Family & Relationships11 mins ago
Dropped Kerb
6 Answers
My father in law has been fined for parking on his drive without having a dropped kerb. The Council said he was passing over a public thoroughfare but you have to do that even if you have a dropped kerb.
Anyone know if this is correct???
Anyone know if this is correct???
Answers
Best Answer
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.It is correct but inasmuch as he is passing over a footway not a "public thoroughfare".
S.184 The Highways Act 1980 makes it an offence to drive a vehicle across a footway or verge where there is no proper vehicle crossover (dropped kerb).
http://www.statutelaw.gov.uk/content.aspx?LegT ype=All+Legislation&title=highways&Year=1980&T YPE=QS&PageNumber=1&parentActiveTextDocId=2198 137&ActiveTextDocId=2198433
S.184 The Highways Act 1980 makes it an offence to drive a vehicle across a footway or verge where there is no proper vehicle crossover (dropped kerb).
http://www.statutelaw.gov.uk/content.aspx?LegT ype=All+Legislation&title=highways&Year=1980&T YPE=QS&PageNumber=1&parentActiveTextDocId=2198 137&ActiveTextDocId=2198433
By paying to have the dropped kerb done, the local authority are in effect granting you the right to pass over the footpath. And the benefit is that it then becomes an offence for someone else to park across the driveway - some councils mark the roads across such driveways with single white lines to remind drivers of this.
Time to get the chequebook out, perhaps.
Time to get the chequebook out, perhaps.