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The Boston Police Department is hereby authorized to go to aid another city or town at the request of said city or town in the suppression of riots or other forms of violence therein.
(Ord. 1950 c. 8; Rev. Ord. 1961 (Temporary Ord.); CBC 1975 Ord. T11 § 403; CBC 1985 11-9.4)
Cross-reference:
Ord. s 11-1
This Section shall remain in force during the effective period of Chapter 639, Acts of 1950, and any act in amendment or continuation thereof or substitution therefor.
(Ord. 1950 c. 8; Rev. Ord. 1961 (Temporary Ord.); CBC 1975 Ord. T11 § 404; CBC 1985 11-9.5)
Cross-reference:
St. 1950 c. 639
All references to Chapter 639, Acts of 1950, as now in force shall be applicable to any act or acts in amendment or continuation of or substitution for said Chapter 639.
(Ord. 1950 c. 8; Rev. Ord. 1961 (Temporary Ord.); CBC 1975 Ord. T11 § 405; CBC 1985 11-9.6)
Cross-reference:
St. 1950 c. 639
The city Parks and Recreation Department oversees 2,200 acres of parkland, including 215 parks and playgrounds, 65 squares, 16 historic burying grounds, three active cemeteries, two golf courses, a variety of urban woodlands and immeasurable street trees. The Department also programs a wide range of community events and live entertainment in the parks under its jurisdiction and employs Boston Park Rangers to monitor the parks and enhance public safety. Over the last ten years, the Parks Department has implemented a $120,000,000 rehabilitation of the city park system targeting every tot lot and most ball fields and hard courts.
(CBC 1985 11-10.1; Ord. 2004 c. 13 § 1)
(A) These Sections delineate a community- initiated process for the city to establish dog recreation spaces within the city through the City’s Parks and Recreation Commission and an external applicant for a city dog recreation space. The applicant may be an individual, a group of individuals or a formal organization. The process is community-initiated, and it remains community-centered by requiring the applicant to remain actively involved in the maintenance of the space and the implementation of rules and regulations in and around the space. This Subsection is designed and intended to highlight and require a prominent role of the applicant for a Boston dog recreation space in the creation, establishment, funding and maintenance of the dog recreation space.
(B) The applicant will also assume a primary role in establishing, promulgating and compelling compliance with standards of conduct in and around the dog recreation spaces.
(C) The establishment of a dog recreation space requires measures of flexibility to allow for variations in space availability and the needs of the neighborhoods enjoying the dog recreation space; such flexibility may include the establishment of multi-use parks/areas. Although the city has a multitude of pre-existing commitments to other current recreational uses in the city’s parks, it is the intention of the city to preserve the space and integrity of the city’s tot lots, tennis courts, basketball courts, tracks and baseball/softball fields, which shall in no way be diminished or compromised by the siting/location of a dog recreation space. The provisions of these Sections, however, shall not preclude an applicant from seeking to use other publicly owned land, other than parkland, for a dog recreation space.
(CBC 1985 11-10.2(a); Ord. 2004 c. 13 § 1)
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