Quote:
Originally Posted by kcrazorbackfan
When the landscapers need to get to a back yard to do a job (as they did mine) and you don't have enough space on either side of your home because of the close proximity to the neighbors landscaping (as both sides of my home is) for the landscapers to get their equipment back to do the job (as they had to do mine), then it has to be accessed somehow (as the landscapers did mine from the diamond lane on St. Charles).
My quote is above, so you don't have to scroll back
to re-read it; I just re-read mine again and I didn't see where I wrote they CAN park anywhere to access their job, I said it's PROBABLY the easiest place for them park to access their job.
GE has his own point of view, I have mine and you have yours. GE's home/lot is probably twice the size of mine and, if he's had landscaping done, probably had enough room on the sides for landscapers to drive to the back yard; unfortunately, I, along with numerous others, don't.
Such quibbling over semantics may seem like petty stuff, but to some, it's a necessity.
Again, just let it be..........
|
Sounds all well and good. And I sympathize...to a degree... with your situation.
But it doesn't change the fact that you can't block a thru traffic lane for an extended period to simply park to do contracted work. Picture it on a road like Odell or Rio Grande or many others. same exact road cross section we're talking about here.