OK - how about the 20 foot law?
Dec. 27th, 2007 07:56 pmSince parking laws are under discussion I would like to bring up the 20 ft law (= illegal to park within 20 feet of an intersection). I got a ticket last month on my street for this, in a spot where I and other residents have parked for years. The ticket said I was 8 feet from the intersection. I appealed it by mail and sent photos and got a notice yesterday that my appeal was denied. (fwiw - this is a one way street, off of a one way street and in my humble opinion, there was ample clearance for pedestrians and emergency vehicles).
Ok - so I will pay the $30. ticket- but the thing is, it seems like selective/arbitrary enforcement. Even more, there are numerous spots in this neighborhood where, if this 20 ft law were enforced routinely, would not be legal spots at all- yet folks park in those spots all the time.
Trivial I agree but it seems more about $$$ ("revenue enhancement") than anything else. Also, rather than leaving it to a judgment call by someone tryng to park or the parking enforcement person, there should be clear markings on the curb at the 20 ft mark.
Photo behind the cut. Am I guilty or not? ;-)

Ok - so I will pay the $30. ticket- but the thing is, it seems like selective/arbitrary enforcement. Even more, there are numerous spots in this neighborhood where, if this 20 ft law were enforced routinely, would not be legal spots at all- yet folks park in those spots all the time.
Trivial I agree but it seems more about $$$ ("revenue enhancement") than anything else. Also, rather than leaving it to a judgment call by someone tryng to park or the parking enforcement person, there should be clear markings on the curb at the 20 ft mark.
Photo behind the cut. Am I guilty or not? ;-)

no subject
Date: 2007-12-28 02:35 pm (UTC)Not really related, but --
Date: 2007-12-28 03:01 pm (UTC)That said, however, in parking here over time, there really are a number of deceptively long stretches of curb that I truly believed were two-car length until I saw two cars try to park there and saw that they simply weren't. Sometimes it's only a matter of 2 or 3 feet, but it's still just an optical illusion that another vehicle could actually fit there. The stretch in front of my old house was like this, and I had an argument with my friend (the same one with the wee car, though she was not yet my roommate) about whether or not I was being obnoxious by parking right in the center. We had to actually try parking both of them to prove that another car really couldn't have fit. I'm still not good at eyeballing these things though -- I have to see it to believe it.
Re: Not really related, but --
Date: 2007-12-28 03:19 pm (UTC)