Weekly, the chair of your neighborhood association scours the streets and picks up the truckload of litter that careless passers-by are just too inconsiderate to drop into one of St. Catherine's many garbage cans. It's hard for her and the handful of people who help her, being the only BLOCK-WIDE ''litter police'', especially since it's scarcely a day until the street looks virtually the same.
We're in a bind here until the city decides to enforce litter fines like the county does in its more affluent and influential east-end neighborhoods. Until then, why not pick up around your neighbor's property as well as your own?
I know that many of you keep your own yards tidy, but simply extending your energies to adjoining yards would make the duties a little lighter and the neighborhood much cleaner. I am as fed up as you are with some people's laziness and negligence, but if we follow THEIR example rather than setting a better one of our own, the neighborhood will look like a landfill within a month.
Sound like a workable start?
By Michael Williams
We're in a bind here until the city decides to enforce litter fines like the county does in its more affluent and influential east-end neighborhoods. Until then, why not pick up around your neighbor's property as well as your own?
I know that many of you keep your own yards tidy, but simply extending your energies to adjoining yards would make the duties a little lighter and the neighborhood much cleaner. I am as fed up as you are with some people's laziness and negligence, but if we follow THEIR example rather than setting a better one of our own, the neighborhood will look like a landfill within a month.
Sound like a workable start?
By Michael Williams