You station a guard in the city centre,give him a unsocial starting time,and provide inadequate or no parking spaces.
Does no one here have any sympathy for AGS?
This is the one I am most familiar with. Access to College Green by buses, taxis and bicycles is often severely restricted by the triple parking.
I wonder if any of you remember Store St in Dublin before they put in the small square. Parking all over the place.
No pics in google so I can't do a comparison
I don't see Pearse St as much of an issue at all.
That road is for access and restricted, most car drivers shouldn't drive past the station anyway
http://g.co/maps/qqhvu
Though the pics here so a few drivers taking a short cut.
I can't stand seeing ambulances tearing through towns and flashing lights to overtake other traffic on roads. I mean, what's the hurry?
+1. They set a very bad example and flout the law in many ways. They have powers that other citizens don't have and so shoul dbehave better than the rest of us, not worse.
Ask any person to start at an unsocial starting or finishing time and there is an issue. It does not give them carte blanche to park wherever they like, otherwise you'd have every pavement in the city blocked by barmen, 24 hour shop staff, train drivers, firemen, pilots and council workers.
The Gardai still have a mentality of being able to do whatever they like on account of their occupation.
Every citizen in this land of ours has the right to use their mobile phone while driving in an emergency situation only. Gardai, given the job they do, use this piece of legislation when using their mobile phones while driving.
If that's true then they are lying and abusing their power in order to break the law.
Someone I know lets a property through a letting agency. Apparently, the agency's unofficial 'black list' includes Gardai because there have been problems with them refusing to pay outstanding rent when they're leaving and basically making it clear that life will be made difficult for the landlord if s/he pursues them for the outstanding monies.
They are not all the time. They don't have to be responding to an emergency. (That's just an excuse for Joe Public) They just need to be using it in the performance of their duty. Same as ambulance drivers. Not saying it is not abused but you have no-way of knowing unless you are in the car with them listening to their conversation. Many guards use their own phones while on duty because of a lack of a proper communications system.
I also heard of a member of the Gardai who during the floods last year and despite being off duty went to help members of the public and ended up losing his life.
Regardless of whether the mobile is being used in an official or personal capacity it is no less dangerous.
It a Garda blows an old woman or child into the air because he is on the phone while driving it makes little difference to the old woman or child when they hit the pavement whether the call that cost them their life was from the gardas wife asking what he wants for his dinner or his local sargent telling him his paperwork isn't up to scratch.
True but does one excuse the other?
That's not the point. The point is that they are allowed to use the phones while driving and on duty so accusing them of abusing their position to break the law is incorrect. I also presume that many gardai drivers benefit from advanced driver training. How many accidents or fatalities are ther every year involving emergency services personnel driving recklessly or carelessy before we start painting a picture of gardai everywhere blowing old women and children into the air because they were on their mobile phone.
I also heard of a member of the Gardai who during the floods last year and despite being off duty went to help members of the public and ended up losing his life.
I also heard of a member of the Gardai who during the floods last year and despite being off duty went to help members of the public and ended up losing his life.
No, but painting an entire profession in a negative light because of the actions of a few is not fair either. Especially when it seems to be based on hearsay.
The abuse of illegal parking by Gardai in front of Store St garda station was so bad that Dublin city council re-designed the public space in front of it and erected enough scenically designed bollards to prevent the Garda cars from parking on it
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