Residents at the end of Gippsland Street, close to town, are increasingly angry over the amount of glass bottles that appear around the streets and in gardens on Thursday mornings following pay and party night on Wednesday.
Gippsland Street is part of the route that cuts through the Ingebyra cul de sac and is used by staff and tourists heading towards the pubs in town.
Local resident, Karessa Symons-Hall, was furious after discovering on her return from an early morning start at work, that her driveway was covered in broken glass and that she had driven over it in the dark.
"Every Thursday morning it's the same after the Wednesday pay night. People walk down the street from around 9.30pm and bottles are dropped in front gardens and along the gutters," Ms Symons-Hall said.
The irony is that the entire area is supposed to be an alcohol-free zone.
This is the second bad winter according to Ms Symons-Hall who said that she doesn't feel that the family can go through another winter in the same home.
Some other residents in the area have already taken the plunge and only live in their homes outside winter.
There are also concerns for the local children walking to school and running the gauntlet of broken glass and even more undesirable deposits along the street.
"We are just not coping with the influx of kids here," said Ms Symons-Hall.
She is also worried that what garbage makes it to the bins still may not be collected because of the new rules that require a sticker on bins before they are collected.
Stickers and explanatory notices were sent to owners last week but absent landlords will then have to send the stickers back to Jindabyne to be put on the bins.