Boston

Boston Issues 1,000 Tickets, $100,000 in Fines Over Snow Removal

The MBTA was fined $2,400 for 18 tickets

Boston, MA – February 6: A snow-covered sidewalk is seen beside the city lot at 1010 Massachusetts Ave in Bostons Roxbury on Feb. 6, 2022. In Boston, a pair of publicly owned buildings, including the home of the citys Inspectional Services Department, were fined thousands of dollars for violating Bostons snow removal ordinance in the days after the region was slammed by a powerful blizzard late weekend. At 1010 Massachusetts Ave. in Roxbury, owned by the city of Boston, city Code Enforcement Division inspectors issued at least 39 tickets, worth a combined $5,700 in fines, for failing to clear the sidewalk of snow, according to city data. City inspectors also issued at least 18 tickets, worth $2,400 to the MBTAs Cabot yard on Dorchester Avenue in South Boston for not following the citys rules requiring that sidewalks be cleared of snow. (Photo by Jessica Rinaldi/The Boston Globe via Getty Images)
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Boston has issued thousands of dollars in fines to publicly owned properties for failing to remove snow and ice after last week’s storm.

A city-owned building in Roxbury with offices for several city agencies was fined $6,800 for 46 tickets, while the state-run Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority was fined $2,400 for 18 tickets, the Boston Globe reported Sunday.

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The city’s data only lists billing addresses, not the location of the violation. That means fines could include properties anywhere in the city that are managed or owned by the agencies.

The Roxbury address, for example, houses offices for the Boston Public Health Commission, Parks and Recreation Department, and the Inspectional Services Department, as well as the state Department of Transitional Assistance.

Kelly Mitchell, a spokeswoman for the mayor, said they were compiling a list of addresses where violations took place.

“City-owned properties are subject to the same standards for snow removal as every property within the City of Boston,” Mitchell said in a statement to the newspaper.

Joe Pesaturo, a spokesman for the MBTA, said crews were working around the clock to clear snow and ice from transit stations, stairs and parking lots.

In total, city inspectors issued 1,100 tickets and nearly $103,000 in fines for all types of properties — commercial and residential — as of Sunday.

Copyright The Associated Press
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