Showing posts with label litter. Show all posts
Showing posts with label litter. Show all posts

Wednesday, November 18, 2015

Handing out the litter summonses



A rep from a co-op on East Seventh Street wrote in … noting that the building had been hit with a "plague of litter summonses" of late… all of them citing "litter within 18 inches of the curb."

The question: Any other people/buildings in the neighborhood getting fined ($100 for the first offense) like this?

The residents feel as if their building has been singled out (they have received two within 11 days).

We looked at this PDF at the Department of Sanitation for an explanation on enforcement …

Residential Premise Enforcement Routing
Under the Enforcement Routing Program, enforcement agents patrol all areas including commercial, industrial, manufacturing and residential blocks at specified times focusing on violations for dirty sidewalks, dirty areas and failure to clean 18 inches into the street. During the enforcement routing time, when enforcement agents observe a dirty sidewalk, dirty area or an 18-inch violation in front of/adjacent to a residential premise, a notice of violation will be issued. Although enforcement agents will issue notices for dirty sidewalk, dirty area, or failure to clean 18 inches into the street violations only during the specified 2 one-hour daily routing time periods, they may issue notices for all other violations at any time.

Residential Premises
Residential routing times citywide have been set as follows:
8:00 AM to 8:59 AM and 6:00 PM to 6:59 PM

This issue of the Journal of the National Association of Administrative Law Judiciary from May 2014 has a footnote-heavy article titled "Fighting Dirty Sidewalk Tickets in New York City."

Monday, June 17, 2013

Is this David Lynch-directed Don't Litter NYC spot the scariest commercial ever made?


YouTube Day continues at EVG today... this video is making the rounds again... A description via YouTube:

This public service commercial to "clean up new york" was directed by David Lynch and photographed by Frederick Elmes. Perhaps the scariest commercial ever made.

In case you didn't see it last time around the Internet... And now, from 1991...