"In the Weeds"
This is a posting from Matthew Stout

(Posting from Matthew Stout)
I look around our neighborhood and I see that our neighbors are still making repairs to their houses and recovering from Harvey. My wife and I received very minimal damage compared to other neighbors – just doors down, and many streets over – yet we are having a hard time of it. It’s disheartening to see people still struggling after having been dealt such a hard blow, and the time that it is taking to recover is wearing on everyone.
One thing that I have noticed is that yard maintenance is taking a back seat to home repair. Some people have had to cancel their yard service in lieu of contractors, and yards are being left as an afterthought. Issuing Deed Restriction violations and fines does not seem like a very neighborly thing to do at this time, and would be generally counter-productive. I was thinking this was a place that we could come together as a neighborhood and help each other. For those people who are not capable (physically or financially) to mow their own yards, I thought we could try to organize a brigade of volunteers who have the time and/or the lawn mowers to try to help.
This is just an idea in its infancy, so there details to work out. We would need volunteers who are reliable and dedicated, and lawn mowers volunteered. And we would need to cooperation of the neighbors in need, as well, to make sure the call to aid comes before the yard has grown past the height that a push lawn mower can manage and requires a landscaping company with larger machines.
The FEMA lots have been marked so they need to be taken care of by FEMA. But we should be able to co-ordinate an effort to help the neighborhood as a whole. It would be one less things to worry about until Norchester is back on its feet again.



