• MonsterMonster
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      45 months ago

      Not for those who can afford 100k+ to buy it in the first place. There will be some who see this as a further requirement to show the world that they are rich enough to belong to an exclusive club.

  • @veni_vedi_veni@lemmy.world
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    5 months ago

    This whole vehicular size arms race needs to go away please.

    It’s so retarded that people think they need to get bigger cars to “protect” themselves in accidents. Just feedback looping stupidity.

      • @orrk@lemmy.world
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        35 months ago

        already exists, armed with variety of lethal and non-lethal defense systems, up-armoured to take on anything short of 30mmAP rounds

      • @afraid_of_zombies@lemmy.world
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        35 months ago

        Makes sense. The guy openly carrying weapons with the look of he is dying to use them clearly gets into less problems then the guy who doesn’t attract any attention to himself. You really want to be threatening people by just being there, that will definitely work out well for you. That’s why I carry around a matchet and scream at random people to back off

    • Kwozyman
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      65 months ago

      But how will the other people know I have money if my car isn’t huge?

      The protection argument has some merit, though. I remember seeing several studies that show survival rates are bigger for the SUV inhabitants in crashes. What SUV drivers don’t know (or simply don’t care about) is that it’s survival in the detriment of smaller cars inhabitants.

      • @veni_vedi_veni@lemmy.world
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        115 months ago

        Poor crash compatibility, and for reasons to do with chicken imports from Europe in the past (Not just bikes covers this), light trucks have less regulation in NA compared to cars, incentivizing the manufacturers to push them into consumers as well.

        It’s shittiness all round and government is like that cat from the “bachelorette woman crying” meme.

  • @Kekzkrieger@feddit.de
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    475 months ago

    While this is great, someone who doesnt mind paying a 100k for a car wont mind the extra fees.

    What would really change the game is changing existing parking spaces to fixed size parking spaces and if your over that you get towed.

    That would mean they have to park their car somewhere more remote which would incentisize not buying huge cars to begin with

    • @EatATaco@lemm.ee
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      5 months ago

      I can’t speak for Parisians, but here in the us my experience is that it’s the people who drove the big cars who bitch the most about the price of gas.

      So the added cost would definitely be a disincentive.

      • Flying SquidM
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        235 months ago

        There’s a ridiculous thing in the US that Europeans probably don’t know about called “rolling coal,” where people in big pickup trucks that they never use for hauling anything because it would scrape the bed modify their truck to belch out a huge cloud of black smoke on demand.

        I have a Prius. They love doing it to me, because of course a hybrid that still uses gas must mean that I’m one-a them commie tree-hugging hippies. They probably pay as much in gas to do it once as it would take to get my car to go 5-10 miles. And they’re the ones putting Biden ‘I did that’ stickers next to gas pumps when gas prices go up.

        Hey rednecks, you know what you have to do to not worry much about gas prices? Buy a fuel-efficient car.

    • GreatAlbatross
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      165 months ago

      It’s a gentle nudge.
      If you’re picking a car, and didn’t think about it very much, something like paying more for parking might well nudge you to a smaller car.
      And it means when those 100k cars go on the second hand market for 20k a few years later, the people paying that much will not be happy with the fees.

      On a slight tangent, range rovers are being targeted by criminals. To the point where RR ups the security, and it’s worked around in a month or so.
      This has lead to insurance premiums going way up. And while there are a few people just choking down the payments, others are switching away from RR, or from SUVs entirely.
      It doesn’t put every customer off, but it certainly affects a chunk.

    • @ExLisper@linux.community
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      While this is great, someone who doesnt mind paying a 100k for a car wont mind the extra fees.

      Not just that, it removes the… let’s call it ‘shame factor’. Some people that would feel bad about driving big, polluting cars in the city now will feel perfectly justified: they are paying extra for the privilege. This will not reduce the number of cars and likely will increase it. It’s simply a bad policy. As you said, number of parking spots for big cars should be reduced each year putting greater and greater pressure on the owners to get rid of them.

    • @FlorianSimon@sh.itjust.works
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      115 months ago

      Not saying this is what you’re saying, but the average french SUV doesn’t cost 100k. In-laws bought one almost new for 15k. They’re not poor, but definitely not rich, and would think twice about buying one next time if it means they pay more for parking.

      • @Moonrise2473@feddit.it
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        65 months ago

        15k seems like a Dacia Duster. That isn’t considered a SUV according to the limits of that law (1400 kg)

        It’s more to limit those useless monsters like the range Rovers

      • @anivia@lemmy.ml
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        25 months ago

        15k for an almost new SUV? I think you are probably confusing a CUV with an SUV

        • @FlorianSimon@sh.itjust.works
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          35 months ago

          15k € used. The (french) car dealer called the car a SUV, but I’ll admit I’m not an expert.

          But even if you call that something different, there aren’t a lot of 100k SUVs in France, I can tell you that.

          • @Obi@sopuli.xyz
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            35 months ago

            French people will drive a 20 year old kangoo and be proud of it. I know because that is me.

    • @afraid_of_zombies@lemmy.world
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      15 months ago

      and if your over that you get towed.

      A neighbor of mine who was a 60 something year old accountant got one of those oversized pickups and managed to block my space multiple times since he couldn’t angle it in correctly.

  • @wheeldawg@sh.itjust.works
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    425 months ago

    Suck it, SUV owners in Paris.

    But really, suck it every SUV owner. They’re terrible in every single way and no one can change that.

    • @Malfeasant@lemmy.world
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      155 months ago

      As an SUV owner, I agree. It tries to do too many things, so it’s not good at any of them. When we had kids, I wanted a minivan. They’re ugly, they don’t get good gas mileage, their handling is like a pregnant yak- but if you need to haul around kids and their stuff, there’s nothing better. My wife at least considered it, but we ended up with a hybrid SUV. I don’t completely hate it, but I still would rather have gotten a minivan.

      • @AnalogyAddict@lemmy.world
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        5 months ago

        I have a compact SUV (CR-V.) It gets good gas mileage and has enough room for my very large dogs. Some people have reasons, just a lot of people don’t.

        I’d like to see a tax on ego trucks first.

    • @nexusband@lemmy.world
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      15 months ago

      Comments from @wheeldawg@sh.itjust.works are terrible in every single way and no one can change that! Good stuff, the fact that Paris classifies everything above 1,6 tonnes as an SUV, so that put’s even a measly Peugeot e-308 in that cateogry. But it’s a compact BEV! Still weighs 1759 Kg.

  • MonsterMonster
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    375 months ago

    54.6% voted for the increase… turnout was 5.7%. So just over 3% of the eligible Parisian population voted for this.

    Source

    • Ann Archy
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      5 months ago

      Not just “someone” else’s. SUV owners’. Specifically. For a good reason.

    • @moitoi@feddit.de
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      115 months ago

      Actually, in Paris, if you own an SUV or drive one in the city, you’re rich. Poorer can’t afford one and even a car is too expensive. It’s already a tax on the rich.

      For more taxes on the wealth, it’s up to the national government and it’s a complete different story.

    • FuglyDuck
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      615 months ago

      So, I’m pretty sure they’re talking about the rental-scooters, not all scooters, which, peopel who tend to buy their own don’t do these things… but…people get hurt on them, they increase accidents. People do stupid shit, like riding on sidewalks and trying to zip through pedestrians.

      they get locked up all over the place, blocking sidewalks, entryways, bikeracks, etc.

      in short the rental things are a massive nuisance,

      • @exocortex@discuss.tchncs.de
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        445 months ago

        I’d like to add that Paris is one of the tightest cities there is in Europe. there’s just so little space already. with thousands of badly parked scooters cluttering up sidewalks people got fed up very quickly. the vote was pretty one sided IIRC.

        • @n2burns@lemmy.ca
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          AFAIK, the main issue wasn’t where they’re used but where they’re stored. While scooters riding on sidewalks is an issue, the bigger issue is them cluttering the sidewalk and becoming an impedance to pedestrians, especially those with disabilities.

          • @fine_sandy_bottom@discuss.tchncs.de
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            105 months ago

            Interesting. I’ve seen this where I live, rental scooters just littering the sidewalk.

            I wonder, whether personally-owned scooters will become more prevalent if rentals aren’t available.

            I guess personally-owned scooters are going to be parked more responsibly rather than just left wherever.

            • @variants@possumpat.io
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              55 months ago

              I see a lot of people where I live riding around on scooters but haven’t seen the rental ones here like in bigger cities so I guess personally owned do become more popular if you can’t rent

          • @fine_sandy_bottom@discuss.tchncs.de
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            95 months ago

            Well… yes ?

            I mean there will always be people that break the rules but in my experience once something becomes a law, like smoking in certain areas or whatever, people tend to follow the rules.

            • @NOSin@lemmy.world
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              45 months ago

              The rule already exists, living in the suburbs and working in Paris, I can tell you that they ended up forbidding them because a lot of people weren’t using them on the road.

          • Pepsi
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            so instead of that one rule, you think it’s better to have a different rule?

        • @ChrisLicht@lemm.ee
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          15 months ago

          The performance envelopes of vehicles sharing bike lanes these days are wildly different. I dread the day that RTO is complete, and rush-hour bike lanes are shared by e-bikes, e-unicycles, one-wheels, push scooters, e-standup-scooters, smaller sit-scooters, monkey bikes, e-skateboards, skateboards, and whatever else I’m missing.

      • @fine_sandy_bottom@discuss.tchncs.de
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        45 months ago

        Wouldn’t this apply to both rented and personally-owned scooters though?

        Getting rid of the rentals might reduce the number temporarily, but doesn’t really seem to solve the problem.

        • FuglyDuck
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          165 months ago

          most people who buy their own don’t leave it out on the street, and (while I’m not in paris…) my experience is they also tend to be more responsible about it. like riding while sober, wearing helmets, and being in the bike lane (or wherever they’re supposed to be)

          • @fine_sandy_bottom@discuss.tchncs.de
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            Yeah I think you’re dead right there.

            The rental scooters do seem to bring out the worst in people, or maybe they just tend to hilight people’s general disrespect for “things” particularly those which do not belong to them.

            People will always take care of their own stuff better than someone else’s.

            Edit: I’ve also noticed that people aren’t using them that much where I live. They were all over the place for a minute, but now don’t see them very much.

        • @SlopppyEngineer@lemmy.world
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          It gets rid of all the unused rental scooters lying around on the sidewalk, and that was seen as the biggest nuisance. Privately owned scooters will never reach the same height of scooter littering.

          The rental scooter companies were unwilling or unable to deal with the issue. They were warned that this was becoming an issue.

          • @fine_sandy_bottom@discuss.tchncs.de
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            15 months ago

            Privately owned scooters will never reach the same height of scooter littering.

            Perhaps not scooter “littering” but surely just numbers of personal transport devices.

            That is to say, if no other form of transport existed, then the presence of rental scooters would surely mean that there were fewer scooters in total and thereby fewer scooters parked on the sidewalk.

        • @xmunk@sh.itjust.works
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          65 months ago

          Someone who owns their own scooter is more likely to know local laws on where not to scoot - and if they don’t they can more easily be fined and learn them. Tourists rarely understand local traffic laws and, while you can fine them, they’ll leave next week and then a new tourist will arrive that also lacks that knowledge.

            • @xmunk@sh.itjust.works
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              55 months ago

              It’s surprisingly difficult! Do you think you can turn right on a red in Provence? Would you remember to double check all your assumptions before going on vacation? Would your muscle memory fail you?

              There are a truly staggering number of stories of people getting on the highway the wrong way or going into the wrong lane at an intersection when driving in the UK - there’s so many laws and habits we learn to operate in our society… and those aren’t the same everywhere.

              • @fine_sandy_bottom@discuss.tchncs.de
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                15 months ago

                Well yes, and yet even with these lapses you mention our cities are not in eternal pandemonium.

                Laws, signage, design of street scapes et cetera, all contribute to homogenising behaviour.

        • @theneverfox@pawb.social
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          15 months ago

          If you own it, presumably you’ve spent more time using it, meaning you both look and drive in a more controlled manner

    • xor
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      215 months ago

      This has to be the most American take of the week

      Car-brain plus assuming the french think about them, that’s some top tier copium

    • VeganPizza69 Ⓥ
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      165 months ago

      Bruh, when you get a SUV/truck to drive around, you’re declaring war on everyone else. It’s literally an arms race.

      • @K4sum1@lemmy.zip
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        15 months ago

        Are you sure about that? I know someone that drives a 2003 CR-V not because he wants to, but because he got it for free and can’t afford to get a new or used car.

    • @rambaroo@lemmy.world
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      Parisians don’t give a shit about Americans one way or the other. I was just there and everyone was nice to me like they are to everyone else.

      • Flying SquidM
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        115 months ago

        It’s so weird how there’s this stereotype about French people hating Americans when people seem to have forgotten that Republicans once hated the French so much (for daring to not join America in a war) that they changed ‘French fries’ to ‘freedom fries’ for a while. And then there’s the bullshit “France always surrenders” meme that so many Americans believe. The French military is fucking fierce.

        In my experience, it’s Americans who hate the French a lot more than French people hating Americans.

        • @Miaou@jlai.lu
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          35 months ago

          In my experience, the French who hate the Americans are the ones who travel. I’ll let you draw your own conclusions from there

          • Flying SquidM
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            25 months ago

            And we wear

            Canadian flags

            When we travel

            On our bags

            'Cause we are Americans (ah yeah!)

            – Corky and the Juice Pigs, Americans

          • @Obi@sopuli.xyz
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            15 months ago

            You’re not wrong, I’d say your average French that didn’t travel much and works for French companies basically doesn’t care about Americans at all. It’s when you actually go there or work for American companies that you start radicalising…

    • @TotalFat@lemmy.world
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      55 months ago

      Maybe it’s because the MINI Countryman SUV is a UK brand manufactured by a German car company…

  • @jordanlund@lemmy.worldM
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    135 months ago

    I’m sure the folks who drive larger vehicles because they’re hauling things like wheelchairs will protest that.

    There ARE valid reasons for SUVs.

    • SkaveRat
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      685 months ago

      There ARE valid reasons for SUVs.

      no. not really.

      Professionals who need something with storage space for work use vans.

      People who need to also transport a wheelchair will use a different car, that is not terribly to get in and out of.

      SUVs have 0 reasons to exist, especially outside the US

      • @Buffaloaf@lemmy.world
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        145 months ago

        The prices will apply to vehicles weighing more than 1.6 tonnes with a combustion engine or hybrid vehicles, and more than 2 tonnes for electric vehicles.

        Seems like it applies to vans as well

        • SkaveRat
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          125 months ago

          fair enough. But at that point it’s basically another business expense.

          SUVs don’t really do much in the area of “hauling stuff around”. They are really really bad at it, if you compare it to normal transporters

        • @exocortex@discuss.tchncs.de
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          155 months ago

          Have you been to Europe? Have you walked the streets of Paris? The US was built with enough space being everywhere. American roads are wider, cities are mostly built like square-grids of roads built in a time when cats existed whereas European cities emerged in the middle ages. They’re tightly packed with little extra space. Sometimes (very rarely) here there are old Cadillacs that can be rented for weddings. Seeing one of these cars on the street is an unreal experience. They’re just so huge. They don’t fit on the streets here - and those are cars from the 60s or 70s. Everything seems tiny compared to them. From a European perspective it’s really stupid to build such large vehicles as driving and parking it is much more complicated when everything is build for small cars. Now that SUVs are becoming popular here too it’s just a really annoying. Less parking space per vehicle etc. On cities like Paris - one of the tightest city on Europe this is just annoying. And i haven’t even written about fuel consumption. Paris has had huge problems with smog in recent years.

        • @RGB3x3@lemmy.world
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          95 months ago

          The US is built more for SUVs than places outside it, so they make a little bit more sense than in places like Paris.

          But only a little bit more sense. They’re still obnoxious and far too big in the US.

          • @ConstipatedWatson@lemmy.world
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            35 months ago

            True, lots of places (but I suppose maybe not everywhere) have really wide roads with tons of lanes so it’s easy to drive around with SUV’s, but this is generally not true in Europe where, even in large cities, often roads/lanes are narrower, making SUV’s unwieldy for those driving around them.

            Then there’s the pollution aspect which I can’t address, but I imagine SUV’s pollute more on average than other cars (and probably Europe is currently being a bit more stingy on allowing this)

        • SkaveRat
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          75 months ago

          the onyl reason they exist in the US is because a regulations loophole.

          The EU doesn’t have that loophole, so SUVs don’t even have that reason to exist. Which you can see, as SUVs are super rare in the EU, while they top all car sales ranks in the US in the last couple years

      • Flying SquidM
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        35 months ago

        People who need to also transport a wheelchair will use a different car, that is not terribly to get in and out of.

        A car most likely wouldn’t work for many wheelchair users who drive because they essentially need something they can just get them and their chair lifted directly into, lock their wheels down and start driving. But that doesn’t require an SUV. A van would work too. That’s what a friend of mine in high school drove.

    • Willie
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      625 months ago

      Well, it shouldn’t be hard to write in an exemption just for folks with wheelchairs. It’s almost a non-issue.

    • Maeve
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      275 months ago

      And those with the proper credentials can be e excepted.

    • SKBo
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      205 months ago

      They will be exempted, as well as residents and professionals.

    • @honey_im_meat_grinding
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      There are also valid reasons for disabled people to be against SUVs, and the abundance of cars in general: pollution creates disabilities, and so much pollution comes from car tyres. I know, because I have a disability that’s associated with said pollution, and I wouldn’t wish this on anyone else so I really hope we can replace car use with less polluting methods as soon as possible. And then there’s the more physical way: cars crashing into people also creates disabilities. If you’re disabled, you’re probably more likely to have sympathy for all the other disabilities that cars contribute to creating, and would prefer if SUVs and cars were replaced by other methods.

    • @xlash123@sh.itjust.works
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      45 months ago

      The truth is (at least in the USA), a vast majority of people who own SUVs don’t really need an SUV. This video explains it a lot better than I ever could: https://youtu.be/jN7mSXMruEo

      I would bet that Parisians saw the hell that the USA went through with absurdly large cars and car dependency and wish to prevent that from happening to their city, which this additional fee would help disincentivize.

      If you are open to learning more, I highly suggest looking into Strong Towns, which this video series by the same creator does a great job of summarizing: https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLJp5q-R0lZ0_FCUbeVWK6OGLN69ehUTVa

      It shows the issues that many cities put themselves in by depending on cars and proposes ways we can improve our cities for the benefit of everyone (especially the disabled).

  • @lolcatnip@reddthat.com
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    125 months ago

    This thread was weird to read as an owner of a CR-V. I checked and it’s just under the weight limit for the new law, and it fits easily in “compact” parking spaces, but I think of it as an SUV because that’s what it looks like.

    • @bassad@jlai.lu
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      45 months ago

      Yes it is aimed against heavy and large suv, as they are more dangerous for other road users, more polluting and take too much of public place in a cramped city.

      A CR-V and other “normal” suv does not take more place than a sedan

    • @OneWomanCreamTeam@sh.itjust.works
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      45 months ago

      At least in the US they call them crossovers, unless they’re on a truck chassis, then it’s an SUV.

      This distinction isn’t really common parlance or anything, but it usually is how the manufacturers call them.

    • @EatATaco@lemm.ee
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      15 months ago

      I drive a crv and have always known it as a crossover. Although funny that you mention compact spots, I looked it up one time to see if a crv counts and it does count as compact. Never the less I had a guy scold me for parking in the spot one time. His sedan definitely had a bigger foot print and he was right on the line, while I was comfortably in the middle of the spot.

      I just looked down at the line between our cars and kind of raised my eyebrow at him while pointing out my car is smaller than his.

  • AutoTL;DRB
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    115 months ago

    This is the best summary I could come up with:


    In a referendum on Sunday, which was closely watched by other capital cities, including London, 54.6% voted in favour of special parking fees for SUVs, according to provisional results.

    “Parisians have made a clear choice … other cities will follow,” said Paris’s Socialist mayor, Anne Hidalgo, adding that road safety and air pollution were key reasons for the vote.

    She said the aim was to deliberately target the richest drivers of expensive, heavy and polluting cars who had not yet made changes to their behaviour to address the climate crisis.

    Emmanuel Grégoire, Paris’s deputy mayor, posted on X as voting began: “Heavier, more dangerous, more polluting … SUVs are an environmental disaster.”

    Under Hidalgo, Paris has for years raised pressure on drivers by increasing parking costs and gradually banning diesel vehicles, while expanding the bicycle lane network in the congested capital.

    The motorists’ lobby group 40 Millions d’Automobilistes had argued that drivers should be free to choose whatever vehicle they want, warning that the move to raise parking tariffs was unjustified and the work of “an ultra-urban and anti-car minority”.


    The original article contains 540 words, the summary contains 180 words. Saved 67%. I’m a bot and I’m open source!

    • qaz
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      35 months ago

      54.6% doesn’t seem like a clear choice to me.

      • @maynarkh@feddit.nl
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        65 months ago

        I think with votes like this, especially with the low turnout, it just shows most people don’t really care because they don’t feel directly impacted one way or another. The people that feel impacted negatively by SUVs slightly outnumber people who feel impacted negatively by increased parking prices. That’s the result.

        • @Halcyon@discuss.tchncs.de
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          15 months ago

          This law is aimed at visitors’ cars, so residents of Paris are excluded from the higher tariffs and remain unaffected.

  • @Moonrise2473@feddit.it
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    115 months ago

    This limit needs to be instituted at a country level.

    For example now that the Volkswagen up/Skoda citigo/seat Mii has been put out of production, there isn’t a single car made by all the brands of the Volkswagen group that’s shorter than 4 meters.

  • nifty
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    85 months ago

    So they made having an SUV a money flex?

      • ginerel
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        35 months ago

        Well, those who did not vote are complacent to the majority vote. So I’d say that’s a win.

        Always go out there and vote, regardless of the option you choose. That’s what keeps a democratic system up and running. If you don’t, you just agree with what is decided by others and stay complacent.