• bobs_monkey
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    8 months ago
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    8 months ago
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    I also have a downslope driveway that ices up in the winter, and have had someone hit my car and take off doing it, so yeah I’d rather they didn’t. I also respect people’s private property.

    • SomeoneSomewhere
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      8 months ago
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      Things might be different in the US, but here in NZ the first meter or two off the road is usually road reserve, which is council property. That’s where footpaths/sidewalks, street trees, and utilities are run.

      The bit of your driveway that is actually yours doesn’t start until about where your front fence is, if you have one.

      • Duranie
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        Nope - absolutely the same here. There’s typically a stretch of property facing the street and potentially in an adjacent alley where the homeowner is responsible for basic maintenance (mowing the grass) but it’s used for utility access and may be taken off they decide to widen the roads. I’m sure exceptions exist, but less commonly.

        • AbidanYreEnglish
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          8 months ago
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          Hell, one of the houses I looked at when I moved had an easement about farmers taking cows across the yard (probably leftover from the 1700s, but still).

      • AA5B
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        Arguably your driveway, front walk, and front step/porch is s there expressly for other people to use. Sure, wandering around the front yard of someone you don’t know is rude/disrespectful, as is hitting their car, but you’re providing a well defined way for anyone to approach your house, so really can’t object to them using it

    • NocturnalMorning
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      8 months ago
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      I also respect people’s private property.

      That’s about the most asinine way you possibly could have ended that sentence. You almost had my sympathy for why you feel the way you do until said that.

      • meyotch
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        I respect people. If a person I respect has property, by the transitive property, the property gets a sort of respect.

        • Quadhammer
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          To an extent I agree to respect people’s property, but I think community takes precedent here. People shouldn’t fear for their lives if they need to turn around. If you’re that fearful of people you need to live somewhere without roads