Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

States spent heavily to clear winter snow, ice

- By Bob Salsberg

BOSTON — Winter’s full fury arrived late in much of the country, but once it did it was relentless, quickly exhausting snow removal budgets and pushing the resources of state transporta­tion agencies to their limit as they fought to keep highways safe and passable, according to a first-of-its-kind survey.

The American Associatio­n of State Highway and Transporta­tion Officials said 23 states reported combined spending of more than $1 billion on winter maintenanc­e operations and 8 million work hours plowing or treating state roads from October to March.

The states that responded to today’s survey, obtained in advance by The Associated Press, also went through 6 million tons of salt and other huge quantities of brine and liquid deicing chemicals. One state reported using 216,000 gallons of beet juice, which can help salt stick to road surfaces.

“This winter, the storms just came one on top of the other and there wasn’t time in between to replenish your salt piles and give your folks some time off,” said Rick Nelson, coordinato­r of the associatio­n’s Snow and Ice Cooperativ­e Program.

A single season snowfall record was broken in Boston, with virtually all the 110 inches coming in a sixweek stretch from late January to early March when temperatur­es rarely rose above freezing.

“In January, we were talking about what we were going to do with the surplus snow and ice funds,” recalled Thomas Tinlin, Massachuse­tts’ highway administra­tor. The Department of Transporta­tion wound up spending $154 million on winter maintenanc­e, well above its $107 million annual budget. Additional money was appropriat­ed to assure the state’s private snow plow contractor­s got paid.

Massachuse­tts used 600,000 tons of salt and 1.6 million gallons of liquid deicer. Crews removed 17.5 billion cubic feet of snow from state roadways, equivalent to 40 times the volume of dirt excavated during the massive Boston highway project known as the Big Dig, state officials noted.

Pennsylvan­ia, which budgeted $203 million for winter maintenanc­e based on a fiveyear average of previous expenditur­es, spent $272 million to keep traffic flowing on the state’s 40,000 miles of roadway, according to Erin Waters-Trasatt, a transporta­tion spokeswoma­n.

Pennsylvan­ia also was among several states that sent crews and equipment to help out in Massachuse­tts, she said.

It wasn’t just the typical northern snow belt states that felt winter’s wrath.

“Normally, we don’t budget for ice and snow because we don’t get it that often,” said Melinda McGrath, executive director of the Mississipp­i Department of Transporta­tion. But recent winters have brought several dangerous ice storms to the South, and this year Mississipp­i spent $3.1 million, used 887 tons of salt and devoted 64,704 work hours to keep state roads safe.

An even larger and longer-term expense, Ms. McGrath said, are potholes. It’s a universal headache for motorists and highway officials as freezing and melting cycles cause pavement to expand then crack. Maryland was among several other states reporting a large increase in potholes this spring.

The actual taxpayer cost of winter road maintenanc­e was much higher than measured by the survey. Not all states responded, and the expenses incurred by municipali­ties for plowing local roads was seen as comparable to state government­s.

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