Punishing winter hard on pavement, underground infrastructure

Photo by Tom Rivers: The pavement on Ingersoll Street in Albion has cracks and potholes after four months of punishing winter weather. This photo was taken on Thursday. The Village of Albion DPW was out today using cold patch to fill in the pavement.
ALBION – The brutally cold winter has caused cracks in street pavement and big leaks in waterlines.
It’s also meant many trips for DPW and highway departments for salting and plowing roads.
Crews have been out frequently since early November with few breaks from any prolonged warmups in the temperatures.
Jay Pahura, the Village of Albion DPW superintendent, said his crews have already been out 82 times for salting in the past four months. The village is down to its last load of salt – 80 tons, he told the Village Board on Wednesday.
The winter started in earnest in early November. Pahura said village crews were out salting 30 times before Jan. 1. In some winters, the DPW plows and salters don’t see much action until January.
The freezing temperatures also have been hard on the village’s underground infrastructure. Pahura said there have been 10 major water leaks this winter, including one on East Bank Street on Wednesday that probably was a 200,000-gallon water loss.
The village’s water system typically shows a 15 percent water loss from leaks in the system. But the current report reports about 20 percent.
Village Trustee Will Gabalski said the brutal winter has caused major waterline ruptures through Western New York, not just Albion.
“It’s been a tough winter,” Pahura said. “It’s hard on the roads and what’s underneath.”
It’s also hard on the DPW budget with additional costs for salt and overtime.

Albion DPW crews are out today putting cold patch on roads. Steve Borowczyk, left, and Shaun Stephens were working on Ingersoll Street.






