All Dc government vehicles can park on a meter with out paying stated in the municipal regulations.
All and any government employee can enter a business. They do get a break. Also, you don't know if that employee had a complaint call to that location. Your 1 picture just shows the parking enforcement car parked in a legal space.
Oh, must just be mad you was issue a ticket or you wanted that parking space.
Second, I was not issued a citation or ticket. I was merely walking by and noticed a blatant disregard for parking legally by this DC government employee.
The driver of this vehicle parked 3 feet from the curb, obstructing traffic from easily passing and clearly not parked within the metered space (the rear of the vehicle extends beyond the meter by a foot). The vehicle parked legally (and paying) behind the government vehicle also then had to have the rear of their vehicle jut out beyond the space behind them. If this was a non-government vehicle, it would have been ticketed for not parking within the metered spot regardless of the "right to park and not pay" you so aforementioned. The bigger picture is more about holding this employee accountable for their poor parking when they are a parking enforcement officer. Irony at its best.
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3 Comments
Soulja (Registered User)
All Dc government vehicles can park on a meter with out paying stated in the municipal regulations.
All and any government employee can enter a business. They do get a break. Also, you don't know if that employee had a complaint call to that location. Your 1 picture just shows the parking enforcement car parked in a legal space.
Oh, must just be mad you was issue a ticket or you wanted that parking space.
Nate G (Registered User)
First, your grammar is horrific.
Second, I was not issued a citation or ticket. I was merely walking by and noticed a blatant disregard for parking legally by this DC government employee.
The driver of this vehicle parked 3 feet from the curb, obstructing traffic from easily passing and clearly not parked within the metered space (the rear of the vehicle extends beyond the meter by a foot). The vehicle parked legally (and paying) behind the government vehicle also then had to have the rear of their vehicle jut out beyond the space behind them. If this was a non-government vehicle, it would have been ticketed for not parking within the metered spot regardless of the "right to park and not pay" you so aforementioned. The bigger picture is more about holding this employee accountable for their poor parking when they are a parking enforcement officer. Irony at its best.
Κλειστό Display Name Blocked (1220880) (Registered User)