Pothole season is upon us

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Potholes on Victoria Avenue were so deep in spots, they exposed the underlying brick from days gone by.
Potholes on Victoria Avenue were so deep in spots, they exposed the underlying brick from days gone by.

After a seemingly never-ending winter filled with long hours plowing our streets and roads, the recent thaw brought more work onto Public Works crews.

It’s pothole season, and this year is a bad one.

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Jerry Corso, manager of Public Works South for the municipality, said crews are trying to keep up by putting down asphalt patch.

“It’s a struggle. When Mother Nature plays with our roads, these will develop, especially when it thaws out as it did late last week,” he said. “We even had crews out on the weekend.”

Corso said late February and early March are typically the worst times for potholes.

“The temperature is usually around the freezing point. And it fluctuates – freeze, thaw, freeze, thaw,” he said. “One day you’re doing snow removal, the next you are doing potholes and watermains.”

With potholes, the problems begin when moisture gets underneath the asphalt and between cracks in the pavement, Corso said, causing chunks of asphalt to essentially pop loose. As the ice turns to water and cars pound over the loose pavement, it crumbles and is scattered, creating a pothole.

The melt also leaves large puddles on the road, perpetuating the pothole issue and making them hard to detect, until you drive over them.

Corso, and most other folks in Chatham-Kent, are tired of winter and its impact on our roads – and mental health. But we’re not finished.

“It’s been a significant winter and it’s not quite done with us just yet,” Corso said.

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