Tag Archives: PSNI

blue, yellow, and red: but not parking in Bucharest

  • Blue badge for disabled usersBadge Holders * may usually park on single or double yellow lines for up to three hours except where there is a ban on loading or unloading and at a few locations where local schemes apply.

A guide for Blue Badge holders
published by Roads Service, 2003

Blue Badges: Park where you like

It seems that there are some rules which are unenforceable in those parts of Northern Ireland that are not in the Greater Belfast area.

Those of us who are lucky enough to be deemed not to need a blue badge may not know all the rules for those who do have one. But it does seem pretty clear that you cannot park on double or single yellow lines for long periods.

The problem, however, comes when someone does park for longer than three hours. In the words of one traffic attendant last Saturday,

We can’t do anything about disabled badge holders breaking the rules here. It’s all done from Belfast. Basically, they have up to three hours to park – and by the time they’re over it, it takes too long to get someone here from Belfast to do anything. So they really have a free parking space anywhere, anytime.

This sounds absolutely bonkers to me. In parts of Belfast I have seen traffic attendants out using digital cameras to show parking enfringements – presumably to back up their case if it needs to go to court. Surely this is what could be done in places outside the Greater Belfast area for those enfringements that concern blue badge holders.

Double yellow: Free Parking

Of course, many other drivers are at fault when it comes to parking generally – this is not limited to holders of the blue badge. They often can be found parking on double and single lines for periods longer than is allowed.

Double yellow lines mean no waiting at any time

from The Official Highway Code for Northern Ireland, p. 11

Waiting restrictions indicated by yellow lines apply to the carriageway, footway or footpath. You may stop to load or unload (unless there are also loading restrictions as described below) or while passengers board or alight. Double yellow lines mean no waiting at any time, unless there are signs that specifically indicate seasonal restrictions. The times at which the restrictions apply for other road markings are shown on nearby plates or on entry signs to controlled parking zones. If no days are shown on the signs, the restrictions are in force every day including Sundays and bank holidays. White bay markings and upright signs (see below) indicate where parking is allowed.

The Official Highway Code for Northern Ireland,
© Crown copyright 2008
(emphasis: mine)

Sadly, too many people seem to think that double yellow lines mean

Park here for free

when this is not the case as The Highway Code states.

Traffic attendants: red coats in NI

Perhaps we all need to be reminded of the law every now and then. Although it is not nice to get back to your car and find that there is a yellow envelope on your car windscreen, it is a reminder that there are rules about how, where, and when to park your vehicle. In Northern Ireland these rules are enforced by traffic attendants in red coats. The old Traffic Wardens have gone. But it is not just the ‘red coats’ that can and do give parking penalties. The Police Service of Northern Ireland can do so too. I’ve seen them do this particularly when people have parked too close to junctions.

* N.B. Before anyone thinks I am getting grumpy with people who really need these badges: I am not. I am just concerned that some rights that are granted to those that have them may be abused.
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North Queen Street Homophobic incident – an update

PSNI Homophobic hate crime posterThis afternoon I had a meeting with Constable Stevie Wilson of York Road Neighbourhood Police team concerning the incident that happened on 20 October 2010 in North Queen Street.

read more on Michael Carchrie Campbell

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Pink Paper fails its Northern Ireland readership

I want to reassure my friend Stephen that he is most certainly ‘not the only gay in the Province’. Although I suspect that the TUV and others would almost certainly wish that he were.

Indeed, I am only now getting to see his post as this morning I was with other representatives of the Northern Ireland LGBT Sector including from The Rainbow Project, NIGRA, and Cara-Friend at a meeting with Will Kerr, Asssistant Chief Constable of the Police Service of Northern Ireland, regarding the forward working of the LGBT Independent Advisory Group to the PSNI. It was certainly clear there that Stephen and I

are not the only gays in the Province.

Pink Paper fails its readership in Northern Ireland

The story is all too sadly yet another tale in the almost daily ‘erasing’ of Northern Ireland from the rest of the United Kingdom.

Perhaps some people in England, for it is mainly in England that these offending websites and organisations are based, should take a look inside their passport the next time they have it in their hand.

What does it say on it?

That’s right…

United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland

What part of this is too difficult to understand?

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blogged elsewhere: bomb alerts continue to disrupt lives

Earlier I posted elsewhere about the continuing bomb alert in the north of the city of Belfast. I said:

The bomb alert that is causing disruption in the York Road area of the city near the Alexandra Bar is concerning. There are many young children who live in this area. The roads around it, particularly Mountcollyer Avenue, are roads where children happily play in the street.

read rest here

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“known to police”: the whole truth?

In East Tyrone Magistrates Court yesterday a phrase was used by a detective constable in a bail hearing that has my brain considering whether this is correct or not.

The defendant was arrested at the scene of the finding of some ammunition and a holdall containing a revolver in a car in which he claims he was being taken to be a victim of a “so-called punishment shooting”*, lying face down on the back seat with a blanket over his head.

His solicitor said,

bail should be permitted as his client had no previous record.

Yet the detective constable replied:

That may be so, but he is known to police.

Now, I am known to police. My membership of various bodies and organisations is known to police. All of these are in a law-abiding capacity.

However, were I to be arrested, detained, charged, and the subject of a bail hearing like the accused above, me being “known to police”, would the magistrate be told by the police that I was “known to them”. And if not, why not, as this would be not

Telling the truth, the whole truth, and nothing but the truth

* “so-called punishment shooting” should be read as one set of criminals (usually linked to Northern Ireland paramilitary organisations (on both sides)) meting out their own “justice” to other criminals or those suspected of crimes – without any recourse to the Police Service of Northern Ireland and the Courts Service of Northern Ireland. These crimes themselves do not seem to be investigated by the police. All in the province and these islands must stand against the thugs and get these practices stopped. Now!
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