Has the time come for “parking close” and “wide bay” badges rather than a “disabled” badge?
Physically disabled people obviously need a bit of a hand in the ever larger car parks outside major supermarkets these days but the problem is in identifying those people who actually need that bit of a hand.
At the moment, the identification is purely through possession of one of the “disabled parking” badges on a car. The problem is that these seem to be handed out like confetti with many people possessing them who clearly don’t need them but get them purely through reason of them being old. Yes, some old people need them but those are disabled old people, not those that are simply old and see it as their right to have one of those disabled badges. It’s as bad with the parent and child (formerly mother and child as it remains in some places). Yes, you need a wider bay to unload the kids into a pram, but you don’t need a wider bay for teenagers (unless they’re so stupid that they just swing the doors out).
What’s really needed are two stickers: a “parking close” one and a “wide bay” one.
At the moment, there seem to be very few people in our local supermarket who would need the “parking close” one which is as you would expect. After all, even if you parked in the closest disabled or child parking spot to the door, you’d still have to travel several hundred yards within the store to get to the back and would probably end up travelling something like a mile or more if you went round all the aisles. Thus “disabled” people who claim that they need to park close to the shop really only need to do so if they have a wheelchair in which case they actually need a “wide bay” sticker.
It’s obviously different in smaller shops but for supermarkets it appears that a massive reduction in the “disabled” slots (and probably in the parent & child ones too) would help those people who really need them.
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