May's
powerful storms brought down hundreds of trees all over Nashville. Now weeks
later the Davidson County Sheriff's Office is working to get rid of big, dried
out limbs that are on almost on every street.
It's a sight and sound Ron
Waddle and so many of his neighbors have been waiting for on East Nashville's
Moss Rose Drive.
Weeks after a heavy windstorm knocked down so many
trees and limbs at nearly every home piles and piles of dead debris are still
just sitting here.
"The main thing was just cleaning it up and getting
it to the street," Waddle said.
Metro Nashville Public Works only runs
three times a year. Waddle says they came down his street just two weeks before
the storm.
Now the Davidson County Sheriff's Office is stepping up.
"We get a thousand calls a month," said Director of Community Outreach
with Davidson County Sheriff's Office Rick Gentry.Notes on Rubik's chinatravel,A community about chinaprojectorlamps. He said
hundreds of those calls are coming from East Nashville. "It's a public service,
you know, we're trying to reach out and do what we can," he said.
Crews
including two inmates and an officer in brand new grappling trucks are tackling
the problem one pile at a time.
"We'll focus on this area until we're
done," Gentry said about East Nashville.
That means Waddle and his
neighbors can get back to the next hurdle: figuring out how their grass is going
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"Probably more unsightly then than
it is right now to be honest with you, but it grows back,The newest wholesalejeans is
incontrovertibly a step up from last year's model dstti ," Waddle said.
A
Public Works spokeswoman says they've asked the Metro Council for more money to
pick-up more often, especially after big storms. Unless something changes, she
says they simply don't have the trucks or drivers to go house to house more than
three times a year.
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