Dayton Daily News

Road conditions in Dayton improving

Dayton leaders say city still on track to fulfill levy campaign promise.

- By Cornelius Frolik Staff Writer

Dayton leaders say the city is on schedule to fulfill a levy campaign promise for all residentia­l streets to be in good shape by the end of 2024.

Officials say work remains on target even though the city is paving fewer lane miles than it ini- tially projected before the Issue 9 tax-hike levy was passed by voters in November 2016.

“We’re only in our second year, so we still have a lot more paving to do,” Dayton Mayor Nan Whaley said. “I think our streets are getting better every year. At the end of eight years, we’ll be in good shape.”

Potholes and bumpy roads have been a common complaint in Dayton, and the pledge to improve street conditions was a key part of the 2016 levy campaign.

Before the election, Deputy City Manager Joe Parlette said increasing the city’s earnings tax from 2.25 percent to 2.5 percent would help expand city services, including the maintenanc­e, repair and resurfacin­g of residentia­l streets.

Parlette said at the time that the higher tax rate would allow the city to resurface about 60 percent of its residentia­l streets over the eight-year levy period, meaning all residentia­l roads would be in good condition by the time the tax hike expires.

The city paved about 19 lane miles in 2016, but upped that to 53 lane miles last year, public works data shows. The city estimates paving another 59 lane miles this year.

Spending on road surfac- ing and maintenanc­e rose from about $1.6 million in 2016 — before the levy pas- sage — to $5.1 million this year.

“If you drive the streets, you are really starting to notice some difference­s,” Diane Shannon, Dayton’s director of procuremen­t, management and budget, said this month.

But so far, the amount of paving has fallen short of the city’s initial projection­s.

In 2016, city officials and elected leaders estimated that the new tax revenue would allow the city to increase the number of lane miles it paved from about 20 per year to about 73.

Shannon said the city’s original calculatio­ns were based on a residentia­l lane mile inventory of 1,028 miles, which was adjusted to 901 miles when the city updated its inventory.

Inflation has also impacted bid prices for road projects in recent years as the price of asphalt has risen, reducing the number of lane miles that can be resurfaced, accord- ing to the city.

Asphalt prices increased from $68.82 per ton in 2017 to $76.24 in 2018.

Still, the city says it is on target to resurface between 55 and 60 percent of the roads by the time the levy expires, which would mean all residentia­l streets would meet the industry standard of “satisfacto­ry” condition by the end of the eight years.

City officials say resurfaced streets enhance property values and improve quality of life, safety and neighborho­od aesthetics.

Nobody likes a bumpy ride, Fred Stovall, Dayton’s director of public works, said prior to the levy’s passage.

 ??  ?? Constructi­on crews work to resurface Wayne Avenue in the Oregon District in 2017. The city paved about 53 lane miles last year, and estimates paving another 59 lane miles this year.
Constructi­on crews work to resurface Wayne Avenue in the Oregon District in 2017. The city paved about 53 lane miles last year, and estimates paving another 59 lane miles this year.

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