Colorado transportation leaders are poised Thursday to put aside $25 million for emergency highway repairs and repaving on mountain highways torn up by one of many heaviest winter snowfall seasons on file.
That request for road-repair cash from the Colorado Division of Transportation — which is able to goal bother spots on U.S. 40 over Berthoud Move and different routes — comes because it additionally asks for $19.6 million to plug its strained snow-plowing finances. And there’s nonetheless a number of weeks left earlier than the winter storm season sometimes ends within the excessive nation.
“As of March 31, that is the fifth … most potent winter we’ve had within the final 50 years,” John Lorme, CDOT’s director of upkeep and operations, mentioned Wednesday afternoon throughout a presentation to the Colorado Transportation Fee.
Persevering with snowfall since then might nudge this winter season to the fourth- or third-heaviest in that timeframe by way of statewide snowpack, he mentioned.
Fee members, who’ve heard an earful from drivers about bumpy roads this winter, signaled they’ll possible help the requests after they vote on a finances modification Thursday morning. To cowl the requests, the fee would faucet practically $45 million from its personal program reserve fund, which is meant partially for unanticipated bills throughout the 12 months.
The heavy storms have depleted CDOT’s $84 million snow- and ice-removal finances, and CDOT additionally has blown via a $12 million upkeep reserve fund for plowing. Lorme mentioned inflationary will increase in working bills for CDOT’s truck fleet even have performed a task by driving per-mile plow prices barely increased within the final 12 months.
The practically $20 million in more money will cowl what CDOT has spent to maintain plows working within the final month or so by shifting cash in its finances. It’s additionally anticipated to cowl the season’s remaining storms, Lorme mentioned.
State highways have taken a beating from this winter’s recurring freeze-thaw cycles in addition to the affect on pavement of the chains required on heavy vans’ tires when the state’s traction regulation has been activated.
It’s worse than the same old winter put on and tear, CDOT leaders say.
Crews have been dispatched to patch potholes utilizing a brief “chilly combine” remedy, together with on U.S. 40, however everlasting fixes shall be wanted. Officers say the conventional summer time upkeep finances received’t be capable to cowl all the additional wants this 12 months.
“We’re speaking about, in lots of places, extra vital work the place we’re speaking pavement reconstruction and rehabilitation — not simply easy pothole restore,” mentioned Jeff Sudmeier, CDOT’s chief monetary officer, throughout the fee presentation.
Whereas snow continues to be falling in some areas, a fast melt-off elsewhere has brought on flooding, damaging different roads. That features U.S. 151 in southwestern Colorado.
Sudmeier mentioned CDOT was nonetheless compiling a full checklist of emergency repairs, with $25 million used as a ballpark estimate. He mentioned he deliberate to element CDOT’s spending of the cash for the fee in coming months.
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