the wardens around here target "problem" place.ere they can catch lots of people quickly, over problem areas where there is a real issue. For example untill recently there was no where to stop outside our local post sorting office, so people just risked it, and the wardens would wait, they have finally put some spaces here and it's no longer an issue
Right, wasn't sure if someone had just posted an old link.
My €2.
I'm in favour of it in some places. If a certain amount of pavement can be left clear, for the sake of the argument 1.5m, then yes. If that can't be achieved (narrow pavements or street furniture that stops that being achieved) then no, you cannot park there.
I see this every day between Ware and Hertford with cars parked and blocking pavements on both sides of the road. Some of those houses have front gardens. Some of those houses also have rear gardens and a garage at the back. They could adapt them for their cars.
In Leighton Buzzard, my ex has a small garage block at the end of her row of 3 houses. There is space to put a car in front of the garages and one in it. She parks on the road in front of her house. The 'drive' is empty and her garage is full of crap.
Some people are just selfish
The government needs to make a policy though, instead of just kicking the can down the partially blocked road.
Absolutely impossible to implement where I live up North. Half of the town's cars would have to go. Which I'm all in favour of, but there's a lot to sort out first (e.g. public transport and cycling infrastructure). Or I suppose we could put up a bunch of parking garages everywhere but that would be awful.
around me there are quite a lot of cars that sit on the street and never seem to move, getting those off the road as as a start would help. Also plenty of places I see where there is plenty of space to park fully on the road, but people park on the pavement by habit
I just had an adventure on Google Street View dropping into random neighbourhoods, and it varies a lot by town. Some places like Leeds and Sheffield had wide roads that would have perfectly coped with a ban on pavement parking. Other places it looks impossible. Here's a place I dropped into in Bolton. Those people would really suffer from a ban. I guess this is my main issue with it, you're disproportionately affecting the less well-off. The middle class will be fine with their driveways and spacious estates.