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Friday, October 30, 2015
scholarhips
Monday, October 19, 2015
shovel your sidewalk or get $500 fine!
Please read the Chicago DNAinfo article and Share with the community.
By Ted Cox
The community should be able to fine the
city for not clearing the side streets - just saying>>>>>>>.
CITY HALL
— It will cost more to be lazy this winter.
A City
Council committee on Monday hiked the top fine for failing to shovel your
sidewalk to $500 — a tool city officials said would be used against repeat
offenders.
City
officials clarified language on snow removal, but in doing so it also hiked the
fines and set strict times to have sidewalks shoveled.
"The
original language was very vague," said Commissioner Rebekah Scheinfeld,
head of the Department of Transportation, which is assigned to enforce clear
driveways and sidewalks along with the Department of Streets and Sanitation.
Scheinfeld added that the new ordinance, submitted as part of the 2016 budget
process Monday, set "clearer guidelines."
Yet
there's no denying the actual ordinance language increases fines for failure to
clear sidewalks from $50 to a range from $50-$500. It also increases the fine
for obstructing the public way with shoveled or plowed snow from $25-$100 to
$50-$500. Jeffrey Levine, of the Law Department, said it was intended as a tool
the Law Department can use to increase fines for repeat offenders and other
scofflaws.
It also
calls for snow that falls during the day to be cleared by 10 p.m., and for snow
that falls overnight to be cleared by 10 a.m., while confirming that business
owners as well as property owners and operators are required to clear the snow
from the public way on their property and not cover Divvy stations and other
bike racks in the process.
The
timing provision made some aldermen skittish, but Levine sought to placate them
by saying the increased fines are aimed at the "repeat, flagrant
offender."
"Our
first step is always to issue warnings," Scheinfeld said.
Budget
Director Alexandra Holt said the "intent is not to change the
procedure," but it's "really intended to address the people who don't
ever clear the snow from a sidewalk."
The new
ordinance cleared the committee and heads for approval as part of the budget
process at the City Council meeting on Wednesday.
Stay Safe and Alert!!!
Later, Leroy Duncan
Community Representative
Monday, October 5, 2015
open house and networking!
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Saturday, October 3, 2015
ONE DAY ONLY!
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