A bit council (Vol 6)

A bit council (Vol 6)

Author
Discussion

nuyorican

907 posts

104 months

Wednesday 22nd May
quotequote all
-Cappo- said:
Nothing council about flagrantly disregarding spiteful, peevish, pointless little signs. They're everywhere. A blight on our country.

It may even be something that the underclasses and the upper class have in common, It's generally the anxious middle classes that slavishly and fearfully adhere to every sign, warning and 'polite' notice.

- Rules are for the guidance of wise men and the obedience of fools.

The Gauge

2,219 posts

15 months

Wednesday 22nd May
quotequote all
Spare tyre said:
Having watched one of his videos, they now keep popping up on YouTube. I don't know which annoys me the most, his face or his voice. Just watched a video he did 3yrs ago about him and his girlfriend, what an absolute monsterilla she is.

Plymo

1,153 posts

91 months

Wednesday 22nd May
quotequote all
nuyorican said:
- Rules are for the guidance of wise men and the obedience of fools.
As said by Douglas Bader, who was of course famous for losing both his legs in a plane crash, while disobeying rules about low flying!

lord trumpton

7,492 posts

128 months

Wednesday 22nd May
quotequote all
Koyaanisqatsi said:
Straight out the bath to Sainsbury's

A bit of a fat too.

-Cappo-

19,675 posts

205 months

Wednesday 22nd May
quotequote all
nuyorican said:
-Cappo- said:
Nothing council about flagrantly disregarding spiteful, peevish, pointless little signs. They're everywhere. A blight on our country.

It may even be something that the underclasses and the upper class have in common, It's generally the anxious middle classes that slavishly and fearfully adhere to every sign, warning and 'polite' notice.

- Rules are for the guidance of wise men and the obedience of fools.
Twas just the irony that made me chuckle.

nuyorican

907 posts

104 months

Thursday 23rd May
quotequote all
Plymo said:
As said by Douglas Bader, who was of course famous for losing both his legs in a plane crash, while disobeying rules about low flying!
biggrin

I did not know that.

Spare tyre

9,761 posts

132 months

Thursday 23rd May
quotequote all
The spotting of wheelchair mickey

https://www.facebook.com/groups/720708193065632/?h...

Local oik

Fallingup

1,580 posts

100 months

Thursday 23rd May
quotequote all
nuyorican said:
Nothing council about flagrantly disregarding spiteful, peevish, pointless little signs. They're everywhere. A blight on our country.

It may even be something that the underclasses and the upper class have in common, It's generally the anxious middle classes that slavishly and fearfully adhere to every sign, warning and 'polite' notice.

- Rules are for the guidance of wise men and the obedience of fools.
This is bks. Most councils put up signs to mitigate against being sued. Mostly by council types who know how to abuse the system. It's a sad reflection on the world we live in. Blame the United States and our over payed lawyers.

Roman Moroni

1,055 posts

125 months

Thursday 23rd May
quotequote all
Dr Murdoch said:
Enfield Council in London take a fairly robust approach to driveways without a dropped kerb....

Haringay have gone one better.

https://www.google.com/maps/@51.6024073,-0.0630195...

Check out #64

(Apologies, I'm to much of a luddite to know how to upload the photo --- Council??)

Whistle

1,440 posts

135 months

Thursday 23rd May
quotequote all
Drove past this place today, Got to be a thread winner.




hidetheelephants

25,353 posts

195 months

Thursday 23rd May
quotequote all
Whistle said:
Drove past this place today, Got to be a thread winner.



Vapes, tanning beds, discount fireworks, sleeve tattoos, burberry knock-offs. All it needs for a full house is an XL Bully.

Last Visit

2,895 posts

190 months

Friday 24th May
quotequote all
hidetheelephants said:
Whistle said:
Drove past this place today, Got to be a thread winner.



All it needs for a full house is an XL Bully.
There's probably one in the pram.

nismocat

474 posts

10 months

Friday 24th May
quotequote all
hidetheelephants said:
Whistle said:
Drove past this place today, Got to be a thread winner.



Vapes, tanning beds, discount fireworks, sleeve tattoos, burberry knock-offs. All it needs for a full house is an XL Bully.
How can you tell they have sleeve tattoos?

nismocat

474 posts

10 months

Friday 24th May
quotequote all
Rusty Old-Banger said:
Roofless Toothless said:
As soon as you apply to the council for a ‘dropped kerb’ you soon discover that it is officially known as a ‘crossover’. It is not just a matter of getting rid of an inconvenient bump up the kerbstone.

It costs thousands to do this, and not only for the physical labour and materials, but the searches that are made about the utilities that may be passing your house beneath the footpath, and if their conduits are robust enough to withstand vehicles driving over them. In my own case I recall they even contacted the utility companies for their future plans in the road. Both the town and county councils may become involved on matters of road safety and public amenity.

Driving merrily across the pavement may seem innocuous to some, but wait until you collapse a gas main or sewer pipe, and it won’t seem so funny having to fork out perhaps tens of thousands for the repair.
This is EXACTLY it.

(Highways engineer who deals with this crap every day)

There are other issues too - road classification, visibility to/from hazards, removal of on-road parking availability, suitability of off-road parking area (if it's too small to realistically park a car/van), if the house already has an access (separate in and outs are generally refused), all sorts of things.

Roofless, I think you are in my area so you may well be familiar with this guidance: https://www.essexhighways.org/applications/vehicle...

In my experience, it's about £3k to install a dropped crossing, so really not very much in the grand scheme of things. Break a utility and it can easily run to 6 figures to repair. I've just "paid" £400k to BT to lower a chamber in a footway, for example.

Edited by Rusty Old-Banger on Wednesday 22 May 14:22
The end of terrace house I grew up in was extended by my dad (who was a builder) and it doubled the size of the house and became a very large 5 bed, the biggest in the whole area at the time was 4. My dad dropped the kerb while he was at it and stole a bit of land to boot! (it was all woods). This was in the 70s.

Fast forward to last week when I happened to pop in to see the old stomping ground (moved out when I was 18 but family lived there till about 2000) and there is a curb and path now! Apparently the house was split into two (1and 1A) and the council found out the path was illegally dropped and reinstated it. The silly thing is the owners of the two houses ust bump up the curb and when any council person comes knocking they just say the cars never mived since they put the curb in!

hidetheelephants

25,353 posts

195 months

Friday 24th May
quotequote all
nismocat said:
How can you tell they have sleeve tattoos?
Does it stop being a sleeve because it's on a leg rather than an arm? Is a trouserleg tattoo a thing? IDK.

jdw100

4,290 posts

166 months

Friday 24th May
quotequote all
Last Visit said:
hidetheelephants said:
Whistle said:
Drove past this place today, Got to be a thread winner.



All it needs for a full house is an XL Bully.
There's probably one in the pram.
Can’t see the ‘turkey teeth’ in a blinding white: so not a full house.


nismocat

474 posts

10 months

Friday 24th May
quotequote all
hidetheelephants said:
nismocat said:
How can you tell they have sleeve tattoos?
Does it stop being a sleeve because it's on a leg rather than an arm? Is a trouserleg tattoo a thing? IDK.
Not sure.

I am not a fan of tattoos all over the arms and legs, my daughter is covered but not on the face, but it is very popular now with the 20 to 30 age group.

Spare tyre

9,761 posts

132 months

Friday 24th May
quotequote all
Whistle said:
Drove past this place today, Got to be a thread winner.



Good luck to them for trying, but that is gonna end in tears

alisdairm

252 posts

163 months

Monday 27th May
quotequote all
hidetheelephants said:
nismocat said:
How can you tell they have sleeve tattoos?
Does it stop being a sleeve because it's on a leg rather than an arm? Is a trouserleg tattoo a thing? IDK.
A leg covered in tattoos should be refereed to as a 'leg sleeve' or simply 'a trouser'

I prefer 'a trouser'

ColdoRS

1,815 posts

129 months