Saw the earlier thread about what was wrong with the stop light picture which reminded me of this picture
http://www.thedamnedestthing.com/page3.html (I’m sorry I don’t know how to link correctly, I’m ignorant, old and don’t have the time to learn alot about computers). Anyway about 1/2 way down is a picture showing a street with a handicap parking space with a tree, pole and parking meter on the sidwalk. It’s been a year or so and I don’t know whats wrong with the picture. Could anyone help?
With a tree, a parking meter, a telephone pole, and a guy wire all on the exit side of the parking space, it is unlikely that a handicapped person could get onto the sidewalk after leaving the car.
The exit side of the space is into the street like all other spaces. A handicapped person driving the car gets out on the drivers side which is into the street (a passenger, however, may have trouble but I’m not sure how much.
The parking meter seen is, I believe, for the adjacent space that is not shown in the picture. I’m familiar with at least one city in America that doesn’t have parking meters for handicapped spaces. People who park there do so for free. I don’t think that is an unusual situation either.
Shouldn’t the sign be facing the street, not the camera? The arrow at the bottom looks like this: <—> or perhaps like this: —> so it should be parallel to the street. Also, the location of the sign would make it hard to see as you drive down the street because it is blocked by the telephone pole.
The curb, which is new if coloring is an indication, appears to have no handicapped ramp cut into it.
(It may be a falsely cropped picture if the ramp is at the extreme right of the picture, but as presented it certainly looks odd. Putting a handicapped spot adjacent to a guy wire and a small, mulch surrounded tree is rather stupid, of course, as noted earlier.)
In Arlington, VA, they got tired of people getting handicap plates for the most trivial reasons, then parking free all day at meters and/or reserved spaces. So now handicapped drivers must pay the same. They still have reserved spaces, but they have meters too now.
I would tend to agree with this. Positionning of the meter would seem to indicate that it’s for the vehicule praking behind the handicaped space. As for the ramp, it could be ahead of the space.
Five: The instant I saw that photograph, I thought it was a fake. And I’m still of that opinion. Could be wrong, though.
I have to agree with several others here. I think the “problem” is that the space is pretty much blocked by all the junk on the sidewalk (pole, pole, tree, meter, sign, guy wire, etc) making it an odd place to put a handicapped space.
If you look behind the guy, you see three lines at varied distances. I believe this guy is a triple jumper and that break is a impact break. Nasty ones where you could have the bone shatter instead of a clean break.
Personally though, the one that sent me throught cringes was the professional weightlifter who had his shoulder break while doing a clean and jerk. Nasty photo shows his shoulder bending inward as the weight falls.
That and the video where the guy took a skate to the jugular at a NHL hockey match give me the willies
–the guy wire is exactly where you’re going to want to swing the right-hand side rear passenger door all the way open, so as to get a folding wheelchair out of the back of the car onto the sidewalk (Mom dropping off Grandpa, etc.),
–and it’s also exactly where Mom is going to bonk her head on it and trip over it while she stands there wrestling the wheelchair out of the back of the car,
–and the little tree is exactly in the way of swinging the front passenger door open all the way and getting Grandpa out of the front seat and into the wheelchair.
What about that skinny little tree? It appears to be planted right at the edge of its little sidewalk square rather than in the center, where rational beings would have put it.
You know, when a joke takes this much explaining and people still don’t understand what’s funny, it’s not a joke anymore. I say it’s a bad choice on behalf of the webmaster who put that picture up…
Um, disabled parking spaces aren’t supposed to have meters. They can park for free (even in a non-disabled spot) simply by displaying their placard. Disabled spots are always free.
I’d say there’s nothing in the picture worth commenting on.
I’ve had a handicapped placard from time to time, when I’ve had surgery.
I can vouch for the fact that many spaces are simply striping and signs added to the first space near the entrance, no matter how hard it is to park in or unload passengers from.