In 2010 the city obtained a cease-and-desist order from the court, which a judge enforced in 2014 by issuing a permanent injunction compelling Vitti to comply with zoning regulations and stop using 10 Rugby St. Some of the photographs show trucks belonging to contractors other than Vitti dumping large slabs of cement, the document states.Īccording to the document, the defendant, owner Antonio Vitti, told Lunney he has been “cleaning up” the premises to comply with a 2016 agreement with the Zoning Board to construct a building that will allow him to move the operation indoors to limit noise, vibration and dust.īut Lunney wrote that “the defendant used this excuse to profit from violating the zoning regulations, the 2010 cease-and-desist order, and the court injunction.” The “defendant’s acceptance to truckloads of material from other contractors and processing it, in the open, without a special exception from the Zoning Board, constitutes a contempt of the court’s order,” he wrote. Lunney verified the complaints, according to the court document.Īnother neighbor filed similar complaints, along with photographs, illustrating violations that date to July. One man reported that his mother’s roof and car were damaged by flying stones. Workers there have been using a jackhammer to break up large cement slabs that an excavator then lifts into a machine that crushes it into gravel, neighbors reported.
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