Except that signs are double-sided! If there is a single arrow on the sign pointing in one direction then I can see his point, but I can't remember the last time I've seen a sign that poorly placed. Often it's as a result of collisions.Imagine the sign had it been placed parallel to the street facing into traffic. That's how the arrow applies.
I don't know how that makes a difference. The sign is designed to be read from the street. Whichever sign it is reads as if you were looking at it from the street. If there are double sided parking signs (never seen that) that have conflicting information, that would be one thing, but I've never seen that.Except that signs are double-sided! If there is a single arrow on the sign pointing in one direction then I can see his point, but I can't remember the last time I've seen a sign that poorly placed. Often it's as a result of collisions.
If a collision screwed up the sign shouldn't the city fix it before preying on poor people like this OP?Except that signs are double-sided! If there is a single arrow on the sign pointing in one direction then I can see his point, but I can't remember the last time I've seen a sign that poorly placed. Often it's as a result of collisions.
So, the bus stop would run from the bus stop sign back to the next parking regulation sign, which would be the one we see just to the right of center of the photo, behind which the dark car is seen.It took me a while because the initial location description was incorrect, but the one on the ticket is right. There's nothing confusing about this. He parked in a bus zone, plane and simple.
This appears to be the site of the violation. https://www.google.com/maps/@40.8261409,-73.9269237,3a,30y,232.83h,84.67t/data=!3m6!1e1!3m4!1su-eBmbTjsAR59NMLYAMFXQ!2e0!7i13312!8i6656!6m1!1e1
Before (or to the right) depending on your perspective of that sign indicates No Parking Stadium Event and no parking for street sweeping Mon & Thur 8-9:30. Just beyond that you see the fire hydrant and the No Standing Bus Stop pointing back towards us (it's the round sign that's on a post just beyond the fire hydrant and before the sign on the bridge column that says "we buy junk cars.". That makes that entire area a no standing zone.
You'll also notice the complete lack of parked cars in the zone he parked in.
The sign with the No Parking Stadium Event/No Parking Street Sweeping is entirely immaterial. First it applies to the stuff NORTH of the sign. The operative sign is the Bus Stop sign.
Correct, the black car is parked legally (provided it's not during a Yankees game or during the designated street sweeping perios). Parked in front of that car would be illegal.So, the bus stop would run from the bus stop sign back to the next parking regulation sign, which would be the one we see just to the right of center of the photo, behind which the dark car is seen.
All NYC parking signs are double sided and can be read from the street or curb side - both sides are identical.I don't know how that makes a difference. The sign is designed to be read from the street. Whichever sign it is reads as if you were looking at it from the street. If there are double sided parking signs (never seen that) that have conflicting information, that would be one thing, but I've never seen that.
Well that's obviously not universally true (as it this one clearly isn't). If both sides were identical and there is a single headed arrow you have a contradiction. I suspect you mean that they both are intended to convey the same information, which means they aren't identical one has the opposite arrow depiction on it. But looking around my sister-in-law's place in Flatbush, we have a lot of signs that indeed are nearly perpendicular to the street. I'll modify my admonition that the one facing the traffic travelling on that side of the street is the one that is the "street side" one.All NYC parking signs are double sided and can be read from the street or curb side - both sides are identical.