Lala Move July 2026
Love Local
Over this past summer, a record number of diesel-powered ice cream trucks have jammed the streets of the DUMBO and the Fulton Ferry historic districts, and residents are sick of the noise and fumes. Shown: Rival ice cream trucks roam the streets of DUMBO looking for a place to park. Eagle photo by Mary Frost
Rival ice cream trucks roam the streets of DUMBO looking for a place to park. Eagle photo by Mary Frost
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4 Responses

  1. To move the discussion up a notch, I suggest looking into the minefield which ice cream trucks and all food trucks vend in within NYC. The fact is that it is impossible to find a legal spot to sell anything from a food truck in NYC! Vendors are forced to park in bus stops, at hydrants, at meters, in crosswalks – each is served with fines.
    https://www.6sqft.com/the-state-of-food-trucks-why-owners-are-fed-up-with-outdated-regulations/
    NYC needs to establish enforceable sanitary guidelines for mobile food vendors. Where do you think the ice cream vendor goes to the bathroom? Of course, having kids buy ice cream sold from trucks sitting in toxic diesel clouds is obviously not right. Diesel generators pump soft serve along with the accompanying fumes for customers. In a greener future, if
    soft servers used electrically-powered food trucks, they would be quiet and non-polluting.
    Sane rules for operating would take Mr. Softee et al. out of the renegade category.

  2. No one is forcing vendors to park anywhere…not in bus stops, in front of fire hydrants or in cross walks. When they do so, they are simply saying they are above the law.You should be more concerned about the brick and mortar businesses that are being impacted by these vendors that have little overhead and are a nuisance to locals. You’d have some resemblance of an argument if we didn’t live in NYC where there are tens of thousands of alternatives to grab a bite.

  3. I mean, honestly, we could just ban cars and trucks from most of DUMBO like we do in Time Square and Wall Street. Its insane that we still allow cars on Water street, the most photographed spot in Brooklyn.
    I would really love to see some sort of electrification program in the city more generally. It would be great if vendors could just plug in to street lamps or something.

  4. If only Boro Hall, meaning BP Adams was to pull up his socks and take a serious look at this unnecessary damage to our health and quality of life, it could be brought to an end. Yes, electrically cooled trucks coupled with a limit on parking by diesel emitting trucks could do it. BP Adams need only step outside Boro Hall and check out the Carvel parked on the corner of Montage and Court St. 10 feet from the subway entrance, or the noisy popcord truck by Starbucks at Joralemon St. Hooray for May Frost. Plaudits to the Eagle, on to the News, the Post and the NYTimes.

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