
Boston officials gathered in front of a giant pile of sand and one of the city's two new mega snow blowers today to vow they're ready for what winter might bring.
Mayor Walsh said the new snow movers will help Boston begin to emulate what Montreal does, rather than what Boston has traditionally done: Remove snow as it falls, rather than just piling it up along curbs and on street corners.
Public Works Commissioner Michael Dennehy said the new snow blowers, when combined with dump trucks, can move 2,000 tons of snow an hour off streets - which he said was a key reason he decided to buy two of them, rather than buying snow melters, which, at best can melt 350 tons of snow an hour.
Walsh noted that after last winter's storms, the city had to spend considerable amounts just in overtime for removing all that piled up snow and ice, long after the storms had ended.
"We're going from a city that used to push snow around to a city that actually takes the snow off the street," he said, adding he hopes to set aside money to buy a new giant snow blower a year for the next few years. Dennehy added that private snow-removal contractors will get paid a bonus if they buy similar units and use them on city streets.
Walsh started a press conference at the DPW facility on Frontage Road by declaring the city will continue the long-standing practice of letting residents who dig out spaces save them for 48 hours after the end of a snow emergency. He noted the one exception is the South End, where the city will continue last year's pilot of banning all space savers all the time.
Dennehy said the city is looking to find additional places to stow snow, because the higher the snow gets piled, the longer it takes to melt - the last of the Tide Street snow didn't melt until July 14. He added, though, that even if the city can't find additional land for snow piles, he remains committed to keeping street snow from being dumped into Boston Harbor. He noted DPW crews pulled 400 tons of stuff out of the snow piled at Tide Street - 400 tons of things that did not wind up in the harbor.
City officials added they are looking to add more beds to the city's shelter system for the homeless - and that the state is looking at possible sites outside the city for shelters to help relieve the stress on Boston.
Walsh said the city would consider a return to the one-way street experiment in South Boston if conditions warranted - and that the Transportation Department is looking at other gridded parts of the city where that might also work - in East Boston and parts of Dorchester and Roxbury.
Walsh also said that "We've been giving guarantees by the T that service will be up and running."
New city snow blower to Mother Nature: Bring it.

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Comments
Don't knock demand based pricing
By anon
Tue, 11/24/2015 - 9:58pm
On a recent visit to San Francisco, I got a prime spot for 25 cents an hour because the Giants were out of town.
My new tradition
By Michael
Tue, 11/24/2015 - 2:34pm
An orange cone or its like is someone's way of saying "Great spot to throw the snow from the sidewalk into"
Cone
By Tweety Bird
Tue, 11/24/2015 - 2:39pm
May I toss my son's dirty diapers near that cone too? Yessir.
good job, buddy
By anon
Tue, 11/24/2015 - 2:44pm
That'll show 'em.
That works...here's my OLD tradition:
By snow blows
Tue, 11/24/2015 - 2:45pm
An orange cone is someone's way of saying "please use this pylon as an opportunity to get some winter exercise by practicing the track and field event known as the 'Hammer Throw" (i.e., chuck the cone).
oh, here we go!
By anon
Tue, 11/24/2015 - 2:35pm
Time for all the people who don't drive or even live in Boston to come out of the woodwork and share their thoughts on why space savers are satan's creation.
It's like the hyper-local
By anon
Wed, 11/25/2015 - 11:50am
It's like the hyper-local version of an Internet abortion debate.
and that the state is looking
By anon
Tue, 11/24/2015 - 3:07pm
As they should, considering a good number of them aren't from here anyway. It's time for these cities of origin to start doing their part.
Why is last winter the new standard?
By issacg
Tue, 11/24/2015 - 3:07pm
The thread running through all of these events is that we are going to be ready for a winter like last winter. That strikes me as silly and inefficient. (I understand, however, that this is probably good politics, but if that is in fact true, that's a problem in and of itself.)
In the past 20 years, we've had one other winter like last (95-96), which, coincidentally (or not) is no. 2 on the list of all-time greatest seasonal snowfall for the city since reliable records have been kept. Using last winter as the standard of "what we should/will be ready for" seems like overkill and then some to me. It reminds me of all of these people who buy vehicles based on the thing that they do every once in a long while as opposed to what they do nearly every day.
I see this crazy on a much smaller scale, too. My relatives are insisting that I get a snow blower, because, you know, last year.
I shoveled last year - at TWO properties. Both properties (and their sidewalks!) were almost always the clearest on both of their streets. Was I sore? Hell yes, but I didn't need a fricken snow blower then and I don't now. Further, the statistical likelihood of getting anywhere near that much snow this year (or in the next couple of years) is tiny (and probably even smaller given the strong and strengthening El Nino - just ask your favorite ski resort up north, which is still not open). What's with the hysterics?
El Nino may mean warmer temps
By anon
Tue, 11/24/2015 - 3:51pm
El Nino may mean warmer temps overall but it also means more precipitation and it's not going to be so much warmer that that precipitation won't be snow.
Precedent
By AllstonHipster
Tue, 11/24/2015 - 4:04pm
Snow removal has been a problem for years in Boston, it was just worse than usual this last year.
Here's my favorite part of the logic
By Waquiot
Tue, 11/24/2015 - 4:18pm
After last winter, this winter, we'll have 4 storms, spread over 4 months, of a foot each, and we will think of them as a dusting.
I think the new removal equipment is great. As others noted, this is done in other cities. I can count a few more winters since 95-96 when the curb piles crept and crept to the point that driving (including buses, for those automobile adverse) became next to impossible. As for the rest of this presser, isn't it the same thing they remind us of every winter.
I am hoping for no more than 3 feet max this winter, preferably in 6 doses of 6 inches with warmups in between, but we'll see.
PTSD
By JPMom
Wed, 11/25/2015 - 7:39am
Last winter's horror show felt like being buried alive. Honestly, just thinking about it makes me and a lot of other people anxious. I shoveled more snow, until I ran out of space to put it, than I ever did before, including in '78 or '95. My back still aches.
Logically, though, I know you're probably right. I don't have a snowblower either and no plans to get one.
I do not understand why "If
By anon
Wed, 11/25/2015 - 11:53am
I do not understand why "If you're prepared for the worst, you're prepared for anything" can possibly be a bad strategy. Maybe if there were unsolvable budget constraints one should be engaging in a balancing act, like the T has to, but I haven't seen that in this case.
That last quote...
By issacg
Tue, 11/24/2015 - 3:11pm
It snow blows my mind!
By baustin
Tue, 11/24/2015 - 3:29pm
It snow blows my mind!
Snark
By JPMom
Wed, 11/25/2015 - 7:41am
I read it as sarcasm or a bad joke or a poke at Baker.
The full "guarantee"
By anon
Wed, 11/25/2015 - 11:56am
"We've been giving guarantees* by the T that service will be up and running."
* Does not include commuter rail, subway, bus, or MBTA ferry services.
1st space saver related murder =(
By *face palm*
Tue, 11/24/2015 - 3:45pm
Coming Soon TM
You almost had me Mr Mayor
By anon
Tue, 11/24/2015 - 4:04pm
Till you mentioned that the suburbs would take in the homeless and that the T will be up and running .
Two snoblowers
By anon
Tue, 11/24/2015 - 4:05pm
Will never see the neighborhoods. These are obviously going to be used in the South Boston Waterfront, Boylston Street and the Financial District. All the neighborhoods will have to settle for the crappy plow the snow around method.
Two snowblowers won't put a dent in the snow.
Not to stand in as spokesman for the PWD but ...
By adamg
Tue, 11/24/2015 - 4:52pm
Couple of things (both noted in my original post):
The city is trying to encourage private contractors to buy their own Big Ass Snow Blowers by agreeing to pay them extra if they use them on city streets this winter.
The city is looking at these snow blowers as just the first. Walsh said he hopes to buy more and more of them.
So, yeah, this first winter, there's still going to be street-corner snow piling, but look for that to decrease over time.
Decrease over time?
By Waquiot
Tue, 11/24/2015 - 10:46pm
You mean no piles of snow on street corners come June?
Oooooo
By cybah
Tue, 11/24/2015 - 4:51pm
Ooo a space saver thread....nope....... *quietly leaves the room*
They're all MINE!
By SwirlyGrrl
Tue, 11/24/2015 - 7:09pm
[img]https://donaldmorton.files.wordpress.com/2012/01/t...
Meanwhile, here's the performance art rendition of "Boston Winter 2015", as seen in London for Halloween. Perhaps the Yeti will invest in a new costume?
[youtube]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9J_VwBGrR1g[/youtube]
HA HA HA!!!
By Boston_res
Wed, 11/25/2015 - 1:15pm
That photo is awesome!
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