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#71
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In article . net>,
Skip Elliott Bowman > wrote: >"Matthew Russotto" > wrote in message ... >> In article .com>, >> Ed Stasiak > wrote: >> >>>But I shouldn't have look at you blue tarp wrapped castle >>>sized motorhome 364 days a year when I'm trying to relax >>>in my backyard. >> >> You, in your backyard, are an eyesore. Maybe we can ban you? > >People have a reasonable expectation of privacy in their backyards, no >matter what they look like. That's a lot different than using the >right-of-way to store a land whale; you can't help but see that. Right-of-way? I'm referring to restrictions on storing it on private property, not on the street. Particularly restrictions based on aesthetic concerns. |
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#72
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John David Galt wrote: > >>> That's been the law in my home town in metro Detroit > >>> for years, you have to store your boat or camper in > >>> the garage and if it don't fit, then it will have to > >>> go to a storage facility. > > >> Rotten place to live. > > > Not at all, it keeps the city from looking like a storage > > lot. > > Mere aesthetics are not proper cause for a law. Oh, but it *is*. Property values mean something. And when they are diminished by the action or inaction of others, there's legal cause. Remember, we're not talkin' hi-falutin' philosophy here - this is about *money.* E.P. |
#73
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The Etobian > wrote in
: > On Tue, 19 Jul 2005 04:32:00 -0500, (Dennis M) > wrote: > >>>Oh, but it *is*. Property values mean something. And when they are >>>diminished by the action or inaction of others, there's legal cause. >>> >>>Remember, we're not talkin' hi-falutin' philosophy here - this is about >>>*money.* >> >>And higher property values mean higher property taxes. He should be >>grateful for that boat parked in his neighbor's yard. > > The city or town or county assessor might not take boats parked in > yards into account when assessing the value of the property for tax > purposes. > They SHOULD NOT take boats into account for assessing "real property". Boats are not part of the real property,just private possessions,like a lawn tractor or auto. -- Jim Yanik jyanik at kua.net |
#74
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Don Phillipson wrote:
> Kevin Spencer wrote: > > > Does anyone else back in to the driveway .... or am I > > unusual? > > This is usual in England although no rule mandates it. That said, the Highway Code certainly recommends it: 177: Do not reverse from a side road into a main road. When using a driveway, reverse in and drive out if you can. http://www.highwaycode.gov.uk/19.htm#177 In the thick end of seventeen years, I have driven forwards into my drive: to use a gate to check headlight alignment; to get my working battery close enough to my neighbour's flat one to use jump leads; er ... I think that's about it. |
#75
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Daniel J. Stern wrote:
> The ones who **** me off and crack me up at the same time are those who > drive tiny cars *all the way into* parking spaces flanked on either side > by much bigger cars. That's moronic; the smart way is to pull in only so > far as to put the trailing end (whichever that be) of the small car more > or less even with the outer extent of the parking space lines. IMO, correct procedure in such circumstances is to "bury" your "trailing end" a few inches into the row: enough that the big boys take the risk of being hit by passing traffic, but not so much as to obscure your presence. |
#76
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KLS wrote:
> Ed Stasiak wrote: > > > I've always understood that it was a state ordnance > > Perhaps you intended to use that last word, so if you did, > your sentence is funny. When I spotted the error in his previous post, I thought of: "Praise the Lord! And pass the ammunition!" > If, however, you intended to refer to a type of law, the > spelling is "ordinance." It's quite a common error, although (perhaps because one of my regular haunts is rec.aviation.military) munitions seem to be written up as edicts more than the other way round. |
#77
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Scott en Aztlán wrote:
> Kevin Spencer wrote: > > > I wanted to get some opinions about my behavior. I recently > > moved into a house (I'm house-sitting for a few years) > > A few YEARS? That doesn't seem particularly unusual: quite a few folk go abroad for a few years (for work, as missionaries, etc.) and want to return to their houses at the end. There are also folk who spend significant periods away from home "at Her Majesty's pleasure" - not that I have any reason to suppose that the owner of Kevin's residence is in such a position. |
#78
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I do the same, but my driveway's as straight as can be. It goes along
the side of my house to the rear-facing garage. Backing in or out would be rather frightening since it's a 70+ feet long single car width with a brick wall on one side, and a drop-off to the neighbors house on the other. |
#79
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Robert Briggs > wrote in
: > Daniel J. Stern wrote: > >> The ones who **** me off and crack me up at the same time are those who >> drive tiny cars *all the way into* parking spaces flanked on either side >> by much bigger cars. That's moronic; the smart way is to pull in only so >> far as to put the trailing end (whichever that be) of the small car more >> or less even with the outer extent of the parking space lines. > > IMO, correct procedure in such circumstances is to "bury" your > "trailing end" a few inches into the row: enough that the big > boys take the risk of being hit by passing traffic, but not so > much as to obscure your presence. How do you know those folks didn't park "fully in" BEFORE the larger vehicles parked next to them? Besides,the way some people back out of their parking spaces and into other cars,I'd definitely use the larger vehicles as protection from them. If you're in as deep as you can,then they'll strike the other big vehicles first. B-) -- Jim Yanik jyanik at kua.net |
#80
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