Whether pregnancy or disability, the differences may be that (a) you have that much more stamina for completing your tasks inside the store because you were able to park near the door, and (b) the store is not full of inattentive people propelling giant explosive boxes in front of you at high speed.
In a store, a very pregnant woman has the option of leaning on the cart. It’s little, but it can help.
I think it goes without saying that the “Expectant Mothers” spaces is for women late in their trimester.
And for all the people pissing and moaning about how it’s not fair that they get special parking spaces, and you don’t: Man up, and walk the extra hundred feet. Personally, I tend to park far away. Since I’m stuck at a desk all day, I’ll take all the physical activity I can get.
Now that you mention it, the factual question has either been answered or stopped being discussed. Moved from General Questions to In My Humble Opinion.
Maybe you should redirect some of your energy to correcting that little oversight of nature, rather than sitting here arguing your point. God knows, most of us would be more than happy to share the burden (I wish constant heartburn, raging mood swings and swollen ankles upon any man who uses the words “we’re pregnant”)
Here’s something to chew on… maybe that spot is closer to the store so that Ms Massively Preggo won’t have to lug her groceries to the far end of the lot once she’s done shopping. She’s already carrying plenty of extra weight, and a good chunk of it is probably resting squarely (and simultaneously) on her bladder and sciatic nerve, and she’s now exhausted from a simple routine chore like grocery shopping. How about giving her a break?
Trust me, no one chooses to get pregnant just so they can get a sweet parking spot.
Geez, haven’t we been over this topic once or twice before? I’m pretty sure parking your car period is not some kind of inalienable right for all. You find a good parking spot, sweet, good for you, but you don’t deserve a great spot just because. A business can decide to provide spots or not, based solely on their whim. Similarly, they can decide to dedicate their spots to whomever they choose (I realize disabled parking is in fact a law). Sure, you can think it’s dumb if you want, and choose to break the rules, but you must be willing to accept the consequences (well deserved dirty looks and comments, possible towing).
I used to work in a theatre with a small parking lot. In one corner of the lot was a loading zone that we absolutely needed to load shows in and out almost every day. It was clearly marked “Loading Zone - No Parking”, but entitled assholes still parked there. I tell you, there is nothing that satisfies quite like calling the tow company out to rid the loading bay of asshole cars!
I’ve known people who are neither handicapped nor pregnant who I think would be worthy of the same “breaks.” Should stores provide spaces for all of them too?
PARKING FOR THE MORBIDLY OBESE ONLY
SELF-ABSORBED JERK PARKING (I’d love to see people park in this one!)
PARKING FOR THE OVER-PRIVILEGED
TODDLER/EXTREMELY SHORT PERSON PARKING (Who else is more parking lot challenged?)
PARKING FOR THE LAZY (This one is completely surrounded by a cart corral)
What Mahna Mahna said. (I love the name, BTW.) You forgot to add “forced to walk across a hot, black asphalt parking lot in the middle of a South Texas summer.”
I know of several 24-hour businesses that have designated parking areas for second- and third-shift employees. When these employees come and go, there are larger groups of people walking to the same place, which makes it harder and less appealing for potential attackers. It also makes it easier on security to make sure there are guards visibly posted to keep people from breaking into employees’ cars.