Disabled Parking Rant

requiem

Expert Member
Joined
May 10, 2009
Messages
4,048
I was involved in a serious motorbike accident in Nov.

I shattered my ankle, my tibia, my hand and wrist.

Moving around is very difficult.

I am still wheelchair bound.

I can move very short distances by hopping on one leg, and using a crutch and a gutter crutch.

On Wednesday I went to the Airport (ORT) for work.

I parked in a disabled parking bay. Hopped to the boot and pulled out my wheelchair. A friend then pushed me to my office.

When we returned later that afternoon. Someone had done 2 things.

1) Scratched my car badly.
2) Placed a note on my windscreen.

"You are an *******. You have parked in a paraplegic parking bay. This means that disabled people can't get to their cars. FUUUUUUCK YOU!!!!"


While I am only temporarily in a wheelchair and I will eventually walk again. I wish to say to whomsoever took it upon themselves to vandalise my car - **** YOU
 

Enzo Matrix

Honorary Master
Joined
Dec 15, 2006
Messages
13,840
hmmmmmmmm

I deal with this every day of my life. In my experience old people think they can park in these bays and once i had a fight with someone who had haemoroids and he parked in a disabled bay.

Sorry you had to deal with this kind of moron. Best to stick a wheel chair sign in your window. Im sure they have CCTV footage of this incident, have you asked airport security?
 

w1z4rd

Karmic Sangoma
Joined
Jan 17, 2005
Messages
49,748
Yeah, you do get *******s who over react like that. They think disabled parking's are only for permanently disabled people.
 

TJ99

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Apr 30, 2010
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I think we had a thread about this before. Far worse than people parking in disabled spots are the white knight retards who think they're justified in causing thousands of Rands worth of damage to someone else's property, for doing something they don't agree with.

The airport has security cameras all over the place. Maybe you could get the footage and see who it was and let your insurance company's lawyers handle it.
 

Hosehead

Executive Member
Joined
Aug 15, 2008
Messages
7,838
Just apply for a temp disabled parking permit and you'll have no more hassles. Personally I take great pains to avoid blocking disabled areas and have verbally challenged people I see who park in those bays who obviously have nothing wrong with them.
 

DrJohnZoidberg

Honorary Master
Joined
Jul 24, 2006
Messages
23,999
That's just fscked up man, sorry to hear about that.

I hate douches parking in disabled bays as much as the next guy, but I always make sure of my facts before accusing somebody of anything. Damaging the car is just retarded.
 

biometrics

Honorary Master
Joined
Aug 7, 2003
Messages
71,858
Here, print this out and stick it in your window:

1194989282626056836disability_sign_james_ki_01_svg_hi.png
 

AnibugZA

Well-Known Member
Joined
Sep 11, 2012
Messages
325
What happened to your car sucks. The schmuck who did it had no right.

The fact is that your car had nothing affixed to it that indicated you were injured/disabled, even temporarily. To that guy, you were the one in the wrong for parking in a disabled bay without any signage.

Perhaps consider sticking even just a paper wheelchair symbol in your rear window? It would at least signify that you're not being an uncaring and rude motorist. It may not be an official disabled sticker, but it still helps to convey the situation to others. Friends and family with disabilities carry several paper copies of the wheelchair sticker with them for when they are temporarily travelling in someone else's vehicle.

At the very least the response would have been a note saying "get official disability stickers!" instead of a rude note and physical damage to your car. Whoever scratched your car must have been in a REALLY foul mood to resort to such blatant vandalism.
 

porchrat

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Joined
Sep 11, 2008
Messages
34,322
I once took a cancer patient out for the day, just to help him spread his legs and get him out of the hospital. He wanted something from a shop (I forget what) so we stopped off to get it. The cancer treatments had obviously left the man disabled to the point at which he couldn't walk on his own and had to rely on me for support. Knowing he wasn't capable of walking across a parking lot I parked in the disabled bay. While I was assisting him out of the vehicle the security guard for the centre came over and told me that the parking was for disabled people only and that I needed to move. I mean while I understand that the man wasn't disabled because of some sort of car accident or something and that he didn't have a limb missing or something it was obvious that he clearly was unable to support himself on his own.

I argued with the guard all the while still trying to help the man from the vehicle and finally was forced to leave the poor man leaning against a pillar while I moved the vehicle. The guard also refused to support him and ensure he didn't fall while I parked on the other end of the lot.

I have always wondered if I was in the wrong for parking there or if the guard was wrong for insisting I move the vehicle.
 
Last edited:

w1z4rd

Karmic Sangoma
Joined
Jan 17, 2005
Messages
49,748
I once took a cancer patient out for the day, just to help him spread his legs and get him out of the hospital. He wanted something from a shop (I forget what) so we stopped off to get it. The cancer treatments had obviously left the man disabled to the point at which he couldn't walk on his own and had to rely on me for support. Knowing he wasn't capable of walking across a parking lot I parked in the disabled bay. While I was assisting him out of the vehicle the security guard for the centre came over and told me that the parking was for disabled people only and that I needed to move. I mean while I understand that the man wasn't disabled because of some sort of car accident or something and that he didn't have a limb missing or something it was obvious that he clearly was unable to support himself on his own.

I argued with the guard all the while still trying to help the man from the vehicle and finally was forced to leave the poor man leaning against a pillar while I moved the vehicle.

I have always wondered if I was in the wrong for parking there.

I dont think so. I think what you did was right.
 

requiem

Expert Member
Joined
May 10, 2009
Messages
4,048
Thanks for the posters. I will print one out. I just cannot believe the gall of some people.
 

porchrat

Honorary Master
Joined
Sep 11, 2008
Messages
34,322
I dont think so. I think what you did was right.
Thanks for the vote of confidence.

I would have brought a wheelchair with but the hospital had none to spare and we waited over an hour for one. If we had waited longer I would not have had time to take the man anywhere. In the end he asked if we could just go without the chair. Nice guy but can be a little impatient. :p

I wonder if the sight of an actual wheelchair would have made that guard think twice about confronting me like that. I still feel bad for making that poor man lean against that pillar like that and I wish the guard had at least complied with my request to steady the man while I parked elsewhere. Ah well, not much I can about it all these years later. :p

I also think there should be a line at which you can no longer be considered disabled enough to qualify for the use of the disabled parking but to me as long as without the added space and/or close location of the disabled parking you would not be able to make use of whatever facility it is you are visiting you should be permitted to use that disabled bay.
 

ToxicBunny

Oi! Leave me out of this...
Joined
Apr 8, 2006
Messages
113,628
I once took a cancer patient out for the day, just to help him spread his legs and get him out of the hospital. He wanted something from a shop (I forget what) so we stopped off to get it. The cancer treatments had obviously left the man disabled to the point at which he couldn't walk on his own and had to rely on me for support. Knowing he wasn't capable of walking across a parking lot I parked in the disabled bay. While I was assisting him out of the vehicle the security guard for the centre came over and told me that the parking was for disabled people only and that I needed to move. I mean while I understand that the man wasn't disabled because of some sort of car accident or something and that he didn't have a limb missing or something it was obvious that he clearly was unable to support himself on his own.

I argued with the guard all the while still trying to help the man from the vehicle and finally was forced to leave the poor man leaning against a pillar while I moved the vehicle. The guard also refused to support him and ensure he didn't fall while I parked on the other end of the lot.

I have always wondered if I was in the wrong for parking there or if the guard was wrong for insisting I move the vehicle.

I would have told the security guard to fsck off in no uncertain terms. I wouldn't even have bothered arguing with him.

What you did was right, in terms of parking in the disabled bay.

OP : What I would do is get in tough with ORT's security, they have cameras. find the person who scratched your vehicle, track them back to their vehicle and go to the police to open a case of Vandalism (or whatever you can), also lay a claim with your insurance and mark the person as the culpable person. Insurance will have a field day.
 

isie

Honorary Master
Joined
Jan 16, 2010
Messages
12,604
I was involved in a serious motorbike accident in Nov.

I shattered my ankle, my tibia, my hand and wrist.

Moving around is very difficult.

I am still wheelchair bound.

I can move very short distances by hopping on one leg, and using a crutch and a gutter crutch.

On Wednesday I went to the Airport (ORT) for work.

I parked in a disabled parking bay. Hopped to the boot and pulled out my wheelchair. A friend then pushed me to my office.

When we returned later that afternoon. Someone had done 2 things.

1) Scratched my car badly.
2) Placed a note on my windscreen.

"You are an *******. You have parked in a paraplegic parking bay. This means that disabled people can't get to their cars. FUUUUUUCK YOU!!!!"


While I am only temporarily in a wheelchair and I will eventually walk again. I wish to say to whomsoever took it upon themselves to vandalise my car - **** YOU

Why don't you have a sticker on your car, or printed one. I'm not justifying what this person did, what would you have done if security clamped your car - they would probably teell you they would not have done it if car had a sign
 

ld13

Honorary Master
Joined
Oct 28, 2005
Messages
13,004
I'm not justifying what this person did, what would you have done if security clamped your car

He would have merely strolled over to the security dudes in his wheelchair and someone with half a heart would've gladly released his car without thinking too much about it.

Clamping car (minor temporary inconvenience) != Scratched car (major permanent damage)

I would have told the security guard to fsck off in no uncertain terms. I wouldn't even have bothered arguing with him.

+1
 
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