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Motocrotte

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The Motocrotte, officially called Caninette[1] was a small motorized vehicle designed to clean up dog faeces in Paris, France.

Introduced in 1982 by then mayor Jacques Chirac,[2] the idea was to provide a rapid mobile strike force, which could travel great distances with access to sidewalks in a minimum of time, to perform a very specific action. The fleet of 100 vehicles was based initially on Yamaha XT550 and later the XT600, with a large tank to the rear which housed both water and waste, attached to a vacuum-powered hose which was placed over the material required to be removed.

The project was abandoned in 2002,[3] for a new and better enforced local law which now fines dog owners up to Euros 500 for not removing their dog faeces. It was estimated at the time of their removal, that the fleet of 70 Motocrottes were only cleaning-up 20% of dog faeces on Parisian streets, for an annual cost of £3million.[4]

See also

References

  1. ^ Daley, Suzanne (6 November 2001), "Budget Cuts May Foul Sidewalks Of Paris", New York Times, retrieved 2011-02-21
  2. ^ http://www.cavi.univ-paris3.fr/fle/DUDLA_2001/GROUPE1/FRED/motocrottes.html
  3. ^ http://sites.google.com/site/urbanbicycles/glass
  4. ^ Henley, Jon (April 12, 2002). "Merde most foul". London: The Guardian. Retrieved July 29, 2010.