Online:
Visits:
Stories:
Profile image
Story Views

Now:
Last Hour:
Last 24 Hours:
Total:

Boston Turns to Snow Farms, Melting Trucks in Desperate Effort to Unclog City Streets

Wednesday, February 11, 2015 6:44
% of readers think this story is Fact. Add your two cents.

(Before It's News)

Over the past 30 days, the city of Boston has been pummeled by multiple storms that have dumped more than 70 inches of snow on the city, breaking the previous 30-day record total of 58.8 inches set in 1978.

While clearing the roads and walkways is one challenge, disposing of the large piles of snow scattered around an already congested city is another, especially with a fourth snowstorm forecast to move into New England later this week.

In order to reduce the piles of snow, Boston has opened five ‘snow farms' at vacant parcels of land throughout the city, where work crews continue to unload thousands of truckloads of snow. Yet as one whopper of a storm follows another and frigid temperatures remain, space in Boston grows ever tighter.

The city has received an unprecedented amount of snow

The city has received an unprecedented amount of snow, according to Mayor Marty Walsh, and they've had to use industrial snow melters, on loan from Northeastern University and the Massachusetts Port Authority, to melt snow as all five snow farms approached capacity at various points.

Despite the public works department melting more than 6,000 truckloads of snow over the past several days, Walsh told the Boston Globe that the snow melters were struggling to keep up with demand and the city has considered dumping snow in Boston Harbor. However, it would first need to notify the Boston Conservation Commission due to the fact that road salts and other chemicals in the snow could pose an environmental risk.

Snow piles at intersections throughout the city were reaching as high as 10-20 feet according to Mike Dennehy, interim commissioner of the Boston public works department. Much of the focus is on reopening travel lanes, turning lanes and keeping sidewalks clear, so pedestrians don't end up walking in the streets, he added.

“If we did not have these five sites, we would have a major public safety issue and even more congestion,” Dennehy said.

More than 400 active plows were out Monday evening as the third major storm in two weeks began to wind down and Dennehy said they try to hit the roads at night to avoid further congestion. For the season, road crews have logged more than 218,000 miles of plowing in over 115,000 hours.

Back in November, parts of western New York were buried under 6 feet of lake-effect snow. In Orchard Park, more than 220,000 tons of snow had to be removed from Ralph Wilson Stadium, home of the NFL's Buffalo Bills.

To help with the removal, the Bills contacted Chuck Lantzman, president and CEO of Pittsburgh-based Snow and Ice Management Company. The company owns two “Snow Dragon” snow melters and brought one to the snowbound region to help dispose of the snow from the Bills stadium.

At the core of the machine is a 9 million BTU per hour burner which keeps 1,200 gallons of water heated between 70 and 90 F. In Orchard Park, about 60 tons of snow was melted per hour just from the Snow Dragon alone, Lantzman said.

“It's a newer technology, it helps [with] going green, because everything's filtered and so you're not dumping pollution,” said Lantzman, whose company provides commercial snow removal across seven states in the Northeast.

The melters have multiple filters to catch oils and debris that gather in the snow. The pollution-free water from the melted snow is then typically dumped into a catch basin, Lantzman said.

“If you just load up a pile of snow in a dump truck and go dump it in a field, whatever you scoop up or scraped off the asphalt is now in that field,” he said.

The snow melters aren't cheap, however, and not many snow removal companies own them because of their cost; Lantzman said his machines cost around $300,000 each. Greater demand for the melters comes from areas such as New York City where there is less space to dump snow. For rural localities, it's cheaper to move the snow into snow farms, Lantzman said.

In Philadelphia, the snowfall amounts have been far less than Boston this season, totaling only 5.2 inches, and typically the city only receives a major snowstorm with over a foot of snow about once every five years, Philadelphia Streets Commissioner David Perri said.

Still, the planning and preparations is a significant undertaking, especially with nearly 2,500 miles of roadways potentially to treat in a winter storm event.

“We've haven't had much snow yet this year, but it's been an unusual year in that we've had a lot of deployments in anticipation of snow coming,” Perri said.



Source: http://www.accuweather.com/en/weather-news/snow-removal-boston-northeast/42028195

Report abuse

Comments

Your Comments
Question   Razz  Sad   Evil  Exclaim  Smile  Redface  Biggrin  Surprised  Eek   Confused   Cool  LOL   Mad   Twisted  Rolleyes   Wink  Idea  Arrow  Neutral  Cry   Mr. Green

Top Stories
Recent Stories

Register

Newsletter

Email this story
Email this story

If you really want to ban this commenter, please write down the reason:

If you really want to disable all recommended stories, click on OK button. After that, you will be redirect to your options page.