Tuesday, April 20, 2010
City Provides Free Shopping Cart Return
This isn't supposed to be the way it goes.
The city adopted an ordinance in 2008 that gives stores the responsibility to not only label all their carts with identifying information, but also to post signs that say it is illegal to take the carts off the premises.
On top of that, the stores are obligated to pay $50 to get a cart back if the city picks it up. That might seem like a lot, but these carts cost $250 each to begin with, according to city Building Official Guy Morin. So, it's kind of a bargain.
But the stores aren't paying and the city is doing all the work.
Walter Veselka, the diretor of public works, says the ordinance isn't working. He and Morin, who both serve on the blight-fighting code enforcement committee, are going to come up with some suggested revisions to the ordinance.
Stay tuned. It might get interesting.
Tuesday, February 2, 2010
They're Not at Liberty to Wave Anymore

BRISTOL – Erin Devine, who owns a Liberty Tax Service franchise on Route 6, says her employees who dress as the Statue of Liberty and wave to passing drivers bring in all her customers.
Zoning Enforcement Office T.J. Decrisantis said the costumed people are out there to grab attention and violate the city’s zoning regulations.
“Based on what I see, it could be interpreted as a moving sign,” said Decrisantis.
Devine disagreed.
“They’re people in costumes,” she said, not signs.
Decrisantis said he first visited the tax service because of an anonymous complaint about the traffic sightline. There were many American flags between the sidewalk and the highway, he said, and a waving person dressed as the Statue of Liberty.
He gave Devine a zoning inspection notice, Decrisantis said, and asked her to “tone it down” with the waver until he could talk to zoning commissioners about the intent of the regulations.
He said he asked her to move the flags to the other side of the sidewalk – about four feet back, so they wouldn’t block drivers’ view.
Devine, who opened only a month ago, said her business will fail without the wavers. She said it is the only marketing strategy used throughout the company.
“This is our branding. This is how we’re recognized.”
Of the 25 people who work at her tax office, 12 are wavers, working part-time, Devine said.
“These are people who are trying to earn a living,” said Devine, who refused to say how much they are paid to stand on the street and wave.
They’re out there Monday through Saturday, from 7 a.m. to 9 p.m., and from noon to 5 p.m. on Sundays, she said, working in shifts of about four hours each.
Decrisantis said he’s not trying to put anyone out of work or otherwise hurt the tax service.
“They’re doing everything they can to get business in the door,” Decrisantis said, but asked, “If they can do it, can other businesses do it?”
If every business on Route 6 employed a costumed waver, said Decrisantis, “it would look like a circus or Las Vegas.”
City Building Official Guy Morin said the costumed character qualifies as an “attention getting device.”
“The regulations are pretty clear about it,” said Morin, who was the zoning enforcement officer before taking his current position.
Decrisantis said he visited both Liberty Tax Service offices on Farmington Avenue on Tuesday to deliver each an inspection notice, this time with a notation that they stop using the wavers within 10 days.
He said it is not a cease and desist order. That would come if the wavers are still there in 10 days, he said.
A cease and desist order gives the business 10 days to comply or appeal. An appeal must be filed within 30 days of the issuance of the cease and desist order, and is heard by the Zoning Board of Appeals.
“I certainly will appeal it,” said Devine.
Until an appeal is heard, the city won’t enforce a cease and desist order, so the business can continue the alleged violation until a ruling is issued.
It’s possible, said Decrisantis, that the entire tax season will be over before the issue is decided.
“It’ll probably start all over again next year,” said Decrisantis.
Ted Parke, a part-time tax preparer for Devine’s business, called the city’s action “typical bureaucratic nonsense.” He said the practice of using wavers is “huge” in Southern California.
“It’s not some deadbeat out there,” said Parke. “We say they are advertisers using their First Amendment rights.”
Decrisantis said he couldn’t stop someone from walking up and down the street dressed as the Statue of Liberty, but he said this is clearly different.
Wavers work 15-25 hours a week, said Parke, and sometimes, there are two on the job at once.
Two people waving “does garner a lot of attention,” said Parke.
-30-
Thursday, January 21, 2010
Oh, the Irony! Building Official Takes a Fall
City Building Official Guy Morin learned too late to take a ladder seriously.
Morin, who recently came back to his City Hall office after seven weeks recuperating from a bad fall, said he made the mistake of not paying attention while standing on a 27-foot ladder at his house.
“I was cleaning the gutters out,” said Morin. “I was almost done.”
But the ladder slipped out of his reach, slid along the fascia board of his house and he fell 14 feet down, landing on mulch and ground cover.
“You don’t have to be up that high to get hurt,” said Morin.
He dislocated the bones in his foot and his tendons became entangled, requiring surgery.
“I was just hanging in midair. I came down on my left foot,” said Morin. “It was like Chevy Chase in ‘Christmas Vacation,’ without the lights.”
Morin, who said he was right in front of his picture window when he fell, said his wife was inside at the time.
“She heard the ladder slide. She looked up and I was dropping,” he said. “We laugh about it now. At the time, she was upset.”
His injury kept him in the hospital for three days, said Morin, in bed for two weeks and out of work for almost two months.
He’s got three screws in his bones and now wears a walking boot for support, but hopes to get out of it soon.
“It’s still a little swollen,” said Morin. “I’m just happy that I’ll be able to walk again. I was pretty lucky.”
He said he’s acquired a couple unwanted nicknames: “Gimpy” and “Hopalong.”
“I’m ready to get rid of those,” said Morin.
After becoming chief building official three years ago, Morin said he stopped the common practice of Bristol’s inspectors climbing up on ladders to check out a roof.
“We do that on a very limited basis now,” said Morin. “Most of the time, the ladders weren’t that safe. I didn’t want anybody hurt.”
Most residential roofs can be inspected from the ground, said Morin, because nearly all are slanted and visible. Commercial roofs are more often flat, and accessible from a door, he said.
When inspectors do have to go up on a ladder, said Morin, they make sure the ladder can carry their weight and that someone below is holding the ladder steady.
Morin sees the irony in his own mishap.
“I grew up on ladders. I just got too complacent,” he said. “I knew it wasn’t up there securely, but I went up there anyway.”
The accident left Morin hurting – but not crying, he said – and with one more household task to finish: selling that ladder.