RE: Wardens Told To Stop Clamping Motorists
RE: Wardens Told To Stop Clamping Motorists
Thursday 16th August 2007

Wardens Told To Stop Clamping Motorists

Government sets out more 'driver-friendly' parking laws


Wardens are to be banned from clamping cars for

Clamps should only be used for repeat offenders, says Govt
Clamps should only be used for repeat offenders, says Govt
a single parking offence, under new guidelines from the Department of Transport. Clamping will now be reserved for repeat offenders.

Transport Secretary Ruth Kelly has also said that councils should not be allowed to set targets for the number of tickets issued. Councils made £1.16 billion from parking fines in 2005, compared to £638 million in 1997.

Presumably, this initiative from the DfT is to help improve the public perception of wardens, beyond its alleged present state as an intolerable set of money-sucking, quota-filling little b*******.

RAC spokesman Edmund King commented: “Clamping is a crude activity which should have been outlawed at the time of Dick Turpin.”

Author
Discussion

Kubica

Original Poster:

13,124 posts

235 months

Thursday 16th August 2007
quotequote all
Sounds good to me, about time too!

dublet

283 posts

234 months

Thursday 16th August 2007
quotequote all
Sounds like they're starting to put some common sense into traffic policy. Here's to revising those speed limits!

markh1

2,846 posts

232 months

Thursday 16th August 2007
quotequote all
Finally! something bordering on a positive move from the D of T.

scottiedog

191 posts

232 months

Thursday 16th August 2007
quotequote all
Must be dreaming, the D of T is actually making some sort of sense!

flattotheboards

6,688 posts

229 months

Thursday 16th August 2007
quotequote all
RAC spokesman Edmund King commented: “Clamping is a crude activity which should have been outlawed at the time of Dick Turpin.”
ye what he said.

bri_the_fly

180 posts

234 months

Thursday 16th August 2007
quotequote all
I used to carry an open-ended spanner the size of the wheel nut...just incase.
Get clamped? The spanner will get behind the clamp, undo the nuts...take wheel and clamp off. Take wheel out of clamp, put wheel on car. Go home!
Quicker (and cheaper) than waiting for them to come 'release' you. F*** 'em!
Once did that outside the Cambridge pub in Shaftsbury Ave W1, and there was a crowd gathering..and when they realised what I had done they all cheered!!! hahhaha

Ravell

1,181 posts

235 months

Friday 17th August 2007
quotequote all
bri_the_fly said:
I used to carry an open-ended spanner the size of the wheel nut...just incase.
Get clamped? The spanner will get behind the clamp, undo the nuts...take wheel and clamp off. Take wheel out of clamp, put wheel on car. Go home!
Quicker (and cheaper) than waiting for them to come 'release' you. F*** 'em!
Once did that outside the Cambridge pub in Shaftsbury Ave W1, and there was a crowd gathering..and when they realised what I had done they all cheered!!! hahhaha
This is one of those moments of "Why didn't I think of that!" tongue out

Never been clamped thankfully.

fade2grey

704 posts

271 months

Friday 17th August 2007
quotequote all
Does this include the private clamper's on private land? like the ones that got me at my own apartment block while loading the car! FFS

MilnerR

8,273 posts

281 months

Friday 17th August 2007
quotequote all
I've been clamped once in a private car park with one of those cheapo chain clamps (stayed too long). Jacked the car up, let the tyre down, squeezed the chain off around the deflated tyre put spare on and phoned the clamping company. A bloke turns up in his van ready to extract 80 quid from me, I hand him his undamaged clamp get in my car and bugger off. I was at least expecting a letter, but nothing, not a peep out of the thieving scum.


This DfT seems like a bit of sense at last. What is the point of clamping a car and therefore blocking the car in an illegal position?

Tinohead

639 posts

232 months

Friday 17th August 2007
quotequote all
Yeah from what I understand, if you remove it yourself (as described above), you need to return it to the company, or hand it into the police as lost and found. As long as you do this and it isn't damaged, there's nothing they can do.

andyturner

120 posts

232 months

Friday 17th August 2007
quotequote all
bri_the_fly said:
I used to carry an open-ended spanner the size of the wheel nut...just incase.
Get clamped? The spanner will get behind the clamp, undo the nuts...take wheel and clamp off. Take wheel out of clamp, put wheel on car. Go home!
Quicker (and cheaper) than waiting for them to come 'release' you. F*** 'em!
Once did that outside the Cambridge pub in Shaftsbury Ave W1, and there was a crowd gathering..and when they realised what I had done they all cheered!!! hahhaha
I thought most clamps (these days at least), surrounded the wheel such that even if you take the wheel off, it's still clamped?

danrc

2,797 posts

233 months

Friday 17th August 2007
quotequote all
Shame my car can't be clamped as its too low smile Love to see the clampers face as he struggled smile

Skodaku

1,805 posts

242 months

Friday 17th August 2007
quotequote all
I thought they had issued "Guidelines", not formal instructions. Will save the celebration for when I see evidence of these guidelines actually being implemented.

Guidelines are a nice way for government to say; "We have done what we can; but your Local Authority have chosen to ignore us. Nothing more we can do". Gets central government off the hook quite nicely. Or is that just me being cynical ?

weewebbo

2 posts

223 months

Friday 17th August 2007
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Yes about time England became a more progressive society like Scotland by outlawing clamping wink

rabw

9,027 posts

231 months

Friday 17th August 2007
quotequote all
never been clamped but always thought I'd end up cutting the chain off and taking the clamp home for a bit of P38 and yellow spray paint.

herewego

8,814 posts

236 months

Saturday 18th August 2007
quotequote all
MilnerR said:
I've been clamped once in a private car park with one of those cheapo chain clamps (stayed too long). Jacked the car up, let the tyre down, squeezed the chain off around the deflated tyre put spare on and phoned the clamping company. A bloke turns up in his van ready to extract 80 quid from me, I hand him his undamaged clamp get in my car and bugger off. I was at least expecting a letter, but nothing, not a peep out of the thieving scum.


This DfT seems like a bit of sense at last. What is the point of clamping a car and therefore blocking the car in an illegal position?
I assume it's to make sure you pay so you don't do it again.

Who me ?

7,455 posts

235 months

Saturday 18th August 2007
quotequote all
MilnerR said:
This DfT seems like a bit of sense at last. What is the point of clamping a car and therefore blocking the car in an illegal position?
Shades of the late DAVE Allen on one of his rants on his TV show. "The car's blocking the road, ***** so what do the idiotic ****** do - clamp it and make things worse " --or words to that effect.laugh

gittygoat

28 posts

245 months

Sunday 19th August 2007
quotequote all
Heard on Talksport radio(Ian Collins show) that this is just a smoke screen to hide the the fact that they have or are about to change the law about wardens issuing tickets - In future they will not have to put ticket onto the vehicle anymore - You'll just get a ticket through the post.
Sorry I'm not too clued up on the subject, but thought I'd let you all know !

alextgreen

15,806 posts

265 months

Sunday 19th August 2007
quotequote all
danrc said:
Shame my car can't be clamped as its too low smile Love to see the clampers face as he struggled smile
Can't even get a finger between wheel and arch on mine laugh

Greensleeves

1,235 posts

226 months

Sunday 19th August 2007
quotequote all
In English law, you are innocent until proven guilty. There may be a perfectly legitimate reason why your car is illegally parked such as it's broken down there, or mitigating circumstances such as you just left it there whilst you helped someone in difficulty or it was wrongly clamped in the first place. In which case, you would like to offer a defence. Clamping removes this right.

What's the crack with the big bruisers who hang around in car parks with a van full of clamps and stick a photocopied bit of paper on your windscreen with their mobile number on it. Surely they can't be legal?