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Not a date in which lockers from the only disabled storage space from One Stop are removed

A Nottinghamshire shop that apologized after the posters of the Porto have blocked its only parking space for disabled parking spaces has not given a set date for the move. On February 2, the only accessible room in the parking lot at a stop in Ruddington was replaced by inpost locker compartments – to demolish and collect packages.

On February 20, disabled fighter announced that disabled people, by blocking access to the only accessible room in the parking lot, they cannot use the shop – something for which a station apologized and said that they would be solved as soon as possible.

A spokesman for the national chain of convenience stores, which Tesco belonged to, claimed that the lockers were set up due to an “installation error” and were resettled as soon as possible. Three weeks later, however, the residents confirmed that the lockers still blocked the disabled parking lot without the move of the shift.

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The shop confirmed that it was in contact with inpost and tried to solve the problem and shift the lockers as soon as possible. It added that measures were taken to ensure that similar mistakes do not occur again, and the shop repeated its excuse for the inconvenience.

The Rushcliffe Borough Council confirmed that with a stop over the lockers in communication in communication and that the business is now applying for a building permit to permanently build it up at a new location in the parking lot. A spokesman for the authority said: “The lockers require the building permit, and the shopkeeper is to submit a valid application. As soon as the RBC has been received, the RBC will check and consult the application.

“The shop operator and his architect were very cooperative with our inquiries and are dealing with the handicapped bay.” It is the second set of inpost lockers in the village, with the nearby cooperative, a four-minute walk, which she also is.

Jemma Winwood, a consultant of the group accessible period based in Ruddington, previously said: “The lockers who are currently there means that the parking lot cannot be used by disabled customers to ensure access to shopping,” she said.

“Disabled customers need space near cars and vehicles to enable the equipment, AIDS and access to their vehicles when shopping. We would be happy to work with the company to advise improvements from the accessibility of the perspectives of disabled people with real experience of potential or already confronted challenges.”

The news follows the removal of another inpost porto locker in the nearby Radcliffe-On-Trent, which received several complaints from residents to the local council.