Brits claim rights to home parking spots
Monday, 22 August 2011 10:41 AM
Almost half of the public lay some sort of claim to the public highway near their homes, claims new research out today.
According to a survey by Churchill Insurance, almost half (44 per cent) of people believe they 'own’ the nearest public parking space to their home.
This sense of entitlement is so great that one in five (18 per cent) have felt distressed when a stranger has parked in front of their property.
The research claims to have identified a group it calls ‘Home Traffic Wardens’, the five per cent of respondents who use traffic cones and road signs to block the space in front of their property to prevent other people parking there.
A further two per cent have even put notices on their property banning motorists from parking near their home, even though they are not legally entitled to do so.
Residents of the North-East (57 per cent) and North-West (57 per cent) are the most likely to lay claim to the parking space near their property.
Less than a third of Scottish residents claim to own the public parking space nearest their property. They are also the least concerned when someone parks in front of their property, with just one in ten being stressed out by a strange car near their home.
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