Anonymous wrote:Have a heart and be kind. Help your neighbors and shovel their snow. Take a basket of muffins over and see if they are ok and need anything!
Anonymous wrote:There are a number of lazy, relatively young, able bodied adults in our neighborhood too. There are tons of teens offering cheap shoveling services so if the adults in question all have “hidden disabilities,” they should hire the teens to shovel for them. If they can’t afford to hire the teens then they shouldn’t have bought a house.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We live in a nice, very expensive part of NW DC.
The houses that have not shoveled are all uniformly:
-Rental houses
-The very expensive flipped houses ($2.5M+) purchased by younger rich couples
Even the older neighbors salted their walks and hired people to shovel (or another neighbor shoveled as a favor).
Why do you care?
Is there truly no longer a sense of doing something because it’s the right thing to do anymore?
Just wear boots and stop demanding that your neighbors shovel snow.
NP. Nut up and take care of your property like an adult.
Your entitlement is showing. We don’t shovel because no sane person would care.
You genuinely have no idea what the definition of “entitlement” is, do you
You have no idea how to walk in the snow, do you?
Haha damn…you’ve just spent like two full days in this thread, haven’t you? Maybe you should get off your lazy ass and spend 20 minutes shoveling your sidewalk instead of 16 hours per day on DCUM.
I shovel snow onto my sidewalk.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
I call and report these people to the county(MoCo).
I'm a runner and my various routes take me anywhere from 3 to 7 miles and after it has snows a few times, you get to know who the deadbeats are - it's always the same people.
I give them 48 hours to get it done and then my criteria are this: if the sidewalks leading to their house and/or their driveways are shoveled but the sidewalk in front or the side of their house is not, they get reported.
Did a 6 mile run today and have a list of 20 or so down county houses - we'll see where things are Tuesday morning.
You want people to clear a path for your hobby or you will call the police? You are an entitled loser.
It's not police, it's code enforcement. They typically give warnings and from what I've seen, people comply; it would only be in extreme cases where someone ignores multiple times where there would be an actual fine.
This is not for me - it's for the elderly, the disabled, the kids walking to school and the people trying to push a stroller. In the warmer months, I also report the people who pull their cars partly into their driveways(usually trying to cram multiple cars) that are then blocking the sidewalk. Again, same reason as above - not for me in particular it's for the good of all pedestrians. On my runs, I get to know who these habitual abusers are and I report them as well.
Anonymous wrote:30 year old neighbor is not shoveling snow.
How do I tell my 30 year old neighbor to shovel his side of the street. He is 30 year old and he is very healthy but wont shovel what can we do?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:+1. Just don’t worry about it! That happened everywhere! I think I’m the only person on the block that shoveled my sidewalk. The rest of the block to the stop sign has 6 inches of snow untouched.Anonymous wrote:Come out to Fairfax County. Half of the sidewalks in our neighborhood are never shoveled. I wouldn’t think anything of this. I didn’t know it was the law to shovel a sidewalk anywhere.
It will be in the 50s and rain next week. It will be melted then.
And, what’s the practical impact?
Do people walk down the sidewalk with any regularity? (Dog walkers don’t count since they could easily walk their dog on their own property.)
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What if he is handicapped
Or obese?
What if he has a legitimate snow-phobia?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What if he is handicapped
Or obese?
Anonymous wrote:What if he is handicapped
Anonymous wrote:30 year old neighbor is not shoveling snow.
How do I tell my 30 year old neighbor to shovel his side of the street. He is 30 year old and he is very healthy but wont shovel what can we do?