Dixie wrote:
What makes me laugh is where my aunty lives is not far from a school. Residents around the area got up a petition to stop school runners from parking on the local roads causing mayhem (the roads arn't very wide). The council painted double yellow lines everywhere to keep the residents quite, the school runners still park everywhere on the double yellow lines, nobody from the council monitors what’s going on.
I live opposite a primary school and we raised numerous objections aiming to
stop the council enforcing a "safer routes to school" scheme. Our reasoning was based on there being a lack of pavements in the area.
The council's response was they were acting to meet a government target for such schemes, despite there being no local demand. The scheme was therefore implemented and we now have vast swathes of yellow lines, squiggles and railings, a 20mph limit, humps, and vast numbers of kids walking in the roadway accompanied by very anxious parents. These parents had previously unloaded their offspring onto a 50-yard long stretch of pavement near the school and leading directly into it. Needless to say, it is now included in the "no stopping zone".
When I leave home in the morning I now have to navigate my car through a sea of school children.
While some parents still ignore the yellow perils, a traffic warden turns up on a moped about one morning a week to try and bolster his revenue target.
The irony of it now being a "less safe route to school" for children has been lost on the council jobsworths