Ask Experts Questions for FREE Help!
  Advanced
Register  |  Log in  
   Ask    
 Answer  
  Help  

Ask QuestionsprogressAnswer QuestionsprogressBuild ReputationprogressBecome an Expert
 
Free Answers in 3 Easy Steps

Register Now
3 Steps

At Ask Me Help Desk you can ask questions in any topic and have them answered for free by our experts. To ask questions or participate in answering them you must register for a free account. By registering you will be able to:
  • Get free answers from experts in any of our 300+ topics.
  • Accept money for answers that you provide.
  • Communicate privately with other members (PM).
  • See fewer ads.

Home > Law > Other Law   »   Town highway dept dumping sand/salt on my lawn!

 
Question Tools Search this Question Display Modes
Question
 
 
#1  
Old Jan 30, 2007, 10:31 AM
beniny
New Member
beniny is offline
 
Join Date: Jan 2007
Posts: 3
beniny See this member's comment history on his/her Profile page.
Town highway dept dumping sand/salt on my lawn!

I live on a road on a hill where we have a very high water table and water constantly runs off our property onto the road. During the winter months the water freezes onto the road and can cause some hazardous conditions. The road lacks a gully or some form of trench to keep this water and ice off the road. The highway dept came yesterday after salting and sanding the ice in front of our property and chopped up the ice and scooped up all the sand salt etc. and dumped it onto our lawn. They also did this last year and caused huge areas of dead grass which has not grown back. Essentially they are defacing our property. I called up the highway dept today and spoke to a secretary who answered me simply by repeating that they are allowed to clean up the road and utilize up to 10 feet onto our property by law. What should I do?

Beniny.

Reply With Quote
 
     

Answers
 
 
Old Jan 30, 2007, 07:54 PM   #2  
excon
Ultra Member
excon is offline
 
excon's Avatar
 
Join Date: Aug 2005
Location: On the outside
Posts: 8,107
excon See this member's comment history on his/her Profile page.excon See this member's comment history on his/her Profile page.excon See this member's comment history on his/her Profile page.excon See this member's comment history on his/her Profile page.excon See this member's comment history on his/her Profile page.excon See this member's comment history on his/her Profile page.excon See this member's comment history on his/her Profile page.excon See this member's comment history on his/her Profile page.
Hello ben:

Call the secretary back. Ask her what particular law she's referring to. If she tells you (and she won't, because she's a bureaucrat, and they don't know squat), look it up. If they CAN do that, and I doubt it, call the mayor. You're a citizen. Of course, if the mayor says the same thing, either hire a lawyer to fight them, or go buy a big shovel.

excon
  Reply With Quote
 
     
 
 
Old Jan 31, 2007, 06:20 AM   #3  
ScottGem
Computer Expert
ScottGem is offline
 
ScottGem's Avatar
 
Join Date: Jan 2003
Location: LI, NY - USA
Posts: 21,901
ScottGem See this member's comment history on his/her Profile page.ScottGem See this member's comment history on his/her Profile page.ScottGem See this member's comment history on his/her Profile page.ScottGem See this member's comment history on his/her Profile page.ScottGem See this member's comment history on his/her Profile page.ScottGem See this member's comment history on his/her Profile page.ScottGem See this member's comment history on his/her Profile page.ScottGem See this member's comment history on his/her Profile page.ScottGem See this member's comment history on his/her Profile page.ScottGem See this member's comment history on his/her Profile page.ScottGem See this member's comment history on his/her Profile page.
Pay to call ScottGem for advice ($.75/min)
Call ScottGem via Skype™
It is possible that such a law does exist. For example, when snow plows come thru, the snow they remove has to go somewhere. But definitely get them to cite the exact statute.

If the statue does say 10' and the dead areas are more than 10', take pictures and submit a bill to the town for repair of the damaged areas.

Some alternatives are to put up a fence that will prevent them from dumping too far into your property or digging your own run off trench.
  Reply With Quote
 
     


Question Tools Search this Question
Search this Question:

Advanced Search
Display Modes

 
Similar Sponsors

Similar Questions
Question Asker Topic Answers Last Post
outstanding dept of $85,000 zimzalabim Bankruptcy & Debt 2 Dec 10, 2006 02:24 PM
Highway construction margins mortiz Finance & Accounting 1 Aug 30, 2006 10:59 AM
atoms in grain of sand BigD Math & Sciences 2 Aug 23, 2006 11:54 AM
Question about dumping timbob84 Relationships 10 Aug 15, 2006 04:07 PM
Morter vs Sand Mix hansgreg Plumbing 3 Feb 28, 2005 06:06 AM




Copyright ©2003 - 2007, Ask Me Help Desk.
All times are GMT -8. The time now is 01:45 PM.

Content Relevant URLs by vBSEO 3.0.0 RC6 © 2006, Crawlability, Inc.