In a message dated 8/26/2010 10:56:59 A.M. Eastern Daylight Time,  
mlam...@aol.com writes:

Hi, Al,  here's a question:  are you calling 311 to report it and/or 
follow up  on it?  Remember, they assign the report a number & you can 
call  them back to follow up on it, and they hold the departments 
accountable if  the departments don't do anything.  This seems pretty 
urgent, and it  seems that 311 could be helpful.
Thanks.
 
I started by calling 311, who transferred me to the water department  
emergency line, who had me on hold for almost 10 minutes before they took the  
info.
 
After over an hour, nobody showed, so one of my crew called 911 to get a  
cop, thinking they could at least put up a barricade where the pavement was  
covering a cave with no support. The cops came, called the Streets Dept, and 
 left (no barricade... just a few traffic cones my guys put up).
 
I called John Fenton, late in the day. He made some calls, which came  
through to the extent that he did get their attention (their short attention  
span attention) and today we had multiple inspectors from the water and 
streets  depts, who made some measurements and tests then said it was a big job 
that  maybe the Highway Dept should handle, and they also left.
 
More of the pavement is caving in.
 
They said there was an old sewer line onto 44th St from my house... and  
there's certainly a pipe down there. But my sewer line goes onto Spruce Street 
 -- I have no idea where the one they saw comes from, but not my house. 
There was  once a convent taking up most of the block between 44th & 43rd, 
Spruce and  Pine, so maybe it was theirs. Of course, that was 94 years ago. At 
any rate, no  sewer line could cause this much erosion -- it has to be a bad 
storm  drain.
 
In the meantime, it's still a danger spot and I'm concerned that a car  or 
possibly a heavy truck is going to crash another hole through the pavement  
above the cave and get swallowed -- causing damage at least and  possibly 
injury (or worse). There doesn't seem to be any water down there  right now so 
a vehicle crashing through won't cause anyone to drown... but I  could 
easily see a situation where someone would be trapped inside and unable to  
open 
their doors or have enough space to get out of a window.
 
Also, when the inspectors were here, they found that the erosion had opened 
 a tunnel between the place where the pavement is open now, and the sink 
hole  about 25 feet away, in the middle of the street closer to Spruce, that 
they  fixed about two weeks ago. So, when they found the first sink hole, 
they didn't  bother checking to see what had caused it or they would have found 
the tunnel  from that end.
 
The whole thing may become a real nightmare and disaster. It has me very  
worried.
 
Al Krigman


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