Treebee
I agree in theory. But here the roads in new estates are so narrow that parked cars, even on just one side of the road, would mean that a fire engine couldn’t get past without cars parking half on the pavement .The houses I’m thinking of where DD2 used to live, are terraced with no garage or parking space. A real problem.
We have a similar problem in my small Cotswolds town. The roads were not built for the traffic we have today.
It's all very well calling for a total ban on pavement parking but - in my street if cars did not, at certain points, park partly on the pavement, cars would not even be able to pass each other, let alone an emergency service vehicle get through.
So, no - I don't think there should be a complete ban. If cars could not pass each other, it would cause huge jams in the street and enormous tailbacks.
The problem is with careless and selfish car owners who don't park carefully - because if you do, there is still room for pedestrians, wheelchairs and prams to get through.
People need cars to get to work. The bus service is inadequate and expensive - and for those with an early start and late finish - non existent. We are a terraced street so there are no other places to park.
Perhaps if the country had a proper, joined up transport system that was run for the purpose of moving people around instead of, as in some instances, subsidising corporate profit -and with a reasonable charge rather than the extortionate cost we are expected to pay - fewer people would have fewer cars.
This is the result of the 1985 privatisation and de-regulation of public transport.