Move it!

Politicians and residents lined up Sunday to demand the Sanitation Department find a new home for the trash trucks it has been parking on a residential stretch of the East Village for nearly a year — despite Mayor Bill de Blasio’s promise to fix the situation.

“It’s disgusting, it smells, the smell lingers, it’s attracting rats, it’s a quality of life issue and it needs to be solved immediately,” said US Rep. Carolyn Maloney (D-Manhattan) at the event. “We need a better solution than parking sanitation trucks on a residential block.”

“We understand the city needs to find a better solution, but find one, don’t come moving into a neighborhood and slowly destroying it,” the longtime lawmaker added.

The Sanitation Department has been parking trucks along a stretch of East 10th Street between First and Second Avenues since September when it lost its lease on a West Side garage. Officials have said they picked the stretch of street last year as a temporary solution in part because it’s near DSNY’s local offices.

But that explanation has done little to allay the neighborhood’s fury.

“Last week I had a rat run across my foot. I lived here for 20 years and I’ve never seen a rat” until the trash trucks showed up, said Marian Caracciolo, who lives on the corner of East 10th and First Avenue. “I thought it was a cat, and then I realized it was a rat.”

Meanwhile, two of the city’s top Albany lawmakers — Assemblywoman Deborah Glick and Senator Brad Hoylman — are threatening to introduce legislation that would ban the Sanitation Department from parking trash trucks on residential streets.

“The Sanitation Department is using East 10th Street as its own private parking lot,” said Holyman (D-Manhattan). “It’s unacceptable. Businesses and residents are suffering the consequences.”

“This is not just a failure of the city administration, it’s a pointed attack on this community,” added Glick (D-Manhattan).

Hizzoner promised to clean up the problem nearly a year ago, in September, when a reporter asked him about it during an unrelated news conference.

“The bottom line to your question — do we want garbage trucks parked on residential streets? Of course not,” Hizzoner said.

The Department of Sanitation and City Hall again declined to offer any timeline about when the trash trucks might find a new home on Sunday, saying the process had been slowed by Manhattan’s “tight real estate market.”

“The Department of Sanitation is committed to being the best neighbors possible at this location,” said spokeswoman Dina Montes.