At the end of the article you'll find a list of tips to keep your pooch
safe on city sidewalks.
Not exact matches
Professor DiIulio again: «It is reasonable to suppose that by doubling or tripling the number of officers
on regular duty in and around drug - infested, crime - torn neighborhoods, and by deploying them in accordance with the precepts of community policing, the streets and
sidewalks of even the most blighted inner
city could be made
safe enough for children to play and adults to stroll.»
On Tuesday at 11 a.m. at
City Hall, «Public Advocate Letitia James will announce legal action to ensure that all New Yorkers with disabilities have
safe and reliable access to
sidewalks and pedestrian pathways, as required under the Americans with Disabilities Act.»
Fortunately that argument was shot down to the holding in
City Council of Augusta v. Tharpe which held that there is a duty
on municipalities to keep the
sidewalks and roadways
safe.