Boston has an unusual parking practice: they allow people who have shoveled out an on-street parking space to reserve the spot with a "space saver" for 48 hours after a storm. This is the subject of derision, sympathy, and everything in between. Many other cities have people "hold" spaces - for example the "Pittsburg Parking Chair" but no others I'm aware of do it officially.
The rationale is that Boston declares snow emergency routes during an emergency. This pushes the cars back into neighborhood streets, many of which are single lane one-way with parking on both sides. So the plows either bury one side, or alternate sides and bury both. Home owners are also required to clear 1 42" wide sidewalk in front of their houses, so you wind up having tall, narrow sidewalks and cars have to be shoveled out carefully. Example.
Boston snow statistics considerably understate the snowfall there because the official location is Logan Airport, out in the harbor surrounded by 38-40 degree sea water that moderates many storms. The average is 44-48". At the Blue Hills Observatory a few miles inland, the average seasonal snowfall is 60". Boston is the 8th
snowiest metro area in the country, but if they measured it inland, we'd be 4th, after Rochester NY, Buffalo NY, and Cleveland, all of whom get major lake-effect snow.
We went through three snow throwers to move the salt-laced, wind-blown concrete that we get. First had an old Ariends, than an ST824, and finally went to an Ariens 1124 Pro, which has an 11.5hp OHV Tecumseh.
That never stalls out or bogs down.
Our place in NH gets a lot more snow but it is much lighter and easier to throw.