hinault wrote: » I've nothing against kids out playing in the residential where I live. Our area has a lot of traffic coming in to and exitting from our estate though. And we have kids, some as young as 3 or 4 years of age, with absolutely no "roadsense" whatsoever, running around on to the street without being aware of oncoming traffic. Our estate is well signposted for speed restrictions (20kmsph) and most drivers observe this rule. But kids continue run out in front of traffic, or worse will stand in the pathway of cars reversing in to driveways. It appears that the "parents" of these children are not concerned at the danger that these children present to themselves and to car drivers. But if an accident does occur, it will be the motor vehicle driver who will be penalised if there is a collision. Has an accident to occur before these parents get the message? I don't want to see any kid get hit by a car. But what chance does a driver have if, respecting the speed limits, a kids runs out in front of their car before the driver can take evasive action? The driver is on to a hiding to nothing. An accident is going to happen and I'm asking for ways to try to avoid this happening.
hinault wrote: » But if an accident does occur, it will be the motor vehicle driver who will be penalised if there is a collision.
con___manx1 wrote: » I have seen estates where this happens too. I always drive like snail. I can't understand people who let very small children play near a road. These estates are riddled with speed ramps but I can still see an accident waiting to happen. I really don't think there is anything you can do to be honest. They are not doing anything against the law. Just plain stupid careless parents
holystungun9 wrote: » As you were the third person to post I'm delighted that you quoted the op (1st post) leaving me in no doubt as to the link between your post and the aforementioned first post relating to issue of children playing on the roads within estates also clearly labeled in the thread title.
Turtyturd wrote: » I think the bigger issue is these kids living with their. 'parents'. Child kidnapping ring?
Akrasia wrote: » Feck sake. These are children playing in their neighbourhood Half the threads on here are about obese kids who just watch tv all day, and those threads are full of 'In my day we were kicked out of the house at 7 am and told not to come home until dark' In a housing estate, children are going to be playing. It's where they live, they are going to be on the roads. Drivers should be extermely careful and drive very slowly knowing that children (or animals) could appear from anywhere. OP, you would get a much better response if you posted a thread complaining about arseholes speeding around housing estates and residential areas. Any driver who hits a child in a housing estate is 99.9% at fault.
hinault wrote: » I've nothing against kids out playing in the residential where I live.
anncoates wrote: » Could the management company not just put an electrified fence around the green area to keep the kids in?
donkeyoaty0099 wrote: » I have to crawl around it as kids regularly pelt it across the opening after a ball or on a bike.
hinault wrote: » An accident is going to happen and I'm asking for ways to try to avoid this happening.
donkeyoaty0099 wrote: » WE have the same in our estate. There's a communal car park with space for about 50 cars shared by two apartment blocks and a couple of houses. Despite ample green space the kids have decided the car park is the ideal place to play football. The turn into the car park is completely blind and I have to crawl around it as kids regularly pelt it across the opening after a ball or on a bike. The most bizarre thing is the parents of some of these kids stand at their doors watching the little urchins essentially playing in traffic and don't say a word. Someones child is almost certainly going to be hit as not every driver is as cautious as I am with the corner.
LexieOnRale wrote: » I find parents who let their kids race around unsupervised would generally be the type who'd call their solicitor before an ambulance if anything happened