Rottenbiller-Baross-ter

Eliminate the unacceptable conditions at the beginning of Baross Square 20 – Rottenbiller Street

Baross Square 20-21.
Category: Rubbish
Status: Waiting for solution
In Baross Square, problematic people who habitually hang out in front of the Corso shoe store occupy the entrance and the space in front of the window. Back in February, the shoe store manager called the police because they had already made themselves bed and were lying drunk in front of the entrance before closing time, and the customers were unable to leave the store. The shoe store manager argued and asked why they were not going under the bridge. The owner of the sewing shop at 1 Rottenbiller Street was outraged by this. We also expressed our protest to the shoe store manager, saying that it was not a solution to disturb them from one location to another. The solution is to have them eliminate this lifestyle and remove them from the entire neighborhood, because their presence causes a lot of annoyance and poison to the residents of the neighborhood. The area under the overpass is used as a public toilet, and although we managed to get the area cleaned on a weekly basis, the urine and feces have become so embedded in the asphalt that the stench is constant, especially in the summer you can't open the windows because of the stench coming into the apartments. The parked cars can't be cleaned as the condition would require. Someone even sent me a photo of a homeless person urinating on a happy owner's car with the license plate AAGK 280. My relative came to me in horror that he almost ran over one of the problematic people as he wandered around the roundabout under the bridge begging. When the light turns red, they keep begging the drivers of the cars forced to stop. There is no solution until they establish police surveillance and patrols in the entire area. The residents here don't dare let their children out on the street alone, some people find their lives miserable due to the smells and noise coming in through the windows, but they are afraid of retaliation when they see the company, so no one dares to give their face and name to the complaint.