Friday, December 22, 2006

SNOW: Snowfalls like that which hit our area earlier this week create all kinds of problems for rural drivers and homeowners, but nothing like those encountered by the county workers whose job it is to keep the roads clear.

There are more than 600 miles of La Plata County roads to plow, so officials with the county's Road and Bridge Department have to make decisions about which roads get plowed and how often. As the road maintenance superintendent for the county, Doyle Villers is usually the man with the final say.

Villers said the county has indentified county roads 240 (Florida Road), 501, 141 (Wildcat Canyon Road), and 310/318 as the main arterials that receive top priority during winter storms. Those roads are paved and sanded as often as conditions dictate by the county's 10 large dump/plow trucks, whose drivers work 12 hour split shifts to clear roads 24 hours a day, often covering a combined 1,500 miles during a given storm.

After the main roads are addressed, Villers said motor graders attack the gravel roads that are the access to many rural subdivisions. Lower volume roads, in general, are not plowed until major roads have been cleared.

Villers said the road crews' task is to clear snow from the center line of a road to the side, and that often can affect cars, mailboxes and driveways that are in the path of the snowplows. The right of way on these roads is 30 feet from the center line, and the county is not responsible for any damage to objects inside that right of way. The county recommends that residents never park in the right of way when snow is expected.

As we have seen this week from the storm that hit the front range, keeping the roads clear can sometimes be a very difficult task. We are very lucky to have not only dedicated, hard working county road crews but also the CDOT crews that maintain our highways. Thanks guys!

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