Editor's Blog2 mins ago
Parking On Unadopted Road
20 Answers
Hi, I and two other neighbours live on an unadopted private road which has a turning circle outside my house. Recently a developer has bought one of the houses and has started building works but the workers keep parking their vehicles in the turning circle and often block me in. This obviously has become very annoying and I’ve raise the issue with the developer a number of times and put a please no parking sign out but to no avail. The road is privately owner but we’ve not been able to trace the owner but each house has a right of access clause in their deeds. The planners and local council aren’t interested as its a private unadopted road. Any thoughts on what I can do to stop them parking in the turning circle?
Answers
>>> Hi, as I don't own the road can I legally clamp? Nobody can clamp vehicles since the Protection of Freedoms Act 2012 came into effect! The legal position is outlined in Section 6 (on page 8) here: http:// tinyurl. com/ h8az85b All you can do is to threaten to sue those who obstruct your access for compensation for any, and all, losses suffered by you as a result...
17:09 Mon 21st Mar 2016
-- answer removed --
>>> Hi, as I don't own the road can I legally clamp?
Nobody can clamp vehicles since the Protection of Freedoms Act 2012 came into effect!
The legal position is outlined in Section 6 (on page 8) here:
http:// tinyurl .com/h8 az85b
All you can do is to threaten to sue those who obstruct your access for compensation for any, and all, losses suffered by you as a result of their actions (e.g. having to pay for taxis, to and from work, because you couldn't get your car out, lost pay from arriving late at work, etc).
Nobody can clamp vehicles since the Protection of Freedoms Act 2012 came into effect!
The legal position is outlined in Section 6 (on page 8) here:
http://
All you can do is to threaten to sue those who obstruct your access for compensation for any, and all, losses suffered by you as a result of their actions (e.g. having to pay for taxis, to and from work, because you couldn't get your car out, lost pay from arriving late at work, etc).
When you say the planning department of the local authority are not interested, it is very common for the planning consent to contain conditions about parking and deliveries during construction - especially on a narrow or non-standard access arrangment, so you could look there. However the remedies for a breach don't add up to much - enforcement action by planners, which takes time.