Snow and Sidewalks: A Study of Three Communities
Vol. III, No. 247 - Each of our hometowns here in Miami County each deal with Snow Removal with a Different Mix of Carrots and Sticks
Perhaps this publication should not have been surprised, but more than a few residents have asked what the rules are for shoveling sidewalks, now that we are well past one week when one of the largest snow storms in recent memory covered the area. And there are a number of sidewalks that haven’t even been touched. Some of our readers want to know what exactly are the rules, and much to no one’s surprise — the rules are a little different depending on where you live.
Troy’s ordinance (Section 521.06) reads like a traffic ticket with a customer-service script attached. Property owners have to keep sidewalks, curbs, and gutters in repair and free from snow, ice, and other nuisances. On top of that, you are not allowed to push the snow from your driveway back into the street or sidewalk, and you cannot sweep grass or yard clippings into the street either, which is the city’s way of saying, “Your mess is your mess.” If you are caught, there is a clear price list: pay twenty dollars within ten days or wait and pay fifty dollars later.
Troy also builds in a small legal drama into the ordinance. A designated city employee writes up a notice, and you can appeal that notice by requesting a hearing with the Director of Public Service and Safety, who can appoint a hearing officer. That hearing officer holds an administrative hearing, keeps a record, lets you present evidence, and then makes a final decision for the city. It is a full, formal process over a pile of snow, which is somewhat amusing, but also a reminder that Troy takes sidewalk safety seriously.
Tipp City, by contrast, is much more focused on the clock. The ordinance (Section 95.20) says that if your building or lot borders a street with a graded or paved sidewalk, you have the first four hours after daylight to get the snow off the walk. The same four-hour rule applies to ice: you either remove it or put down sand or another substance so people can walk safely.
On enforcement, Tipp City is surprisingly gentle on snow. Violating the snow and sidewalk section can bring a fine of not more than five dollars for each offense. That is less than a fast-food combo meal, which might not scare anyone into buying a good snow shovel. Other sections in the same chapter can bring higher fines and even cost recovery for street cuts, but snow itself sits on the low end of the penalty scale. In practice, Tipp’s message is more about shared responsibility and time deadlines than about heavy punishment.
Piqua sits somewhere between Troy’s formal system and Tipp’s friendly nudge. In Piqua’s Ordinance (Section 92.04), property owners or occupants have to keep the sidewalk next to their property free and clear of snow and ice. The key phrase here is “within a reasonable time,” which Piqua helpfully defines as normally no more than twelve hours after the storm ends. Instead of four hours after daylight, residents get up to half a day after the snow stops to dig out, which feels more flexible for people working different schedules.
When it comes to penalties, Piqua does not write a special snow fine into the snow section itself. Instead, it points to the city’s general penalty section, which says that when no specific penalty is listed, a violation is a misdemeanor of the first degree, and each day the problem continues is a separate offense. Under Ohio law, a first-degree misdemeanor can carry up to serious fines and even possible jail time, at least on paper, though cities often exercise discretion. That makes Piqua’s ordinance look strict in theory, even if real-world enforcement may be more measured.
So which city is the strictest? In terms of clear, immediate bite, Troy probably wins. There is a defined fine, a set payment schedule that doubles if you wait, and a detailed enforcement and appeal process that shows the city plans to actually use the ordinance. Piqua looks tough on the books because it ties snow shoveling to the general misdemeanor penalty, and every day you ignore your snowy sidewalk can become a new offense. Tipp City, with its four-hour deadline but tiny maximum five-dollar fine, seems to rely more on community norms and neighborly expectations than on the fear of punishment.
From an enforcement-design standpoint, Troy’s approach is the most built-out and predictable: residents know the rules, the penalties, and how to argue their case. Piqua’s law is simpler to read and gives more time but leaves the actual penalty level to a broader criminal category, which could be confusing to the average resident reading the code. Tipp City is very specific about timing and responsibility but keeps the fine so low that it reads more like a reminder than a real deterrent.
For everyday residents, the bigger lesson is not which city can punish you the most. It is that all three communities agree that walkable, safe sidewalks are worth protecting. Clearing the sidewalk is not just about avoiding a ticket; it is about the kid walking to school, the neighbor walking their dog, or the delivery driver sprinting door to door on a slick morning. The law is the stick, but the real motivation should be not wanting to be “that house” on the block that turns a winter day into an obstacle course.
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I appreciate the information that you have provided, however, I'm unsure about the repercussion of not clearing sidewalks. I live 5.5 blocks from the Square in Troy, and to date, there are many sidewalks that aren't cleared. I walk a lot, as do many others, and it's annoying!! People who don't clear their sidewalks are equal to those who leave their shopping cart in the parking lot instead of putting it in the cart garage.