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Community Corner

County Road Association Of Michigan Warns The Worst Is Probably Yet To Come

Lansing, Mich. – Although motorists are already frustrated with pothole season, the County Road Association of Michigan warns the worst is probably yet to come. Michigan residents have more to look forward to than just the opening of baseball season this week.


“As some areas in Michigan experience the first 50-degree days followed by rains later in the week, we will see even more craters emerge on our roadways,” County Road Association director Denise Donohue warned. “Seasonal weight restrictions are in effect from our southern border with Ohio and Indiana to the tip of the Keweenaw Peninsula, indicating that frost is leaving the ground and further destabilizing our roadbeds.”


Board Chairman Greg Jamian of the Road Commission for Oakland County states; “Experts have predicted over the past several months that this would be the worst pothole season in Michigan’s history. Due to inadequate road funding in Michigan, the road infrastructure has already been pushed beyond its useful life in some cases. This year’s extraordinary weather conditions will exacerbate the problem even more. Our Board of Road Commissioners in Oakland County have instituted a 6 point plan to address this year’s special concerns, Jamian stated

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According to Michigan’s county road agencies, the epic winter of 2013-2014 pushed frost at least twice as deep in the ground as normal: four to six feet in some areas. Add to that poor road conditions – 80 percent of Michigan’s local road system is in fair or poor condition – and Michigan has a perhaps unparalleled recipe for creating potholes.


“By the time you see a crack in the road, the structural integrity of the road is already vulnerable,” Donohue said. “Michigan’s state and local road agencies will patch the potholes, but roads in these conditions need more than just a patch. They need a long-term funding solution and with each day that passes, the price tag inches up.”

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