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Drag racing in Newmarket Square has become so popular a hot-dog guy now sets up a stand

But that could end starting tonight. District C-6 Capt. Joseph Boyle promised Newmarket Square merchants today he'll have officers assigned to the square tonight to break up the Friday-night races before they begin.

That's good news for Victoria's Diner owner Damian Marciante, who says the drag racing - and the drag racers - are killing his business. At a meeting of the Southampton/Mass. Ave./Newmarket Safety Task Force this morning, he said his weekend business has dropped 30% because of how the "very combative" racers are scaring off people who might otherwise want to eat at the diner.

"I've been trapped inside," he said.

Sue Sullivan of the Newmarket Square Business Association said a hot-dog vendor who normally only plies the streets during the day has started setting up shop on Friday and Saturday nights to feed hungry drag racers, who sometimes assemble in the South Bay parking lot, and their fans, who gather in parking lots of other businesses in the area.

Sullivan said, however, merchants have approached the hot-dog guy about not doing that anymore and that he seemed amenable.

Police said part of the problem has been that the races, typically on Friday and Saturday nights, tend to start just as their shifts change at midnight. Also, police won't chase drag racers once they've begun, because the risk of a dangerous crash is just too high.

Still, beyond sending officers down, police and merchants agreed there are several options to try. Business owners should post "No Trespassing" signs on their parking lots, which will let police clear them out after hours. Police will take to management at the South Bay mall about adding security sweeps after hours to keep the racers out of its parking lot.

And while the city won't install speed bumps on the area's streets - they can pose problems for fire trucks, delivery trucks and snow-removal vehicles - police said they would talk to the DPW about the possibility of rumble strips, which might be more acceptable to truck drivers, but still force the drag racers elsewhere.

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And while the city won't install speed bumps on the area's streets - they can pose problems for fire trucks, delivery trucks and snow-removal vehicles - police said they would talk to the DPW about the possibility of rumble strips, which might be more acceptable to truck drivers, but still force the drag racers elsewhere.

This isn't the 1950s. We have the technology. Why doesn't the city know about it?

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That these speed bumps seem to work out just fine in surrounding communities. Most notably Cambridge but also Brookline & Dedham. If you don't want to put them in just say that but don't blow smoke up out skirts about how they mess up fire trucks & plows. They sound so helpless saying crap like this. I also get the sense that they just tell the public BS to shut us up and move along with their deaf & outdated agenda.
I thought we got rid of Menino and 70's thinking. Guess I was wrong. I am so sick of this outdated crap that this city claims is the best they can do. Someday Boston will enter the 21st century. Just not in my lifetime.

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.

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There are so many ways to stop this. Traffic cameras would be another one but drivers don't want them because they are more interested in speeding and getting away with breaking the law than they are with saving lives.

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to 25 miles per hour isn't one of them.

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People already out street racing and willing to run from the cops don't care about the law. They'll just pull their tags.

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I believe that it has something to do with state constitutional requirements about facing your accuser, but I will defer to the resident lawyers on that (a quick google brings up a lot of spam sites about "driving laws in your state")

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Salsa music blaring cars ripping around and drunk spectators wobbling around the middle of the street. There are usually between 150 and 200 people lingering around until 3 or 4 AM. Other than that its quiet...

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Sounds awesome! I'll have to make a special trip for the occasion! Why not, you know, turn this into a legit event? The diner could get a lot of business...

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Boston is a melting pot. Some residents might work different hours and they like to stay up and party late.

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They're not racing in some deserted cornerr of the city. Newmarket Square is as close as Boston gets to being 24/7: In addition to businesses there that work around the clock (Katsiroubas Bros. and Boston Medical Center), both Victoria's Diner and the Hen House are open until 4 a.m. on weekends, just down the street from a 24-hour McDonald's. The drag racers are effectively ruining things for the restaurants because not only do their cars prevent people from getting there, their racers and fans are apparently pretty obnoxious, too.

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to his street.

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Between this and Methadone Mile Marty has really done wonders for the area.

The city should start organizing and regulating these races. Just like the Boston Grand Prix it could be regulated, shaken down, and run into the ground putting an end to the problem for likely less graft, incompetence, felonies, and time by the mayor's buddies than the current BPD plan of action.

Either that or a dozen people on Twitter could start mocking it.

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How about these people? If we won't chase them with cars, let's try flying devices.

We don't even have to actually do it. Put up a giant poster that says "if you drag race, we'll do to you what Obama's secretly been doing to terrorists in the Middle East."

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We also bomb US citizens abroad via drones.

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AAAHH...hee...hee...heee..hee.hhee.eeeeeeeeeee.......WIPE OUT!!!!! Game over.

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Race up and down the ramps at Newmarket station no one takes the train from that million dollar stop. Four Corners station is another mile long station that doesn't have any riders but could entertain dirt bikes and skateboarders.

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They actually added a couple of puns that Adam missed:
   http://www.wbur.org/radioboston/2016/08/12/wir-police-economy-marcotte
( skip to Time = 21:20 )

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Rumble strips would be terrible. They are very dangerous to people on bikes. They can easily throw your bike to the ground if you run over one.

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