I didn’t mean you, :rolleyes:, I was elaborating on your point! Although did you ever see that Bloom County where the gang takes the transmission off of Steve Dallas’ car after he illegally parks in a handicapped space?
(I’m also not saying that blocking someone into their spot is a good idea. Pregnant, hormonal, irate me was not necessarily a smart person, if you get me.)
I think it’s mainly this in most jurisdictions, although I think you’ll get towed, not ticketed. Failure to follow posted parking instructions on private property normally gives the owner the right to have you towed. Will it happen in this case, probably not, unless you happen to get a very hormonal pregnant lady complaining to management. It could.
There MAY BE some jurisdictions out there that would actually issue a ticket, depending on zoning, etc.
I think the rampant abuse of handicap parking shows that no one is going to give two fucks about “the honor system” when it comes to parking where they want to park. I mean, if even the threat of legal action doesn’t deter you (albeit theoretical legal action) then a meaningless sign surely will not.
And, as in the cite you quoted, permits issued in advance based on objective status with the university are required, so it is not arbitrary. If a woman parks in a space for expectant mothers, who is going to require her to show proof of pregnancy?
But also, this kind of thing following along right behind reinforced the idea.
I thought you misunderstood me. Apparently, I misunderstood you.
Yes, parking behind someone is a bad idea. I acknowledged that, twice now in this thread, while also admitting that I might very well have done it anyway when I was pregnant. Pregnant me was stoopid.
Really you have Expecting Mothers parking spaces ?? I never heard of that before .
Any women can say she is a pregnant so how does the store know if a woman is lying about this ? Do women have to be showing they’re pregnant ? I walked everywhere when I was pregnant so this really crazy to me.
Well of course. But I never directly referenced myself. He/she (SunnyDaze) said, “Well I didn’t mean you” :rolleyes:…I cannot comprehend how that response makes sense. Her original remark was commenting on their desire to block in an inappropriately parked car in a parking lot. Then, assuming most people were familiar with my story, I came in and said (in jest, mostly) that it wasn’t a good idea. In what interpretation could her “well I didn’t mean you” makes sense as a response?
Wouldn’t it be against the law for public LEOs to enforce a “For only” when that warning refers to privately-established regulations within a private parking lot?
I don’t think it’s about entitlement. I think it’s about society going ‘We get that some people are having a harder time than others with ordinary life tasks, so basic human decency says we try and make it a bit easier for them.’ It’s the same reason I give up a bus seat for someone who’s old or who has a cast on his leg, without going into a mental rant about whether he feels entitled or whether the broken leg was his own fault: because trying to smooth other people’s lives a bit, when they’re having a rough time, is basic decency and makes for a better society to live in.
And I don’t think those spots are for women who are only a couple of months pregnant. I would definitely never have used one at that stage. They’re for women who are so big that an extra few minutes of walking would be a genuine burden.
I was in a private lot and got a ticket for parking in a “mini van only” spot, I shit you not. It was in a rental car and I wasn’t in town long enough to try and fight it.
Well, around here, Police very rarely enfore parking restrictions: it’s handled by uniformed city employees, not gun-wielding state employees. But given that, yes:
I know of commercial businesses open to the public which have parking restrictions on private land, enforced by city parking officers. Business owners vote and pay taxes too.
The world is a big place. I know of no constitutional restriction on police enforcing parking restrictions.