![]() ![]() ![]() “It floods up here, and then you get all the backwash and all that nasty stuff coming up our way,” Costigan said. >MORE: Massachusetts readying for fall nor’easter Costigan said floods often push all that trash into the streets. The forecast in Lawrence Tuesday calls for heavy rain. ![]() On Monday evening, mattresses, propane tanks, children’s toys, a plastic lawn chair and other garbage and debris were visible from a bridge on Haverhill Street near the Greater Lawrence Family Health Center. The 17-mile long Spicket River runs from New Hampshire into the Merrimack River, cutting through the City of Lawrence along the way. “They’re trashing and polluting it, and it’s disgusting.” “Sometimes over here it smells like a dead body,” resident Ann Cooney said.
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