Hi. I haven't posted in ages, but was urged to recently, at which point I informed the urger that I don't post on this board anymore because the previous association board voted quite vehemently (and subsequently so did the association) to phase out this board and go to the e-group format. The majority wanted us to use the e-group venue, so I've been honoring the majority request. Well, I've finally realized that I'm the only one who took what was voted on seriously, and everyone else is still par-taaaying down over here?–so I've decided to come back! I liked this format better in the first place! If and when this message board goes away, then I'll use the other venue?–until then, I'm baa-aack. AND I'm glad to see everyone posting on whatever they want, too! I shall also, staying civil as always, of course. So, howdy-doo, all, I've missed this forum!
Now, alley trash--I can relate! The remedy is a total CPTED approach. We have a ''T'' shaped alley--the base of the ''T'' on my block, the top of the ''T'' along 28th street. The trash can that goes with the 28th street alley houses used to be placed inappropriately/anti-CPTEDly (is that a word *lol*?) behind my neighbor's, which already had one trash can. The two cans together created the visual cue: ''come dump here--two cans together AND a clump of brazilian pepper trees--what could be finer?'' We had an awful dumping problem. 5 years and many calls to Yvonne Love (now Johnson) of Sanitation (who is WONDERFUL, btw), and we succeeded in getting the city to move Trash Can Two over to the alley it serves, thus separating the cans and removing the ''dump'' cue. However, the renters living in one house behind the 28th Street can still had their kids dump trash in the alley. Since they were evicted, all was quiet until yesterday, when I saw a child dump trash in the alley. I take it upon myself to clean up the alleys--plural, not just the one behind my house. This is because one neighbor along 28th is a tad disgruntled (read, he says: ''I RULE THIS ALLEY! THE CAN IS GOING BACK!'') about the can being moved over there (even though it serves their houses), so I'm doing my part to keep the areas behind their houses clean--I don't want anyone to feel dumped on, literally *lol*. After the child dumped trash on the ground, I went over immediately and picked up dirty diapers, chicken wings, etc. When the 28th street renters were evicted I spent several hours helping the kids place their stuff INTO the cans, because the mom slept all day and had the kids pack and throw everything out. They threw it into yards and alleys. I gently said, you guys need to put that stuff IN the cans?–let me help you. Tiny kids CANNOT be expected to reach those trash cans! Parents, please don't assign your kids that chore--they cannot reach! Also, get stickers with the number of sanitation special pick-up for the cans. We've done this on many alleys already, but if your cans don't have them, call Yvonne with sanitation. Trash in the alleys runs down the neighborhood and is totally preventable! WHY throw trash on the ground when one can is full instead of walking to the next can, which is often empty? Do the CPTED dance: Hey, if I can get out there and pick up other people's dirty diapers, then anyone can *lol*! Peace out.
Now, alley trash--I can relate! The remedy is a total CPTED approach. We have a ''T'' shaped alley--the base of the ''T'' on my block, the top of the ''T'' along 28th street. The trash can that goes with the 28th street alley houses used to be placed inappropriately/anti-CPTEDly (is that a word *lol*?) behind my neighbor's, which already had one trash can. The two cans together created the visual cue: ''come dump here--two cans together AND a clump of brazilian pepper trees--what could be finer?'' We had an awful dumping problem. 5 years and many calls to Yvonne Love (now Johnson) of Sanitation (who is WONDERFUL, btw), and we succeeded in getting the city to move Trash Can Two over to the alley it serves, thus separating the cans and removing the ''dump'' cue. However, the renters living in one house behind the 28th Street can still had their kids dump trash in the alley. Since they were evicted, all was quiet until yesterday, when I saw a child dump trash in the alley. I take it upon myself to clean up the alleys--plural, not just the one behind my house. This is because one neighbor along 28th is a tad disgruntled (read, he says: ''I RULE THIS ALLEY! THE CAN IS GOING BACK!'') about the can being moved over there (even though it serves their houses), so I'm doing my part to keep the areas behind their houses clean--I don't want anyone to feel dumped on, literally *lol*. After the child dumped trash on the ground, I went over immediately and picked up dirty diapers, chicken wings, etc. When the 28th street renters were evicted I spent several hours helping the kids place their stuff INTO the cans, because the mom slept all day and had the kids pack and throw everything out. They threw it into yards and alleys. I gently said, you guys need to put that stuff IN the cans?–let me help you. Tiny kids CANNOT be expected to reach those trash cans! Parents, please don't assign your kids that chore--they cannot reach! Also, get stickers with the number of sanitation special pick-up for the cans. We've done this on many alleys already, but if your cans don't have them, call Yvonne with sanitation. Trash in the alleys runs down the neighborhood and is totally preventable! WHY throw trash on the ground when one can is full instead of walking to the next can, which is often empty? Do the CPTED dance: Hey, if I can get out there and pick up other people's dirty diapers, then anyone can *lol*! Peace out.