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More Controlled Parking Restrictions for Charlton

123457

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  • It'll make it harder for some, no doubt. Getting to the game might mean parking up where you can and getting a bus or Uber to the ground, I don't know. 
  • if they made them all 5 hour wait, then no problem :smile:
  • clive said:

    Hornfair Road area to get much worse then :neutral:
  • Dazzler21 said:
    Hornfair Road area to get much worse then :neutral:
    Defo and that's how LTNs work too. Everything gets pushed to the boundary roads while those inside get traffic free streets.

    The ones that live on the boundary roads then kick off and the zone could be extended.
  • Dazzler21 said:
    Hornfair Road area to get much worse then :neutral:
    I used to park on Park Drive off Cemetery Lane - looks like that could now get very packed, and it wasn't that easy previously unless got there early. 
  • If this had come up in the first quarter of the season it would have probably been enough to finally stop me doing what had become an utter chore. Now, it's a pain, but time to look for plan B.

    Jacko out!
  • Something that's been bugging me. I normally park over to the west past the station 
    When I was walking up for the Rotherham game one of the stewards on the corner of Charlton church lane/flloyd told someone to try parking in a factory along the road. He was pointing down Delafield. Anyone know where this factory is?

    I know we used to park in that a factory on Victoria away years ago for a few £ but that's gone and is housing now. What was he on about?
  • It's still a Road Tax however much you dislike the name.
    Tax payers built the roads that cyclists and drivers use and are paying for the building of cycle paths and lanes. Both inefficient methods at moving people into towns and cities.

    The transport infrastructure is not joined up properly, expensive and inefficient and it needs sorting quickly

    Ebbsfleet  style large car parks that are free, and fast direct trains into cities and between cities. 60 miles, 60 minutes for £6 or similar should be the aim. Buses that run from towns and villages that arrive 10 minutes before trains depart, that are required to wait for a train if delayed.

    Where Tubes can’t run we should have trams. Tiny electric cars, bikes and scooters available to rent to fill in the gaps alongside busses and taxis.

    In my opinion the only way to start breaking down the need for the car is to make the alternative attractive. They are trying to make it attractive by making the life of a motorist a misery, but the fact is that the alternative is not in place yet. Or even in planning.
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  • cafcfan said:
    There is a clue to the problem with making public transport attractive. It is in the name: Public Transport.

    By definition, public transport has members of the public on it. They are generally, unpleasant, smelly (fag stench, dodgy burgers, body odour, etc, etc), unstable, aggressive, violent, too close, drunk, covered in vomit, reading newspapers that are too large, listening to music that is too loud, trying to dodge fares, or, even worse, trying to strike up a conversation with you. 
    By comparison a car, even with the everyday traffic problems is a haven of tranquillity, an oasis of calm.
    Well obviously we will be in cars!
  • Yep, probably more like it. 

    Call it what you like.....road tax, car tax, emissions tax but I know cyclists dont pay it. 
    Road maintenance is paid from general taxes. The motorists contribution is insignificant. If roads were maintained from a tax on cars, lorries etc no one would be able to afford a car except the very well off.
  • iainment said:
    Road maintenance is paid from general taxes. The motorists contribution is insignificant. If roads were maintained from a tax on cars, lorries etc no one would be able to afford a car except the very well off.
    I assume you would be happy to scrap car tax then? 
    And VAT on cars?
    And car benefit tax?
    And VAT on petrol?
    And VAT on car parts and repairs?

    The fact is the motor industry is very lucrative to the government in many ways: and the whole of the country benefits from it.

    You need to get off your bike and look at the bigger picture. As earthlings we need people to use cars less. A push bike really is not the answer, and neither is parking restrictions around train stations if we want people to use trains.
  • Redrobo said:
    I assume you would be happy to scrap car tax then? 
    And VAT on cars?
    And car benefit tax?
    And VAT on petrol?
    And VAT on car parts and repairs?

    The fact is the motor industry is very lucrative to the government in many ways: and the whole of the country benefits from it.

    You need to get off your bike and look at the bigger picture. As earthlings we need people to use cars less. A push bike really is not the answer, and neither is parking restrictions around train stations if we want people to use trains.
    Even so the taxes on motoring don’t cover anything near the cost of roads.

  • The same can be said for Makros, their carpark is enormous. 
    I have never seen it anywhere near full even on match days and meet ups for CL vengeance bouts.
    Could they not be encouraged to cone off a certain amount on match days and charge £5 a pop…..they’d clean up.
    Or they could just estimate over a couple of games roughly how many empty spaces they have, (let's say for arguments sake it's 200), then put a security guard on the gate the following game, he has 200 parking vouchers and once they're gone that's it. 
  • iainment said:
    Even so the taxes on motoring don’t cover anything near the cost of roads.

    That is a very blinkered way of looking at the cost of and the contribution towards our roads. 

    A better way of looking at it is to ask yourself the question as to what would be the consequences of not having roads? 

    Savings you make with a good road network reduce costs of building and maintaining them.

    It is why man started building tracks in the first place and why the Romans took them to a new level. It is why we have motorways, it is why we should have good train services. It saves time and money. You have to factor that in.
  • They Want people to use trains. 
    Yet the Prevent people from getting to train stations 

    makes sense 
  • The sooner we move to a bespoke stadium in Kent with 5000 parking spaces the better….
  • Something that's been bugging me. I normally park over to the west past the station 
    When I was walking up for the Rotherham game one of the stewards on the corner of Charlton church lane/flloyd told someone to try parking in a factory along the road. He was pointing down Delafield. Anyone know where this factory is?

    I know we used to park in that a factory on Victoria away years ago for a few £ but that's gone and is housing now. What was he on about?


    You are right and he's wrong. There is no factory left where you can park.
  • Live in Sidcup & been forced to abandon my old diesel car &  switch to the railway by the ULEZ restrictions.
    I qualify for the freedom pass.

    So been reading this thread with a smug smile getting bigger  & bigger
    Said smile disappeared when it was pointed out, no trains on Boxing day, is that correct?
    286 to Eltham
    161 to Charlton.
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  • 286 to Eltham
    161 to Charlton.
    All well and good, but are we not away to Wimbledon on boxing day? 
  • cafcfan said:
    There is a clue to the problem with making public transport attractive. It is in the name: Public Transport.

    By definition, public transport has members of the public on it. They are generally, unpleasant, smelly (fag stench, dodgy burgers, body odour, etc, etc), unstable, aggressive, violent, too close, drunk, covered in vomit, reading newspapers that are too large, listening to music that is too loud, trying to dodge fares, or, even worse, trying to strike up a conversation with you. 

    By comparison a car, even with the everyday traffic problems is a haven of tranquillity, an oasis of calm.
    Yes, but by definition the spanner’s are normally playing away when Charlton are at home! 😉
  • All well and good, but are we not away to Wimbledon on boxing day? 
    In that case, feet up in front of the tele with a mince pie.
  • cafcfan said:
    There is a clue to the problem with making public transport attractive. It is in the name: Public Transport.

    By definition, public transport has members of the public on it. They are generally, unpleasant, smelly (fag stench, dodgy burgers, body odour, etc, etc), unstable, aggressive, violent, too close, drunk, covered in vomit, reading newspapers that are too large, listening to music that is too loud, trying to dodge fares, or, even worse, trying to strike up a conversation with you. 
    By comparison a car, even with the everyday traffic problems is a haven of tranquillity, an oasis of calm.
    An oasis of calm...... Try driving my kids around and see if you still call it that
  • edited November 2021
    Public transport is generally unreliable, extremely poor value for money and often full of obnoxious people.

    People will have paid small fortunes for tickets to Shrewsbury and will now have to undertake a convoluted mission to get to a game. Less than 200 miles away.




    Worth reading the Shrewsbury train thread which perfectly underlines why there needs to be massive enhancements to public transport before people will favour it over far more reliable and economical cars unfortunately.
  • Redrobo said:
    That is a very blinkered way of looking at the cost of and the contribution towards our roads. 

    A better way of looking at it is to ask yourself the question as to what would be the consequences of not having roads? 

    Savings you make with a good road network reduce costs of building and maintaining them.

    It is why man started building tracks in the first place and why the Romans took them to a new level. It is why we have motorways, it is why we should have good train services. It saves time and money. You have to factor that in.
    I don’t disagree. We need roads fit for purpose for all sorts of reasons. But car owners who think only they have a right to the road because they pay “Road tax” and think no one else pays anything to the road distort and deflect the argument.
  • edited November 2021
    Earlier in this thread I was picked up for intimating that parking policies were punishing car owners.

    I'll defend that point now. Firstly, if the council is making car ownership both more difficult and more expensive, whislt doing nothing to improve public transport or provide viable alternative means of transport then that is punishment pure and simple.

    Secondly, the situation is far worse than just alternatives not being provided, alternatives are actively being scrapped, 9% of buses and 18% of tubes. If you make it more difficult to use personal transport whilst public transport is also being cut, then how can it be anything other than a punishment?

    https://metro.co.uk/2021/11/25/tube-line-could-be-closed-due-to-tfl-funding-crisis-15665178/
  • MrOneLung said:
    The sooner we move to a bespoke stadium in North Norfolk with 5000 parking spaces the better….

    I'm being selfish ...

    😉
  • Earlier in this thread I was picked up for intimating that parking policies were punishing car owners.

    I'll defend that point now. Firstly, if the council is making car ownership both more difficult and more expensive, whislt doing nothing to improve public transport or provide viable alternative means of transport then that is punishment pure and simple.

    Secondly, the situation is far worse than just alternatives not being provided, alternatives are actively being scrapped, 9% of buses and 18% of tubes. If you make it more difficult to use personal transport whilst public transport is also being cut, then how can it be anything other than a punishment?

    https://metro.co.uk/2021/11/25/tube-line-could-be-closed-due-to-tfl-funding-crisis-15665178/
    Those cuts are more to do with this Governments decision to go after TfL and particularly Londoners for voting the wrong way, I get the politics, not the economic damage bringing London down does  
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