Please Deice Your Sidewalk
Dec. 7th, 2007 01:57 pmWe're a few days removed from the first winter storm of the year, and yet many stretches of sidewalk in and around Davis Square are still covered in ice. Simpson Ave seems particularly bad as you get towards the Broadway end of the street and Cutter was no Picnic last night either. I can only imagine the folks who live there are renters, as I would think owner residents would not want to risk the liability. One trip to Home Depot or Tags and a few seconds tossing a small amount of rock salt on the ground will fix this. Please everyone do their part to keep the sidewalks in our neighborhood safe all winter.
Is there recourse for pedestrians in Somerville when folks do not clear the sidewalk or does it simply become a legal issue if/when someone slips and falls? I'd like to see the city stepping up to clear bad areas, perhaps citing landlords and residents who repeatedly fail to keep the sidewalk safe.
Is there recourse for pedestrians in Somerville when folks do not clear the sidewalk or does it simply become a legal issue if/when someone slips and falls? I'd like to see the city stepping up to clear bad areas, perhaps citing landlords and residents who repeatedly fail to keep the sidewalk safe.
no subject
Date: 2007-12-08 02:51 am (UTC)I'll have to ask my financial advisor about this shovel equity thing though. I've never heard of it but I wouldn't mind getting some.
no subject
Date: 2007-12-08 02:58 am (UTC)Point. Game. Match.
no subject
Date: 2007-12-08 03:21 pm (UTC)You are a tenant. The law applies to you. You have a legal responsibility to clear the sidewalk - regardless of the rest of the argument, that's what the law says. You live in Somerville (presumably), and are therefore held to its laws.
no subject
Date: 2007-12-08 03:29 pm (UTC)I rent. I shovel. I told my landlord I would. After all, I'm the one who is going to have to walk down my front walk, my sidewalk and get in and out of my drive.
I even toss some ice melt down on the steps. Again, it's my ass traipsing up them every day.
As an aside, you pay big rent because you choose to live in a big rent neighborhood. While absentee landlordism is a real problem, I'm not quite sure how you equate big rent with big service.
I don't expect my landlord to shovel his way out of his own home and then drive 20 minutes to come shovel 10 feet of walkway for me just because I pay rent and would rather wait on someone else to do it for me. I do expect him to come and repair my place when it breaks though. Lucky enough for me, he does.
If you don't want to pay big rent anymore, move to a low rent neighborhood.
no subject
Date: 2007-12-10 06:25 am (UTC)I'm blind and use a mobility aid, and I've just moved from Toronto. I cannot believe the sorry state of the sidewalks down here--it's terrifying, and ridiculous. It pains me to think that the reason for this mightn't be because people are busy or overworked, or even because they're simply lazy. Instead it might be that the self-absorbed, spoiled-brat attitude of entitlement so clearly demonstrated by