Blizzard 2015 Boston

   / Blizzard 2015 Boston #331  
The flyer pasted to the pole is more than adequate.

If anyone tried to use space savers up here it would
be removed quickly and tossed in a dumpster by a dpw crew
and the area cleared of snow back to the curb and beyond
if sidewalks are flush with the curb.

The public would be reminded that on street parking is public parking
and not reserved for anyone period and cars would be towed if a snow
emergency was declared for snow removal purposes or if highways were
physically blocked by DPW barriers preventing access during a storm AND
they would be ticketed or arrested if they are driving during a snow emergency
unless they were law enforcement, municipal workers or health care workers/doctors/nurses etc.,
traveling to a hospital.

You have to keep in mind that this is Boston (Somerville is very Boston like in density and housing stock even though it is technically a different city a few miles north). No side yards or driveways for many homes and lots of multifamily homes. People really have no place else to pahk their cahs or put snow so it isn't like irresponsible types causing problems for the DPW on purpose. I've driven through Cambridge and Somerville a bit over the past few weeks and it is a mess. There are lots of huge snow piles that may or may not have cars underneath.
 
   / Blizzard 2015 Boston #332  
Very true,

We have had an issue with students that leave their cars for months at a time
on the un-metered spaces for months and the only way they have been able to
control the issue is to designate certain streets with and without meters that have
high traffic counts with seasonal snow removal emergency signs notifying the car
owners that they cannot park on the street during heavy snow events.

Odd even parking is also suspended when snow piles and packed ice must be removed.

The state drove by with their tiny road grader on Tuesday making a mess of things and I
am sure its because they think the storm coming from rockies is going to make a real mess
of things. They love to waste money by making repeat trips when a wing operator on the
plow truck would reduce the number of trips they would have to make every night when
its snows enough to plow.
 
   / Blizzard 2015 Boston #333  
The flyer pasted to the pole is more than adequate.

If anyone tried to use space savers up here it would
Your profile doesn't say where you live. What I call "Excessive pride of place" is common everywhere, it seems.

Earlier in this thread I explained why this practice is tolerated. It is common in many snow belt cities dating back to the 1950's. In Pittsburg they even sell souvenir "parking chairs." City of Boston's idea of "snow removal." That pic was taken last weekend and that 12' high mound is still there.
image-L.jpg


This winter has brought about a lot of changes and snow removal practices and budgets will without question be reviewed for 2016.

We had three snow throwers and only needed two. I decided to sell one and sent out an email at work. Sold in three minutes....
 
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   / Blizzard 2015 Boston #334  
The late Mayor of Boston, Mayor Menino, was accused of various times of favoring some neighborhoods over others with services. These same allegations have followed Mayor Walsh. Focused-through-windshield phone video of what a typical Boston residential street looks like at the moment.

Note that many of the houses have little or no front hard so there is literally no place to put the snow removed from parking spaces, which are usually shoveled out by hand.

 
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   / Blizzard 2015 Boston #335  
I live outside Ithaca and it has a very high population
with college students and year round residents.

We have plenty of parking problems with lack of
parking in many places and we have parking garages
without roofs which causes huge deicing and snow
removal expense- crazy idea in this climate especially when
the garages do not have heated floors to melt ice and snow.


You have to love municipalities(insert snicker here) and how they only think in
the short term with short dollars instead of thinking long term to reduce
issues with ice and snow and its effects on exposed concrete where heated
floors solve more problems and reduce repairs to the concrete surfaces.
This works on car washes and has worked well for sidewalks as well.
 
   / Blizzard 2015 Boston #336  
I live outside Ithaca and it has a very high population
with college students and year round residents.
Funny, your profile doesn't say that.

Population of Ithaca: 30,014. Metro area population is 101,564.

The population of Dorchester - one neighborhood in Boston - is 114,000. Metro Boston has 4.6 million.

Cornell is pretty large but also has their own resources, while Boston university, for example, has 50% more students. So if students create parking problems in Ithaca, you can imagine what 25 colleges and universities create, and that excludes adjacent schools like MIT and Harvard.

In other words, apples and oranges.
 
   / Blizzard 2015 Boston #337  
Boston has 102" officially and the record for seasonal snowfall is 107". 4-6" is forecast overnight so we may break that record.

It snows in Boston in March than the three months prior, with most snowfalls 6" or less. Then again, Boston got 25" on April 1 2007, so we'll see.

If we get a couple of the kind of nasty ice storms typical then a lot of people are going to lose it.
 
   / Blizzard 2015 Boston #338  
Boston has 102" officially and the record for seasonal snowfall is 107". 4-6" is forecast overnight so we may break that record. It snows in Boston in March than the three months prior, with most snowfalls 6" or less. Then again, Boston got 25" on April 1 2007, so we'll see. If we get a couple of the kind of nasty ice storms typical then a lot of people are going to lose it.

I recall a serious snowstorm in ?May in about 1978. We definitely get snow in March and even April typically.
 
   / Blizzard 2015 Boston #339  
Spoke with my Framingham son yesterday. He says there are lots & lots of people with ice dam water damage. His single story ranch house has a 3 or 4/12 pitch roof which he was able to keep clear and has escaped damage. They did a big remodel recently with new attic insulation which helps too.

Luckily he lives in a 1960's era subdivision with driveways.
 
   / Blizzard 2015 Boston #340  
I've seen numerous stories in our local news on the parking situation in the Boston neighborhoods, and some on emergency response problems. But I've seen very little about other essential services. Having a hard time even imagining how basic trash collection is being managed at this point. Even if the trucks can make it through the streets, where are residents able to put the trash and recyclables for pickup? The cleared walkways in front of the homes look ridiculously narrow between the drifts. Also wondering how the thousands of UPS, FedEx and USPS parcel deliveries are being made? To say nothing of delivery and pickup of bigger stuff. :confused:
 

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