Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I hope that everyone who wants DC to be able to handle this like it's no big deal are willing to pay higher taxes to afford that. It really was/is a difficult snow/ice combo and the low temperatures aren't helping.
It's funny that DC has money for special machines that clean bike lanes (which cost $250,000 each) but doesn't have plows to plow neighborhood streets. I'd say the problem here isn't money, it's priorities.
https://www.reddit.com/r/bikedc/comments/1juj9fl/new_bike_lane_sweepers/
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I hope that everyone who wants DC to be able to handle this like it's no big deal are willing to pay higher taxes to afford that. It really was/is a difficult snow/ice combo and the low temperatures aren't helping.
It's funny that DC has money for special machines that clean bike lanes (which cost $250,000 each) but doesn't have plows to plow neighborhood streets. I'd say the problem here isn't money, it's priorities.
https://www.reddit.com/r/bikedc/comments/1juj9fl/new_bike_lane_sweepers/
Anonymous wrote:I hope that everyone who wants DC to be able to handle this like it's no big deal are willing to pay higher taxes to afford that. It really was/is a difficult snow/ice combo and the low temperatures aren't helping.
Anonymous wrote:So on Wednesday this is what City Administrator Kevin Donahue told The 51st:
“Given the magnitude and given the composition of the storm, this is where I would expect to be,” he told [the reporter]. “We've made enough progress with the plowing and the snow removal that we're just able to tackle more and more each day because we have fewer roads for plows to focus on with each passing day.”
That’s some seriously circular logic. Yeah, that’s how clearing snow works! So basically he’s saying they did everything as best as they could (which is objectively not true) and that they’re going to keep clearing snow as is the logical way to clear snow. What???
Anonymous wrote:I hope that everyone who wants DC to be able to handle this like it's no big deal are willing to pay higher taxes to afford that. It really was/is a difficult snow/ice combo and the low temperatures aren't helping.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:35 year DC resident here. I’m super annoyed that certain blocks in the neighborhood have simply been untouched. By anything since the snow hit. Now they are treacherous concrete sheets of ice. Haphazard and random. Worst performance we’ve experienced and we’ve had several major storms over the decades.
+1
This is my issue. They aren’t even trying to clear anything anymore. My road was never plowed. Many roads were never plowed. And DC just keeps putting out messaging about the expertise of all of thr people driving plows and Chancellor Ferebee showing off clear sidewalks for school. Meanwhile none of these things seem to actually be happening. Like just keep plowing the roads.
I thought the city would have people working 24 hours -- like, three shifts, around the clock, every day. But no one really seems to be doing anything. Are we just waiting for it to melt?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:35 year DC resident here. I’m super annoyed that certain blocks in the neighborhood have simply been untouched. By anything since the snow hit. Now they are treacherous concrete sheets of ice. Haphazard and random. Worst performance we’ve experienced and we’ve had several major storms over the decades.
+1
This is my issue. They aren’t even trying to clear anything anymore. My road was never plowed. Many roads were never plowed. And DC just keeps putting out messaging about the expertise of all of thr people driving plows and Chancellor Ferebee showing off clear sidewalks for school. Meanwhile none of these things seem to actually be happening. Like just keep plowing the roads.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Did the city just give up? I drive around quite a bit and I don't see anyone working on anything. I can't remember the last time I saw a snowplow. This incompetence is unreal. It feels like neighborhoods should just take up collections and hire their own private plows.
snowplows are useless at this point. They are removing ice from the main roads. I did see them around today.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’ve lived here since 1993 and have never seen a storm like this (snow then sleet that quickly compacted into ice, followed by a record-breaking cold snap). I shoveled multiple times on Sunday and the ground was already concrete by early evening. The vast majority of the plows in DC can easily handle snow but not a slab of ice. I’m not sure what all the people whining about this wanted the city to do?
And the whiners — almost all of them very recent transplants — also conveniently neglect to point out that things are just as bad in Virginia, Maryland, Philly, NYC (the crowing by Mamdani fanboys has been overtaken by complaints, and how many homeless there have died because of his new policies) and Boston. They act as if DC alone is struggling.
NYC got 15 inches of snow. Boston got 23 inches. DC got 6.
Also, it seems rich for longtime DC residents to accuse transplants of being whiners about the weather. Have you lived anywhere north of here? Where I grew up, they don't cancel school unless it's snowing so much that you can't see the road in front of you.
How much ice did those places get? And people in NYC are not at all happy right now and they got all snow.
And yes, I grew up in Syracuse, NY. This much ice would have been a problem there, too. They have removing snow down to a science up there. No one has a good plan when they get punched in the face by ice.