Author Topic: Lancashire, code 01 parked in a restricted street, Miller Road  (Read 486 times)

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I’ve lived at my home for 12 years and was shocked to find a PCN on my windscreen last week. In all my time living here I don’t think I’ve even seen a parking warden on my street.

I can’t deny that a single yellow line runs down the kerb across the property, and though it’s fairly faded where I’ve been parking, I couldn’t say that the line was broken. It’s approximately 45 metres to the signage that applies to the line (Mon-Sat 8am-6pm), and I can’t say that I’ve ever noted its content as I’ve never had an issue in 12 years and as the signage is stationed in front of a business, so I would have assumed it applied to protect the parking spaces reserved for their employees rather than the entire kerb line.

I understand that not much of this is grounds for a proper appeal but as you can imagine I feel a bit aggrieved at getting a PCN for parking outside my own house, and if anyone has an idea of how I can best appeal it (if indeed you think there are any grounds) I’d be very grateful.

Here’s the PCN:


Here are images of the line from both sides:





And finally, here is the signage, which again is about 45 metres down the road in front of the business:

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Re: Lancashire, code 01 parked in a restricted street, Miller Road
« Reply #1 on: »
The PCN just says Miller Road - Lancashire is a big place so this would be a very vague location if one just got the NTO in the post and you weren't the driver... The website does have a map though.





Re: Lancashire, code 01 parked in a restricted street, Miller Road
« Reply #2 on: »
Please give us a GSV link to the exact location on Miller St.

Your car is well off the carriageway, leaving not all that much room for pedestrians and people with prams and invalid carriages, so the council may have receive a complaint and sent out a CEO, hence the PCN. Do you always park like this in your 12 years of parking ?  The only appeal argument I can think of here, is 'legitimate expectation'. This is to state that you have been parking for many years adjacent to the yellow line and have never got a PCN, and consider that advance notice of enforcement should have been delivered to residents

Re: Lancashire, code 01 parked in a restricted street, Miller Road
« Reply #3 on: »
This is the map on Lancashire's PCN portal but all I can confidently say it's somewhere on the way to Blackpool.


Re: Lancashire, code 01 parked in a restricted street, Miller Road
« Reply #4 on: »
Please give us a GSV link to the exact location on Miller St.

Your car is well off the carriageway, leaving not all that much room for pedestrians and people with prams and invalid carriages, so the council may have receive a complaint and sent out a CEO, hence the PCN. Do you always park like this in your 12 years of parking ?  The only appeal argument I can think of here, is 'legitimate expectation'. This is to state that you have been parking for many years adjacent to the yellow line and have never got a PCN, and consider that advance notice of enforcement should have been delivered to residents

GSV: https://maps.app.goo.gl/GCjQZXcT5gjECTec9

Yes, always for 12 years. It’s more common for cars to park on the other side in the same manner. One might imagine this is because fewer of the homes on that side have driveways, and perhaps also as there’s no yellow line. If my driveway was designed better I’d use it. There’s a couple of us that don’t have driveways.

Any other thoughts?

Many thanks.


Re: Lancashire, code 01 parked in a restricted street, Miller Road
« Reply #5 on: »
Now with the GSV link, I measured the distance the sign is away from your house, and it's 50 yards, 45.93 metres. This is not an unreasonable distance away. Frankly, I am astonished (1) you didn't understand the significance ofthe yellow line, and (2) that you haven't been penalised before.

So it comes down to 'legitimate expectation' as I indicated previously. Other thing to check up on is whether everybody else is getting PCNs for parking like yourself. I think it is clearly time to make your local councillor aware of this unexpected enforcement. It is possible somebody has complained due to your car occupying rather too much room on the footway. In London, they would have served a PCN for parking off-carriageway, as it has been an offence there since the 70s, but this is not the case where you are, so they served the next best thing, which is for the yellow line.