Philly Spending $12M to Repave Roads

Itโ€™s been a brutal winter for roads this year. According to officials with the Philadelphia Streets Department, the city has filled more than 12,000 potholes and is on pace to break an all-time record.

The pothole patchwork wonโ€™t last however. Eventually, several city roads will need to be repaved, which means the streets department will need extra cash.

In the new budget plan, the city set aside $12 million to spend this year on repaving 22 miles of roadway. Next month, resurfacing projects for roads will go out for bid.

โ€œWe operate strictly on a worst, first-case basis,โ€ said David Perri the Streets Commissioner. โ€œThe ones that come up as having the most defects.โ€

Ernie Bocolo, of Lexington Park, hopes one that one of those roads will be Lexington Avenue in Northeast Philadelphia, which is covered with potholes. 

โ€œThere are moms, dads and kids on bikes,โ€ Bocolo said. โ€œSomebody is going to lose control one day. Someone is going to get hit.โ€

Experts say new asphalt generally holds up for ten years. However, brutal winters like the one weโ€™ve experienced can cause roads to deteriorate faster. In his budget plan, Mayor Nutter pledged an additional $4 million for paving projects for the next fiscal year.

โ€œYou reach a point where just fixing the potholes is just not a solution,โ€ Perri said. โ€œNot a permanent fix for a street and we have to get in there and re-pave the street.โ€

 

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