old gregg wrote: » You know in advance you're going to come upon bad/inconsiderate parking every time you drive into town (just like in nearly every town/city on the planet). What do you do? Get on with life or start an internet moan thread. Jebus.
iseegirls wrote: » I could add Tesco Ardkeen, but I think the whole of waterford knows whats going on out there.
wmpdd3 wrote: » Clamping is to good for some people, towing away is the only language they'd understand. Personally, I just don't park like that but is hate for Waterford to get clamping and towing. Traffic wardens only seem to cover the same few streets that they will find expired tickets on. Lidl is private property so up to the drivers to behave. I never shop there, it's just not safe.
looksee wrote: » :eek: what is going on out there?
giles lynchwood wrote: » I have to disagree,I have been shopping in lidil for over two years now and the only danger that I have encountered on a regular basics is the bad trolly driving instore.
wmpdd3 wrote: » Says a lot when lines mean nothing, bollards are the only thing that works. I'd hate to have clampers in the city but it's only a matter of time.
Jambo wrote: » parent and child spaces
Potential-Monke wrote: » Possibly about to start a heated debate with this, but, why should these spaces exist? I don't agree with them
Potential-Monke wrote: » Possibly about to start a heated debate with this, but, why should these spaces exist? I don't agree with them, and would much prefer to see OAP spaces instead. Elderly people could require closer parking, but parents should not get automatic rights just because they have kids. I don't park in them myself, unless there are literally no other spaces around, but only because i couldn't be bothered trying to defend my position on them to strangers on the street who take exception to it. There's also no legal requirement not to park in them. And before anyone asks, no, i don't have kids of my own, and no, i don't care about the struggles parents may have with bringing kids to the shopping centres. That's another annoyance of mine, but that's for a different thread. Parents decided to have kids, shouldn't mean they get automatic rights at anything. I've decided not to have kids, so can i have my "No Children" spaces near the doors?
Samsgirl wrote: » It's nothing to do with being near the shop doors. It's for door opening space to strap.in a child/childseat. And so you don't have your car door damaged when a child swings a door open.
wellboytoo wrote: » The people in Lidl who insist on parking on the lovely yellow box right outside the front of the store adjacent to the empty car park are bad enough, not only do they break the rules , they back out on top of the pedestrians walking into the supermarket because they are parked where the pedestrians should be walking.
robtri wrote: » they exist because the business wants to attract parents as they spend more money than childless couples or singles, in general. families are cash cows to these big supermarkets... your not...