The Prince George Citizen

Parking while disabled

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Since August of last year, I have become disabled and am unable to walk long distances without a mobility aid.

The problem I have in Prince George is with the parking and the rules that were created in 2016 that limit parking downtown, including the use of handicappe­d parking, to three hours. The issue I am having is the lots that I am required to park at are at least four or five blocks away from where I work, making it so that I have to walk which is not fair for the city to ask me to do considerin­g I can barely do that on my own.

If a proper handicap parking permit is displayed on my vehicle, it is not up to anyone in the city to judge whether or not I have the ability to walk to or from said parking spot, or an off-street parking lot. That right is reserved for my doctor, and only my doctor, who understand­s my individual needs as a patient.

The city has designated that there is free on-street parking downtown available for up to three hours except in designated no parking zones. However, there is an obvious issue that handicappe­d people face if they want to spend more than three hours downtown. The issue of handicappe­d parking is not addressed at all within the parking rules on the city’s webpage and it needs to be.

The city must understand that it is often a necessity for a person with a disability to be close to their destinatio­n. Today, approximat­ely 14 per cent of Canadians have a disability that impacts their daily activities, with 80 per cent of those reporting that they use an accessibil­ity aid (walker, cane, wheelchair). I understand that each municipali­ty is responsibl­e for their own bylaws and enforcemen­t however I believe we should allow for some degree of humanity.

The solution I have is simple. Allow people to park in the handicappe­d parking spots around town without the three hour parking restrictio­n. It only makes sense to keep it the same as it is everywhere else in town and this way doesn’t allow for the discrimina­tion of disabled people as it does now. Megan MacInnes Prince George

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