More than 2 feet of snow fell in Maryland over weekend

BALTIMORE —Snowplow operators are still hard at work days after a record-breaking snowstorm dropped more than 2 feet of snow in the Baltimore area.

Baltimore Mayor Stephanie Rawlings-Blake said it took the city 17 days to clear the streets after the snowstorms in 2010.

Beginning Wednesday, the city will start fining those who don't clear snow from sidewalks in business districts and gateway corridors.

Ordinarily home to horses, the area around Pimlico Race Track is where the city's big snow removal horsepower is on display. A snowmelter is at work, which can reduce 60 tons of snow to water per hour. It's also where the big snowblower on loan from Boston gets fueled and maintained.

It's part of the city's effort to throw everything it can get at clearing and removing a record amount of snow.

"That equipment is massive and it's very effective, but it's a big blower, so just like you were blowing your sidewalk, you have to have somewhere to blow the snow. If it is a residential street, we can't use that blower," Rawlings-Blake said.

Few streets are back to normal. The 1400 block of North Fulton Street in west Baltimore has one lane clear. Residents who moved their cars to obey the Snow Emergency Route restriction said they wonder why no plow has been back.

The city said it has 1,400 pieces of equipment in use, most of it at extra cost from the private sector. And the city is looking for more help from private contractors.

"We are continuing to accept equipment as contractors are out there and equipment becomes available. The city of Baltimore remains open to business," said William Johnson, director of the Department of Transportation.