in

NYC’s bizarre solution to illegal hydrant parking has locals fuming

nyc’s-bizarre-solution-to-illegal-hydrant-parking-has-locals-fuming
NYC’s bizarre solution to illegal hydrant parking has locals fuming

It’s unbe-leaf-able.

The city is bizarrely using massive potted plants in Queens to prevent illegal parking in front of fire hydrants — only to thwart FDNY trucks and Bravest during emergencies, according to fuming pols and locals.

“The placement of these planters is totally negligent, and I don’t understand how anyone could have looked at this and thought it was a good idea,” said City Councilwoman Joann Ariola (R-Queens), accusing the agency of “endangering the public.”

A fire hydrant flanked by two yellow posts, with snow and a planter in the background.

Potted plants owned by the city Transportation Department block fire hydrants in Queens, local pols and residents say.

The city Transportation Department’s planter program has been around for a few years, but Ariola, chair of the council’s Committee on Fire and Emergency Management, said she only found out about it after receiving complaints from constituents this year.

“In an emergency, every second counts, and the precious time wasted by having to move these planters out of the way could be the difference for life and death when someone is trapped in a fire,” she told The Post.

Jackson Heights resident Julia Silber said the heavy pots have also at times blocked fire trucks trying to turn onto 34th Avenue in her neighborhood.

“They cannot fit and have to go back and forth trying to maneuver,” she said, recalling that the planters popped up about five years ago for a COVID-era Open Streets program.

“They do pose a danger, and we have reported it to the DOT many times,” she said.

A black fire hydrant with a silver top stands on a concrete sidewalk, flanked by two yellow posts, with a large planter and street in the background.

“The placement of these planters is totally negligent,” local Councilwoman Joann Ariola told The Post. Office of Council Member Joann Ariola

A local resident association blasted the initiative in a September 2022 video showing firefighters unable to maneuver streets because of the large flowerpots as they reportedly responded to a child with head trauma at a school.

Another video posted to YouTube by the resident group Voices of Jackson Heights in May 2023 depicts several firefighters struggling to move a heavy planter, though it wasn’t clear whether they were responding to an emergency at the time.

Several recent photos provided to The Post show the heavy pots — which require multiple people to move — blocking fire hydrants.

A street scene with melting snow, a large planter with a small tree, a red fire hydrant, and a yellow traffic bollard in front of a brick building.

“It makes no sense to rely on firefighters to move them,” Queens city Councilman Philip Wong added. Office of Council Member Joann Ariola

DOT reps argued that the program actually calls for the planters to be placed at least 15 feet from fire hydrants so as not to hinder emergency response.

“These sidewalk extensions both help ensure vehicles are traveling at safe speeds along the 34th Avenue Open Street and prevent cars from blocking hydrants,” a DOT representative said.

The agency said it coordinated with the FDNY on its design and placements of the “not easily movable” planters to make sure emergency access wasn’t blocked.

But when asked about the photos of the floral faux pas, the representative acknowledged the “planters appear several feet out of place” and that the agency would work to immediately fix the positions.

A large white planter with a small evergreen tree on a city street corner, next to a pile of melting snow.

The DOT acknowledged that some of the “planters appear several feet out of place” and said the agency is working to immediately fix the positions. DOT

Residents said it can sometimes take days for the DOT to respond to respond to reports of the planters blocking fire hydrants.

“These planters are very heavy, but sometimes they are accidentally moved by a car,” Silber said. “If [a planter] by a hydrant, we report it to the DOT, but sometimes it takes them days to move it away from the hydrant.”

Hey @NYC_DOT this is one of the fire hydrants that is blocked by a planter that you said you moved on 34th Ave.

I don’t think this is 15 feet away from the hydrant. pic.twitter.com/tIEuhJq6Xp

— Joann Ariola NYC Council District 32 (@JoannAriola32) February 26, 2026

The issue was reinvigorated during a Wednesday meeting of the council’s emergency management committee.

“This is a citywide problem, I see them in my district,” Councilman Phil Wong (D-Queens) said at the meeting.

“DOT’s approach of placing barriers and heavy infrastructure in the roadway raises real concerns about emergency access,” he told The Post.

“I support safer streets, but not at the expense of common sense or the ability for firefighters to do their job quickly and safely.”

DOT Associate Deputy Commissioner Sean Quinn said at the meeting that the agency is “very open to making changes once a project is implemented.

“A lot of our frequent communication is with the Fire Department on how we can make those changes [and] making sure that the planters and blocks that we have on the street, if they shift after we put them in, are being shifted back into place,” Quinn said.

Leave a Reply

fact-check:-us.-destroys-iran’s-un-‘lies’-after-supreme-leader-strike

FACT-CHECK: U.S. Destroys Iran’s UN ‘Lies’ After Supreme Leader Strike

ny-town-‘extremely-mismanaged’-tax-money-as-35-year-dem-boss-on-hot-seat:-audit

NY town ‘extremely mismanaged’ tax money as 35-year Dem boss on hot seat: audit