Parking chair

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Two chairs marking a parking space as informally reserved

A parking chair is a chair that is used by a vehicle owner to informally mark a parking space as reserved for oneself. Other objects are also used for this purpose, including trash cans, ladders, ironing boards, and other similar-sized objects that are commonly found in households. For curbside parking spaces, two or more items are normally used; for angle spaces, only one is needed.[1]

The practice of using parking chairs is common in inclement weather in urban residential areas of the United States where vehicle owners do not wish to risk losing their vehicle's previously occupied space in its absence. Other spaces may be hard to find due to accumulation of uncleared and plowed snow, and the owner of the vehicle may have invested considerable work in clearing the space just to free the car in the first place.

This practice is especially common in the Northeastern United States (Boston[2] and Pittsburgh[3]) and the Upper Midwest and Great Lakes regions (Chicago[4]). In Pittsburgh, the use of parking chairs is considered to be an "iconic" regional practice.[5]

Use in inclement weather

In snowstorms, vehicle owners with such a need mark the space as their own that their vehicle previously occupied after digging out the heavy snow that covered the vehicle and blocked them in.[6] The legality and level of enforcement of existing laws pertaining to this practice varies by location. Generally, curbside parking spaces are public property and are available to vehicles on a first-come, first-served basis. Still, respecting these makeshift markers has been accepted by citizens as a common courtesy during snowstorms.[7]

The practice is often most effective when accompanied by the threat or actual occurrence of a "look of consternation" from a vigilant, often elderly neighbor who "keeps watch" in their neighbor's absence. While use is year-round, it is a particularly time-honored tradition in times of great snowfall accumulation, when a resident who "digs out" their spot on the street essentially declares ownership,[8] which often goes unchallenged by neighbors for fear of retribution.[9][10]

The idea of the practice is that the person who has reserved the space is declaring dibs to the space from which s/he has freed his/her vehicle for future parking during the remainder of the storm and as long as snow remains on the ground.[11] It is generally a Lockean recognition that the effort of the physical exertion of digging provides an entitlement to the space where the vehicle was previously located.[12] But in some instances, spaces get reserved in this fashion even before a snowstorm starts.[13][14]

Origin

Two patio chairs reserving a shoveled-out street parking space in Pittsburgh's Squirrel Hill neighborhood

The practice is common throughout areas of the United States susceptible to large amounts of snow and where curbside parking on residential streets is the norm, especially in the Northeast.[15]

Photographic evidence of the tradition has been found dating back at least to the 1950s. It is believed that the practice has existed even earlier, as the number of vehicles on residential streets has exceeded the number of available spaces.[16]

The items used have sometimes been referred to as "Pittsburgh Parking Chair" due to their use in the city of Pittsburgh.[16] In severe instances of snow accumulation, this practice extends beyond the city of Pittsburgh proper, and can be found in semi-suburban neighborhoods that border the city limits, such as Brentwood, Crafton and Dormont. While such ad hoc parking restrictions have no legal standing in the City of Pittsburgh, common and long standing community tradition supports their use. As the "parking chair" is part of the culture of the city, local police generally turn a blind eye to these impromptu markers, which under legal jurisdiction, technically qualify as "abandoned furniture."[17][18]

The origin of this practice might be found in foreign countries, as it is common also in southern Italy.

Legality

The practice has been outlawed in some places, including the city of Washington, D.C., where enforcement is strict and violators are ticketed.[19] Some places specifically prohibit the practice, with levels of enforcement that vary. Sanctions against violators may include fines and confiscation of the markers. Other places either do not enforce or make legal allowances for this activity.

In Baltimore, after the First and Second blizzards of 2010, Mayor Stephanie Rawlings-Blake announced that the city would not enforce an existing ban on the practice. She said that it could not be stopped, just like "people saying hon" could not be stopped.[20]

Some places, including Pittsburgh, do not place legal sanctions against those engaging in the practice, but make clear that anyone has the right to claim an informal space that was reserved by someone else for their own vehicle, regardless of courtesy. However, it is a general practice around the city to respect the markers of others.[21] In 1994, Police in Dormont, a suburb of Pittsburgh, confiscated the markers from 200 spaces due to excessive complaints.[10] Pittsburgh retailers sell novelty "Official Parking Chairs."[5]

In Boston, the law prohibits residents from saving the spaces they clear for longer than 48 hours from the moment a snow emergency is declared to be over.[22]

In Aldan, Pennsylvania, the police chief confiscated all markers that were placed following the blizzards of 2010. He stated that he was enforcing a local ordinance in doing so.[23]

Criticism

Most dense residential urban streets have fewer parking spaces than residents owning vehicles. Despite this, it is rare that all residents require a parking space at the same time.[citation needed] When residents use parking chairs or other markers to claim spaces, they effectively reduce the parking available to everyone, by removing the efficiency that first-come, first-served public parking normally provides.[24] Furthermore, guest and work vehicles are discouraged from using available spaces when needed out of fear of retribution. Many citizens cite that despite the existing law prohibiting space savers' use after 48 hours after a declared snow emergency, residents still use them without penalty. This means that public property is being illegally claimed by an individual for their own private use.

Disorderly behavior

Even in cities where parking chairs are generally tolerated, such as Pittsburgh, local police make it clear that public street parking cannot legally be reserved. Citizens are explicitly discouraged from using objects to block parking spaces. Because parking chairs are considered abandoned furniture, they may be removed at any time.[25]

See also

References

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  17. Homeowners Protect Parking Spots With Chairs; Can They Do This?, WPXI Pittsburgh, February 8, 2010
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External links