Jobarion
u/Jobarion
This is about this parking lot. https://www.paderborn.de/microsite/asp/parken_in_der_city/PP_Paderhalle.php
It's operated by the ASP in Paderborn; as far as I understand, that's effectively directly by the city. Since there aren't enough other parking options in the city center, parking lots like this are the only option for many people to park their car within a reasonable distance, even long-term.
It's about this parking lot. https://www.paderborn.de/microsite/asp/parken_in_der_city/PP_Paderhalle.php
It's run by the ASP in Paderborn; as far as I understand, that's effectively directly by the city.
Basically, I think the time period is fine too, it's more about the fact that informing long-term parkers via e-mail, for example, would have been possible, which, for example, isn't the case if I just park on a street.
It's about this parking lot. https://www.paderborn.de/microsite/asp/parken_in_der_city/PP_Paderhalle.php
It's run by the ASP in Paderborn; as far as I understand, that's effectively directly by the city.
There's no rental agreement, just a monthly ticket bought online. The only thing remotely close is the terms and conditions, which state that the parking space can be used by the city at any time for other purposes, without compensation.
Since "any time" probably doesn't mean the city could clear the parking space with 15 minutes' notice, the question is how much time is needed and whether having a way to contact them changes anything. But I'm probably in the wrong place here, because it's not really about the Road Traffic Regulations anymore.
Hey everyone,
My car was recently towed away by the city from a parking spot (including a fine) because it was needed for a city festival. I last moved the car on Sunday evening (no sign/no announcement visible), and on Friday the spot was empty with a sign (sign 260) indicating a parking ban starting Thursday.
I found some court rulings online that confirm that something like this is okay with 2-3 days' notice, but these rulings refer to situations where the car was parked on a public road.
In my case, it's a parking spot where I have a monthly ticket. The operator, the city, has my phone number and email address through this monthly ticket and could have informed me before Thursday that the parking spot would be closed off.
Are there any regulations or court rulings that clarify what my rights and obligations would have been here? Do I really have to check my car every two days, even though I pay extra to park in a parking lot for long-term parkers?
It's difficult to impossible, but to ignore the future growth of the German economy because it's not predictable, but then to assume 5% globally after inflation simply leads to a naive result. I don't want to say that the pension system is great in any way, but you should clearly state in your calculation that it is based on the assumption of 0% economic growth after inflation.