Jump to content

Recommended Posts

Hi

At the top end of Dunstans Road the pavements are cluttered with wheely bins which are left on the pavement all week. This makes it difficult to walk along if you want to walk two abreast, have young children and buggies or certain disabilities. Pavements are for pedestrians not bins, surely...


I'm not sure why the residents do this as they all have front gardens of a decent size. I live on the section of Dunstans between Goodrich Road and Peckham Ryeand although we have more modest gardens, an all of us still squeeze our bins in.

Something of a pet peeve...we put our bins out as late as possible the night before collection and the binmen are very good at putting them back inside our gate, but at least 80% of houses on our street just leave them out all week, when they have plenty of space to keep them inside their boundaries. It's massively inconsiderate and selfish not to.

cohen22 Wrote:

-------------------------------------------------------

> Gosh. Isn't life hard sometimes. Hey ho it's

> Monday tomorrow!


Harder than it needs be for elderly and disabled people who have trouble navigating the urban environment because of other people's lazy selfishness, yes.

rendelharris Wrote:

-------------------------------------------------------

> Something of a pet peeve...we put our bins out as

> late as possible the night before collection and

> the binmen are very good at putting them back

> inside our gate, but at least 80% of houses on our

> street just leave them out all week, when they

> have plenty of space to keep them inside their

> boundaries. It's massively inconsiderate and

> selfish not to.


Absolutely Spot On.

The council put notices on all the lamp posts in our street, asking residents to be considerate and move their bins back inside their properties. The regular offending household continued to leave their bin out, leaving too little space between the bin and the lamp post to get a push chair / wheel chair / tartan shopping trolley / fat person through. Still, they are the same household that regularly scrapes / bangs other cars when parking their massive estate car, so I doubt that a few notices are going to appeal to their sense of being good neighbours.

uncleglen Wrote:

-------------------------------------------------------

> Add to that the selfish idiots who take up a third

> of the pavement with their perfectly manicured

> privet....especially if there is a tree outside

> their property- and you're lucky to pass through

> in single file!


and don't even get Louisa started on buggies..................

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
  • Latest Discussions

    • If you read my post I expect a compromise with the raising of the cap on agricultural property so that far less 'ordinary' farmers do not get caught  Clarkson is simply a high profile land owner who is not in the business as a conventional farmer.  Here's a nice article that seems to explain things well  https://www.sustainweb.org/blogs/nov24-farming-budget-inheritance-tax-apr/ It's too early to speculate on 2029.  I expect that most of us who were pleased that Labour got in were not expecting anything radical. Whilst floating the idea of hitting those looking to minimise inheritance tax, including gifting, like fuel duty they also chickened put. I'm surprised that anyone could start touting for the Tories after 14 years of financial mismanagement and general incompetence. Surly not.  A very low bar for Labour but they must be well aware that there doesn't need to be much of a swing form Reform to overturn Labour's artificially large majority.  But even with a generally rabid right wing press, now was the opportunity to be much braver.
    • And I worry this Labour government with all of it's own goals and the tax increases is playing into Farage's hands. With Trump winning in the US, his BFF Farage is likely to benefit from strained relations between the US administration and the UK one. As Alastair Campbell said on a recent episode of The Rest is Politics who would not have wanted to be a fly on the wall of the first call between Angela Rayner and JD Vance....those two really are oil and water. Scary, scary times right now and there seems to be a lack of leadership and political nous within the government at a time when we really need it - there aren't many in the cabinet who you think will play well on the global stage.
    • I look to the future and clearly see that the law of unintended consequences will apply with a vengeance and come 2029 Labour will voted out of office. As someone once said 'The trouble with socialism is that eventually you run out of other people's money'. 
Home
Events
Sign In

Sign In



Or sign in with one of these services

Search
×
    Search In
×
×
  • Create New...