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Jerry Remy's hauled before licensing board after city inspector breaks a picture frame there

The Boylston Street restaurant had to send a manager and a lawyer to the Boston Licensing Board today to explain why police on a routine inspection on June 9 found its various licenses in a binder at the hostess station, rather than prominently posted on a wall as required by law.

The pair explained that the licenses had been posted in a custom picture frame by the front door, but that earlier in the day, an inspector from the city Inspectional Services Department managed to break the frame when taking it down to look at one of the certificates during his own inspection. Workers cleaned up the glass and then put the paper into a binder for safekeeping until the manager could go to a nearby CVS to pick up a temporary replacement frame. Unfortunately for him, police arrived that evening for a random inspection.

This is just the latest example of local restaurants and bars being forced to hire lawyers and send employees before the board to defend themselves against citations issued because of ISD actions - or inaction. The board's Tuesday hearings now typically include two or three involving businesses that had paid for ISD certificates but didn't get them before police showed up for random inspections.

Also today, the owner of the Sevens, 77 Charles St., told the board that the reason police didn't find a valid ISD inspection certificate on his wall on June 14 was because even though he had paid for it back in November, he never got one from ISD.

He said this is actually nothing new - it's been a routine in the 36 years he's operated the bar. In this case, he said he probably forgot to at least post a copy of his canceled check - which police now also know to check for - because last fall, when he sent it in, he was taking care of his wife, then dying of cancer.

Last year, the board had to order several restaurants to shut immediately because they didn't have food-serving licenses.

In all the cases, the restaurant operators, most new to the business or to Boston, said that when they had gone to the ISD offices at 1010 Mass. Ave. and paid for their health and occupancy permits, ISD never told them they'd also need a food-serving license from the Licensing Board, which operates out of City Hall.

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Comments

I bet the ISD inspector who broke the frame called the police to let them know that Jerry Remy's didn't have their license posted temporarily.

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Could one of the police officers be bothered to actually communicate with another department by calling ISD to verify the story? Of course not. How about hiring some city employees who aren't robots?

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In this day of technology we need paper posted on a wall - there's got to be an app for that.

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In this day and age, we need to have both ISD and the BPD to do separate inspections of the same establishment.

And then we need the Boston Licensing Board to waste time and the taxpayer's money to hold a hearing. And all this for what - because all the owner's "necessary" permits and certificates from the 85 dirfferent agencies, divisions, etc. that a business has to deal with in this City weren't in a neat glass frame.

Especially where every office building I've ever been in has a "Certificate on File in Manager's Office" (or similar language) card posted in all the elevators.

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All this could have probably been avoided with a free round of onion rings for the boys in blue.

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Dat's a nice inspection certificate you got dere... shame if anything should happen to it...

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In other countries, that type of corruption is the expected norm. Cops being paid for everything, every business have to provide "courtesy" to get permits and everything. Compared to crap like this, I have to wonder which is the better "system". At least their corruption allows the majority populace to buy in.

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The restaurant should just bring Jerry along to the hearing. After 2 hours of anecdotes about his time in the minor leagues, and how hard it is to find a high-quality shoehorn, they'll just dismiss the complaint without action in desperation to end it all.

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what did the manager do? Crawl to the CVS backwards on one hand and one knee?

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Out of all this, your criticism is of the manager of Remy's?

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ISD proves that Boston is a world class city. It's the Kafkaesque element of overlapping inspectors, licenses bought but not sent and permissions granted but not granted that lend Boston government the exotic feel of old time East European freighted bureaucracy.

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They all have different licenses to inspect, all different shapes and sizes of paper work.
Put bar codes on all the paper licenses and one inspector could do the whole city in a week.

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