Anonymous wrote:It seems I disagree with most is these posters. It is public street and you can park where you are able. How do we know if the person who dug out the space is coming back?
It sucks for sure, but park where you can. If you can’t afford to move your car, take uber.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It seems I disagree with most is these posters. It is public street and you can park where you are able. How do we know if the person who dug out the space is coming back?
It sucks for sure, but park where you can. If you can’t afford to move your car, take uber.
Some people learn this lesson from a broken windshield
A person is 100% legally able to park in the spot that you cleared on the public street. The guy who cleared that spot has no right to it if they drive away.
However, the car that takes over the spot might get keyed, deflated tires, a broken windshield or simply buried in new snow that gets watered and frozen.
But maybe that's just in my home town of Pittsburgh
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Some jerk took my spot in 45 minutes at 6am. I couldn't belive it, other spots were open and available but the jerk wanted mine.
Would the jerk have been less of a jerk for taking one of the other spots, who someone other than you dug out?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am truly baffled at the people that think it is fine to take a spot someone else dug out and view it as rude to put chairs to mark what you shoveled out. Using chairs to mark the spot you reclaimed from the snow seems common sense.
I am truly baffled that you think spots can be reserved on a public street.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm parking in whatever spot is clear. I don't care about your chair.
Just like I don’t care about breaking your windshield.
Anonymous wrote:.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Idk, I think in the city where the cars turn over a lot and people come and go all day, you can’t save a space. But in the burbs, I think it’s okay to park in a cleared space temporarily but not overnight. Like if I take my kid for an afternoon play date, I will park in a cleared space on their street if it’s vacant and not blocked. But I wouldn't park overnight in someone’s cleared space near my house.
Don't do it! We spent 3 plus hours digging our cars out. If I run to the store, I'm going to need that spot back. We don't have a driveway and rely on street parking!
But what if someone else on your block also ran to the store and their spot was gone because someone on the next block also ran to the store and THEIR spot was gone? I mean if everyone is driving to work and to the store then parking is free game again. Sorry. We all dug spots out, how do you think we are all driving around? Because we dug our cars out, right?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm parking in whatever spot is clear. I don't care about your chair.
Just like I don’t care about breaking your windshield.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Some jerk took my spot in 45 minutes at 6am. I couldn't belive it, other spots were open and available but the jerk wanted mine.
Would the jerk have been less of a jerk for taking one of the other spots, who someone other than you dug out?
Anonymous wrote:I am truly baffled at the people that think it is fine to take a spot someone else dug out and view it as rude to put chairs to mark what you shoveled out. Using chairs to mark the spot you reclaimed from the snow seems common sense.
Anonymous wrote:Yes, moving someone's chairs to park is very rude. Nobody should be touching your car, though.
Anonymous wrote:I'm parking in whatever spot is clear. I don't care about your chair.
Anonymous wrote:I'm parking in whatever spot is clear. I don't care about your chair.
Anonymous wrote:Some jerk took my spot in 45 minutes at 6am. I couldn't belive it, other spots were open and available but the jerk wanted mine.