ChatterBank3 mins ago
Blue Badge Parking
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Ma-in-Law received her renewed blue badge today and I read the leaflet that came with it. It seems (provided she is in the car) we don't have to pay the London congestion charge, may park on double and single yellow lines for up to 3 hours, get free parking at most public car parks, don't have to pay the M6 toll, freebie over the Severn crossing....it goes on. She is disabled for goodness sake, not impoverished. Why shouldn't we pay the going rate?
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.i didn't realise that about the M6 toll! Do you have to apply in advance (like the congestion charge) or just show your badge?
I guess it's because disabled people don't have the choice of parking further away in a free spot and then walking in, so HAVE to use the car park. therefore they get it for free. Same with cc. If you have to go to somewhere in central london and you are not disabled, you have a choice of how you're gonna get there (bus; tube etc) but disabled people sometimes dont
I guess it's because disabled people don't have the choice of parking further away in a free spot and then walking in, so HAVE to use the car park. therefore they get it for free. Same with cc. If you have to go to somewhere in central london and you are not disabled, you have a choice of how you're gonna get there (bus; tube etc) but disabled people sometimes dont
bednobs........you do have to apply in advance. In our local car park the pay and display machine is next to the blue badge bays. Similarly, the introduction of double yellow lines throughout the village was justified on the grounds of road safety. Can't see how road safety is served when I can now legally park on double yellows in the most inappropriate places e.g. opposite another car thus restricting a bus route to a single lane.
bednobs.......//The Mobility Exemption Pass allows free passage of the nominated vehicle on the M6 Toll only. If you think you may be eligible for a Mobility Exemption Pass, you must apply to Midland Expressway Limited as no other evidence of disability (e.g. Blue Badge) can be accepted. To qualify for exemption, you must be on the higher rate disability living allowance and be road tax exempt//
All this applies to my Ma-in-Law.
All this applies to my Ma-in-Law.
McMouse when I first got my blue badge I like may people did not read the paper work properly and as a result I came out of a shop in Mansfield to find a warden ticketing me I not only got a fixed penalty fine (at that time £30.00) but also a lecture on just what the badge entitled me to do and about readig the documentation properly in future
she may have to incur more living costs than the average able bodied person due to her disability, she may also have to make more visits to doctors/hospitals or therapists therefore some fees are waived.
granted it may not be exactly what her costs are but they just give an average to cover the varying scales of disablement.
granted it may not be exactly what her costs are but they just give an average to cover the varying scales of disablement.
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One of the things with the blue badge scheme is that so many people abuse it, I often see people using their parents, partners, etc badge as a ticket to park. The badge is issued to the person not a car and it really annoys most genuine users to see a badge being used by somebody to whom it obviously does not belong. Also in areas like London there is a huge blackmarket in "Cloned" badges the Motability mag often has warnings about this, There was a letter the other month from a guy who'd had his nicked and at the last report the police had recovered over fifty copies