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Judge orders owner of ‘appliance graveyard' to clean up Syracuse property by April

Judge orders owner of ‘appliance graveyard' to clean up Syracuse property by April

Yahoo17-03-2025
SYRACUSE, N.Y. (WSYR-TV) — A State Supreme Court justice has ruled the owners of what's called an 'appliance graveyard' must clean up their property on Syracuse's North Side by April.
The three addresses owned by Kammar's Restaurant Equipment, which repairs commercial kitchen appliances, near the intersection of Wolf Street and Willumae Drive are covered in cannibalized kitchen equipment and scrap metal.
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Judge orders owner of 'appliance graveyard' to clean up Syracuse property by April
'Definitely not what we want in a main corridor in our city,' the city's deputy commissioner for code enforcement, Jake Dishaw, told NewsChannel 9.
'Not only is it unsafe,' said Dishaw, 'but people that drive by shouldn't have to deal with this.'
People who pass the property can see the mounds of metal and piles of appliances filling a fenced side yard, the backyard, and spew into the publicly-owned sidewalk and into the building.
'The inside is like a maze,' said Dishaw. 'High-pile storage up to the ceiling. You would not be able to find somebody in there.'
It's a serious concern and a code violation if firefighters or paramedics don't have a manageable pathway to an emergency.
Because the city has been fighting the property owner to clean up the area for nearly a decade, a judge had to step in.
State Supreme Court Justice Gerard Neri is allowing the owner to clean up the property in phases, but it must be done by April 26.
NewsChannel 9 observed workers moving some of the debris on Monday, March 17.
The owner's son, Kurt Kammer, admits: 'It's an eye sore, big time.'
Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
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