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14 days? some other cities have 48/72 hr restrictions. If you dont move your car, they ticket and maybe tow you. |
If there are signs that says "Residents of this block only" or "Permit Parking Only"; Bylaw 2849, section 17.6F (aka 3hr bylaw) does not apply. Which means, if you have those signs on your block; ANYONE can park on your block as long as they are residents of the area (Permit) or block (Residents Only). |
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If it is a RPO and his vehicle aint registered you can call cov and get him a ticket right away. The 3 hour thing is out the window. |
A very nice note was left for one who lives their car for days, asking them not to park there due to limited parking. They saw it, ignored it and parked again. Called the city. Within an hour they had a ticket...bylaw guy says 3 tickets will earn an impound for them. |
Or just buy POS cars, and fill up the block |
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Point is, use the appropriate bylaws. If the vehicle is registered to the block, and can't be tagged for parking time, use the other ones. Too far from the curb? Too close to a driveway/intersection? Other section of bylaw cover that. Fair warning though, at the end of the day, you gotta live there with your neighbors so careful if you start a feud. |
Just report the suite for illegal rental. Usually owners hate that coz then they either have to report all the income and pay higher property tax or reno the whole place up so it can no longer be rented out and a bylaw officer have to come and make sure the suite can no longer be rented. |
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Ok to be clear i'm talking about a street with no signage, period. The 3hr bylaw applies here and there has always been a misconception about if you live on the block it's cool and while the bylaw makes the intent of the bylaw sound like it's meant to deter commuters and workers from dumping their car and leaving for the day it's also very clear in saying you you can only park in front of the property you personal own. Some notes about the bylaw - it's complaint based only meaning this bylaw is never ever proactively enforced - only the home owner can call about a vehicle parked in front of their house meaning a neighbor can't call if it's in front of someone else house - the majority of the car must be in front of your house meaning if it's parked 50% in front of yours and 50% in front of someone else both homes need to call in - only then will parking take the complaint and on the first go around it takes them up to 3 days to get the registration from icbc meaning they will not come out. You would have to wait at least a few days and for them to come back to call again and hopefully then they have the info and only then will they come out and chalk then wait 3 hours and back again - it's the most annoying to enforce and you can tell there are actually a million hoops to jump through |
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The exact wording of the bylaw "such premises that are property or residence of said person" still protects tenants (as they reside there and their vehicle registered) even if they are not owners. Maybe my interpretation is wrong but what kind of landlord is going to call in their own tenant? Both tenants and homeowners follow the same bylaws when parking in front of someone else's place. |
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To clarify, what I've said is true re the process. Snowball is right, i say "homeowner" but what I mean is registered insurance so a tenant who lives in the basement has the same rights as the owner if the registered insurance is to the house. So coles notes one more time Assuming the insurance is registered to the house then: - all parties can park adjacent to said house regardless if it's the home owner or tenant for as long as they want - said people can only park adjacent to any of their neighbors house for 3 hrs from 800-600 - only the people living at the home can call a vehicle in that's adjacent to their property if the majority of the vehicle sites adjacent to your house otherwise both you and your neighbor need to call One more interesting thing about the Parking bylaw. If a street has both no signage and signage (RPP, RPO) then the 3hr bylaw does not exist on that street because the RPO and RPP trump it. So it's sort of a loophole if you find such a street you can park in the non signed part for as long as you want regardless who you are. |
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I have had a few guys on my block park their vehicles overnight in front of my place. Now one was a cube truck from his business, the other fellow was a guy that had a truck and trailer exceeding 20something feet. They both were parking in front of mine and my neighbours places, cause they didn't want to park in front of their own homes. I asked both of them twice, politely, not to park in front of my place. The guy with the cube truck basically told me to F off. The cube truck is a commercial vehicle due to size and restricted to the 3 hours thing, or overnight. So the city came out 3 times at 10 pm or later to ticket him. He now parks either in his back yard, or the block over. The guy with the trailer was nailed out of the 3 hour time zone, as he parked overnight and was over 20something feet with the truck and trailer. He was ticketed twice by me, and twice by my neighbour. He now parks 2 blocks away on one of those alleys with boulevards. Now once in a while I don't care if people in the neighbourhood park in front of my place. But if you start doing it almost every day, I don't like it. My suggestion is take the time to read through the rules for your area. Some of the time my wife and I have found the people taking your calls at the cities bylaw line don't know what they are talking about. My wife spent hours reading through them that applied to our area. When she called in about the truck and trailer the person said there was nothing that the city could do, my wife then specified the section and subsection that applied to the truck and trailer.. silence.. then oh you are right. So don't take the person on the bylaw line as knowing the rules completely. The cars lining the back alleys, especially in front of laneways makes me laugh. That is the cities fault. I was looking into building a laneway in my back alley.. mostly for resale as I don't want to deal with tenants. But when I was going through it with an architect.. I discovered from the architect that when a laneway is built, when you apply, you sign a letter stating you or your tenants will not park behind the laneway in the alley. |
On the flip side I'm moving in the next month or 2 and already I'm anticipating to battle homeowners and curious how ugly it's going to get. Moving to a new townhouse complex, 55 units each unit with 1 parking stall and almost all the units are 2-3 bedrooms. Based on my assumption I would say the majority of people all drive and likely might have 2 cars putting possibly 55 cars into the neighborhood. Luckily, essentially the entire neighborhood is single family res which means there are ample spots all be it you may need to walk a block or maybe even 2 depending. With that said, for sure some home owners will not be happy. sigh first world problems. |
bald guy is a tenant that lives down the street...cant' find parking...so he winds up parking in front of this dudes house who wasn't all too thrilled.... sound familiar?...dude's car gets blocked in.... Good ol' Surrey and its over crowded neighborhoods where each household has 5 cars + 1 for their tenant. |
At the end of the day that home owner has a garage and a driveway. I'd definitely be having some words with them if I came back and was blocked in like that. |
^Video about a parking dispute ends with a cop who appears to park in front of a fire hydrant. nice. I'm not sure I would block someone in like that without knowing who it was or what they were capable of. You're guaranteed a confrontation and you put your property at risk. I think I would rather put up with it, go through the proper channels to resolve the issue, than deal with insurance and a damaged vehicle. They would also know where you live should they seek retaliation. |
Welcome to Clayton Heights |
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Lots of good insightful situations mentioned in this thread, along with notes to keep in mind. Best is to check whichever bylaw applies to you, so that when calling the city you are ready. Agreed with some of you mentioning, it's a dangerous game when it's neighbours battle, gotta make sure you know who you messing with before anything at the end of the day. |
This city has to do something, my neighbors has 8 cars, one car for each family members |
Looks like the folks in Clayton Heights will have to learn to get along because the parking situation isn't going to get any better A new report going to Surrey city council on Monday calls for the suspension of a crackdown on illegal suites while the city develops a new policy to either legalize or eliminate the city’s un-permitted rental stock. https://globalnews.ca/news/3894237/s...ing-evictions/ I saw in the news today that this was passed last night by Surrey Council |
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My friend who lives 3 blocks from me that has a neighbor who thinks he owns the spot in front of his house. In the past he's hooked up chains to vehicles that have parked there and dragged them down the street, totally fucked up. |
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