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“Outstanding service. They were extremely careful delivering the extra large container into our driveway.” -- A. L. GARNER
City spokeswoman Rowena White.Unlike calling a city department, web-based reports go through even when non-essential staff stays home, as happened last Thursday and Friday.Essential workers like police officers and snowplow drivers can read the reports, let alone resolve the issues.Some side streets remain unplowed after officials said they needed to tow as many as 200 cars parked in the wrong place. Abandoned vehicles, some reported months ago, also got in the way.The post about the Volvo was not acknowledged as of Wednesday—it’s unclear if the car had been towed or the street plowed.“We hear residents concerns, their level, and their frustrations,” White said. “The goal always is to complete the job.”Around the time the post went up, city officials complained that residents were parking on the wrong side of the street, complicating the snow clearing efforts. They threatened to tow some 200 vehicles.White said that city officials will be meeting Friday to review their response to the storm and chart what they might change in a future emergency.Blizzards—a bane of all mayorsGanim isn’t the first mayor to be challenged with snow and...