 There is more than just snow piling along the streets of Boston garbage is not getting picked up. Thousands of residents are complaining that there have been no garbage trucks for as long as two to three weeks. B. U. T. V. News reporter Christina Loeb is live in Boston with the latest on all this trash talk. Thanks, Lauren. As you can see beside me, there are several random trash bags and litter all over just this one snow bank. Residents have taken to the city's Citizen Connect app to post their complaints. I'm taking a look at the app now in just about 45 minutes ago. There are three back to back complaints raging anywhere from Roxbury to East Boston between the app and the mayor's hotline. Residents have filed over 4,000 trash related requests and officials have said only about 200 of those have been addressed earlier this morning. We went out to take a look at the problem throughout the city with already a record breaking 99.9 inches. The Boston winter continues to dump snow, leaving residents difficulty dumping trash. A number of city services have been crippled by the ongoing snowfall, one in particular trash collection, garbage bags and trash litter the snow banks throughout the city and residents are beginning to feel frustration and neglect. I live in South Boston and right now we can't even get to our trash barrels. We just have bags of trash that are pretty much right on the sidewalk and we have to throw them out every single night before our trash pickup. They don't really do a great job of picking up the trash itself. So there's kind of trash, you know, everywhere all over the street bags will rip open and stuff. So it's just been a pain. It's definitely a problem. People need to like I know it's an issue with all the snow, but it does need to be taken care of piles of litter also limit the already cramped space pedestrians have to walk on city sidewalks where snow mounds have taken over. Residents are being urged to be patient while the ongoing snow and trash removal battle don't seem to be resolved any time soon. The mayor is asking for residents cooperation as the city continues to recover from the historic amounts of snow that we've seen. Public Works is also asking the residents place their trash in accessible locations to help speed up the process. Reporting live from Boston for BU TV 10. I'm Christina Loeb. The Boston Globe is reporting that a disposed Christmas tree was even cited on top of a snow bank in Dorchester. Christmas was two months ago.