Backslide Way's Ned England Has Two Issues He'd Like To Raise: The Hospital Speeders, And That Honda
"I'm not asking for a task force. I'm asking for awareness. And maybe a task force," says England, 70, who has documented both situations and begun a YouTube playlist.
WAUKESHA — Ned England has two things on his mind, and he would like the city of Waukesha to be aware of both of them.
England, a 70-year-old Backslide Way resident and YouTube personality known to his 420 subscribers as Nedventuresout, has spent the better part of the past month documenting what he describes as "two distinct but equally serious threats to quality of life" on his block: drivers using Backslide Way as a cut-through to and from the hospital at speeds he clocks "conservatively at 35, maybe 38 miles per hour in a 25," and his neighbor's son — a college-aged young man named either Kaden or Caden, England is not certain which — who parks his 2019 Honda Civic in a position England has photographed and diagrammed as "no more than six inches from the edge of my driveway apron."
"These are not small things," England told this reporter from his front porch, consulting a spiral notebook. "These are safety issues. One is a speeding issue. One is a parking issue. Both are documented."
Ned England documents the ongoing situation — and much more — on his channel Nedventuresout.
Visit @nedVenturesOut →"I understand people need to get to the hospital," England continued, unprompted. "I'm not saying they shouldn't go. I'm saying go 25 miles per hour while you do it. That is the posted limit. It applies to everyone, including people who are in a hurry."
England says hospital traffic has noticeably increased since construction on a nearby arterial last spring rerouted commuters through residential streets — a development he described as "the beginning of the end" for Backslide Way's character as a quiet neighborhood thoroughfare. His evidence: a 31-minute YouTube video titled "BACKSLIDE WAY SPEED PROBLEM (Full Documentation, June 2026)" in which England sits in a lawn chair near his mailbox with a radar gun he purchased from Amazon for $64.99 and narrates passing vehicles in real time. The video has 412 views. He is aware this is "about two views per subscriber" and considers it "strong engagement for this type of content."
"That Honda is never fully in the parking lane. It's in my life."
— Ned England, Nedventuresout, Backslide Way resident
The parking situation, England says, developed independently and should be understood as a separate grievance, though he acknowledges both are "Backslide Way issues" and has begun grouping them under a YouTube playlist he is tentatively calling the Neighborhood Accountability Series.
The Honda in question belongs to the son of his neighbor Linda, whose last name England asked that we not print "because Linda herself has been fine about this." The young man — Kaden, or possibly Caden — parks the vehicle on the street outside his mother's home approximately four days per week. England has photographed the car on 17 separate occasions. In 14 of those photographs, he says, the vehicle's passenger-side mirror is less than one foot from the edge of England's driveway.
"Can I get out? Yes, technically I can get out," England said. "Am I the kind of person who should have to maneuver to get out of my own driveway? No. I am not."
The Young Man Seems Unaware
Linda's son, reached briefly as he was returning to the Honda last Thursday afternoon, said he was "pretty sure" he was parked legally and that he "didn't know there was an issue." He added that Mr. England had "not actually said anything" to him directly. He also mentioned that he had seen "some kind of video thumbnail" with a photo of his car in it. He seemed surprised to learn there were 16 more.
England confirmed he has not spoken directly to Kaden/Caden, explaining that he prefers to "let the footage speak for itself" and that approaching the young man in person "could escalate things."
When it was suggested that the footage, currently at 38 views, may not be speaking loudly enough to reach its intended audience, England wrote something in his notebook.
"I'm not asking for a task force. I'm asking for awareness. And maybe a task force."
— Ned England
What He Has Done About It So Far
England says he has emailed the City of Waukesha Public Works department about the speeding, called the Waukesha Police non-emergency line, and left a message with his alderman's office. He has received, respectively, an auto-reply, no response, and a voicemail saying the alderman was "looking into it."
He has not contacted anyone about the parking situation. "I'm letting the playlist build first," he said. "Then I'll decide next steps."
England is at pains to explain that neither complaint is about personal animosity. He does not dislike the hospital. He does not dislike Linda. He does not even, he says, "technically dislike" the young man or his Honda.
"This is about Backslide Way," he said. "This street has a character. And that character is being — look, there goes one now."
A silver Subaru Forester turned off the main road and proceeded down Backslide Way at what England estimated was "at least 32." He reached for the radar gun. The reading came back 27.
"That's still aggressive for a residential street," he said, and marked it in the notebook anyway.
Across the way, the Honda sat parked. England glanced at it.
"Still too close," he said.
