Title: Plow Residential Streets Using Non-Traditional Techniques and Save Money
1Plow Residential Streets Using Non-Traditional
Techniques and Save Money
- APWA WESTERN SNOW AND ICE CONFERENCE
- Estes Park, Colorado
- September 23, 2008
2Loveland Facts and Figures
3 Loveland Facts and Figures
- 65,000 population
- 36 inches of snowfall per year, average
- 12 snow events per year, average
- November 6.8 inches
- December 6.4 inches
- January 6.0 inches
- March 5.6 inches
- February 5.0 inches
- April 4.0 inches
- City street network totals 358 centerline miles
- Priority One arterials 70 c/l miles 20
- Priority Two collectors 133 c/l miles 37
- Priority Three residentials 155 c/l miles
43
4Loveland Facts and Figures
- PRIMARY SNOW EQUIPMENT
- 16 truck plows
- 11 w/ salt spreaders
- 5 w/ MgCl anti-icers
- 5 pickup plows
- 3 wheel loaders with plows
- 1 road grader
- 1 loader-mounted snow blower 1800
tons/hr - 1 sidewalk tractor w/ plow, broom
blower
5Snow fighting Chemicals Used
- Ice Slicer average 1,500 tons per year
- Apex average 160,000 gallons per year
6General Snow fighting Operations
- 5 anti-icing trucks are deployed 3-5 hours before
the storm to delay ice formation on pavements. - When snow starts falling, all plow trucks are
deployed. - We start deicing, as needed.
- We operate 24/7 until
- streets are safe our
- downtown district is
- cleaned up.
- Two 12-hour shifts.
- Utilize employees from
- 8 other City divisions.
7December 2006 February 2007Mother of All
Winters
8December 2006 February 2007Mother of All
Winters
- Within a 16-day period, over 80 inches of snow
fell in some areas of Front Range. - Snowed every week for 6 weeks straight.
- On December 20th, Holiday Blizzard I powerful
blizzard affected the Front Range and eastern
plains of Colorado and surrounding states. - Up to 3 feet fell along the Front Range from
Pueblo to Fort Collins. - Interstate and state highways were closed.
- Denver International Airport was closed down for
two days, causing a significant ripple affect
across the U.S..
9December 2006 February 2007Mother of All
Winters
- On December 28th - 29th, Holiday Blizzard II
dropped another 8 24 inches along Front Range,
with strong winds. - Much of the state was declared a federal disaster
area. - Tens of thousands of livestock were killed.
- Hay drops were implemented helicopters were
deployed to break the ice on stock tanks. - On January 4th - 5th, Holiday Blizzard III
yet another 12 inches.
http//www.drovers.com/news_editorial.asp?pgID715
ed_id3983
10December 2006 February 2007Lovelands Woes
- On December 20th-21st , 25 inches fell with
strong winds, 4-6 foot drifts and cold temps. - This was a record-breaking storm for December.
- By early pm on December 21st, Priority 1 and 2
streets were plowed we then started plowing
Priority 3 residentials. - With snow 2-3 feet deep, our plow trucks and
contract road graders became stuck dozens of
times. Very slow going.. - Our trucks and graders left behind 3-4 foot
windrows which blocked all driveways.
11December 2006-February 2007Lovelands Woes
- Because it was slow going and we blocked
driveways the phones started ringing. Up to
800 calls per day! - We asked the local construction community for
help in dealing with this emergency situation. - By December 27 one week later nearly all
residentials were either plowed and/or passable. - IMPORTANT POINT residentials that saw a plow
early on were mostly down to bare pavement.
Those plowed a few days later were, at best,
ice-packed and rutted.
12December 2006 February 2007Lovelands Woes
- On December 28th, we received another 8-14
inches, and we started all over with Priority 1s,
2s and finally 3s again. - It snowed each of the next four weekends, for a
total of six weeks in a row. - Due to cold temps, our plows could not pop the
bonded ice loose the plows just chattered over
the top. Road graders worked only slightly
better. - On these last-plowed streets, the norm was
severe icepack and deep ruts, ice potholes, and
very slick surfaces.
13December 2006 February 2007Lovelands Woes
- Beginning early January, contractors and City
crews loaded and hauled many hundreds of
truckloads of snow/ice from our arterial and
collector roads and business districts.
14December 2006 February 2007Mother of All
Winters
- In late January, we again attempted to plow off
ice and ruts from our 140 residential miles, by
deploying 20 contract graders and 25 frontend
loaders.
15December 2006 February 2007Lovelands Woes
- With over 50 inches of combined snows and
resulting snow piles and blocked gutters, we had
DRAINAGE PROBLEMS EVERYWHERE! - Only two solutions load/haul from key
locations, and hope for a warm-up. - Ultimately, temps warmed up, we could plow off
the snow/ice, and drainage finally under-cut the
piled snow banks.
16December 2006 February 2007Mother of All
Winters
- The Cost?
- 500,000 spent on plowing contractors 100/hour
average. - 250,000 spent on loading/hauling, traffic
control. - Untold curb/concrete damage throughout town from
heavy equipment. - Untold asphalt damage throughout town from
never-ending freeze-thaw cycle. - Bruised egos and frayed nerves.
17Lessons Learned?
- Our arterial/collector S I program works quite
well. However, our Achilles Heel is our
residential plowing program. - Must plow fresh snow!! Waiting too long causes
it to become packed down by traffic, and then
freeze tightly to pavement. - Must plow all streets simultaneously, and
continue to plow as needed. - Heavy equipment contractors are unfamiliar with
the residential street network miss too many
streets and even entire neighborhoods.
18My hopefully not-so crazy idea?
- Put snowplows on trash trucks.
19Why might this be better than using heavy
equipment contractors?
- Its already being done in several cities NYC,
Chicago, Milwaukee, etc. - We have a ready fleet of 20 trash and recycling
trucks sitting in our yard. - We have equipment operators for every one of
these trucks. - These residential trash and recycling operators
know our street network better than anyone.
www.innogize.com/adrian/tz/archive/2006/02/
20Trash truck plows versus heavy equipment
contractors
- With 10 plow-equipped trash trucks, it would take
approximately 4 hours to plow the center 1/3 of
our 288 miles of collectors/residentials i.e.
576 plow-miles _at_ two passes. - Assumes each truck could average 15 mph.
- Each operator would drive his normal collection
routes, plowing left to right, eventually plowing
both sides of each street.
21Trash truck plowing
- Timing of each snowfall would dictate our
strategy - If an overnight snowfall, trash crews would plow
residentials first, then unhook plows and resume
their normal collections. - If a daytime snowfall, crews would complete their
normal daily collections, then hook up plows and
plow residentials. - Collections are performed Monday-Thursday, so
snowfalls on Fridays, Saturdays and Sundays,
would not impact collections.
22Cost Comparison
- Grader/loader contractors typically charge about
100 per hour. - Our estimated cost for each trash truck plow and
operator is 60 per hour. - However, our net out-of-pocket cost for trash
truck plowing 10/hour i.e. OT only - Capital cost 26,000 retrofit i.e. for
frame/bumper extension, hitch/plow and hydraulic
hookups. - For 10 trucks 260,000 /-.
23Other Advantages
- Can deploy trash-truck plows immediately versus
waiting for contractors to trickle in. - Immediate deployment means plowing fresher snow
before residential traffic creates packed
snow/ice, ruts, etc. - Trash trucks can plow faster than road graders.
- Residential streets can be
plowed concurrently with our
arterials and collectors.
24Still More Advantages
- The faster the entire street network is opened
up, the faster our community returns to normal - Employees can get to work
- Students can get to school
- Buses can run
- Shoppers can get to the stores
- Sales taxes get rung up
- Fewer frustrations and frazzled nerves.
25Bottom Line?
- Big snowstorms are fairly common community
emergencies in the Snow Belt Region, and we need
to be better prepared. - Being prepared means utilizing all of our
existing resources. - The community will receive better, faster, and
cheaper service. - Buying plows for existing trucks is a reasonable
expense, given the high cost and risk that snow
emergencies present.
26Questions? Comments?
- Mick Mercer
- Streets and Solid Waste Manager
- City of Loveland, CO
- 970.962.2530
- mercem_at_ci.loveland.co.us.