires out of my dumpster and give them to you for free if you pay for mounting them. My car was up on blocks for two hours while she sipped tea and watched.
Ironically she never parked in front of her house.
I recall her neighbor once shoveled driveway and threw some snow by accident on her driveway. She got her two sons up at two am to bury in his driveway with five feet of snow in middle of night.
Sounds like a psycho, not someone "every block needs".
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is why you walk over and talk with neighbors.
Do this. And if they don't move it within 24 hours, I would consider it abandoned property and I would put it on the listserv/Nextdoor and saying free basketball hoop, yours if you move it.
But I can be a b1tch. YMMV.
Would you do the same if they parked their car on the public street in front of your house?
My neighbor growing up I parked in front of her house two hours once between classes and she slashed one tire
Around one year later I was moving cars in my long single car driveway to put my car at end as an early morning class My car was in front of her house two minutes with hazards on as I moved cars. I wake up she slashed all four tires blocking my driveway. My mom and brother and sister trapped and mom had work and sister and brother school.
Apparently the one tire slashed was the warning.
Every block needs a women like her.
Lucky for me my tire place took pity on me and said being four rims up I will pick the best four tires out of my dumpster and give them to you for free if you pay for mounting them. My car was up on blocks for two hours while she sipped tea and watched.
Ironically she never parked in front of her house.
I recall her neighbor once shoveled driveway and threw some snow by accident on her driveway. She got her two sons up at two am to bury in his driveway with five feet of snow in middle of night.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is why you walk over and talk with neighbors.
Do this. And if they don't move it within 24 hours, I would consider it abandoned property and I would put it on the listserv/Nextdoor and saying free basketball hoop, yours if you move it.
But I can be a b1tch. YMMV.
Would you do the same if they parked their car on the public street in front of your house?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is why you walk over and talk with neighbors.
Do this. And if they don't move it within 24 hours, I would consider it abandoned property and I would put it on the listserv/Nextdoor and saying free basketball hoop, yours if you move it.
But I can be a b1tch. YMMV.
Would you do the same if they parked their car on the public street in front of your house?
My neighbor growing up I parked in front of her house two hours once between classes and she slashed one tire
Around one year later I was moving cars in my long single car driveway to put my car at end as an early morning class My car was in front of her house two minutes with hazards on as I moved cars. I wake up she slashed all four tires blocking my driveway. My mom and brother and sister trapped and mom had work and sister and brother school.
Apparently the one tire slashed was the warning.
Every block needs a women like her.
Lucky for me my tire place took pity on me and said being four rims up I will pick the best four tires out of my dumpster and give them to you for free if you pay for mounting them. My car was up on blocks for two hours while she sipped tea and watched.
Ironically she never parked in front of her house.
I recall her neighbor once shoveled driveway and threw some snow by accident on her driveway. She got her two sons up at two am to bury in his driveway with five feet of snow in middle of night.
Anonymous wrote:A menace! Sure they shouldn't put it front of your house. But isn't this something kids do generally on quiet side streets? The type with generally big driveways and no real need for parking on the street other than visitors/3rd cars? Is the street space at that much of a premium?
I just can't see caring about some kids playing basketball.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is why you walk over and talk with neighbors.
Do this. And if they don't move it within 24 hours, I would consider it abandoned property and I would put it on the listserv/Nextdoor and saying free basketball hoop, yours if you move it.
But I can be a b1tch. YMMV.
Would you do the same if they parked their car on the public street in front of your house?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is one of my pet peeves. Basketball hoops in the street are a menace. NP
Agree.
Not to mention balls bouncing all over the place and kids chasing them out into the street where cars are driving.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is one of my pet peeves. Basketball hoops in the street are a menace. NP
Agree.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is why you walk over and talk with neighbors.
Do this. And if they don't move it within 24 hours, I would consider it abandoned property and I would put it on the listserv/Nextdoor and saying free basketball hoop, yours if you move it.
But I can be a b1tch. YMMV.
Anonymous wrote:This is why you walk over and talk with neighbors.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If it’s on their own property, it’s not illegal. If it’s not, that’s illegal and you have the right to complain. You can report it to the city.
Is the space on the street in front of your house considered your property?
No. This thread is full of a bunch of entitled AHs who complain about kids playing outside in “their” beloved extra parking spot one minute and then probably turn around and complain about excessive screen time for kids and “why don’t kids play outside anymore?” the next minute.
Entitled a-holes like…the kind of person who would put up a basketball hoop in front of their neighbor’s house instead of their own?
The neighbor doesn’t own the street, even if it is *gasp* in front of their house!
Anonymous wrote:My husband minds the neighbor's business too.