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Back to the Stone Age

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  • Back to the Stone Age

    SPIRITWOOD, N.D.—A hulking yellow machine inched along Old Highway 10 here recently in a summer scene that seemed as normal as the nearby corn swaying in the breeze. But instead of laying a blanket of steaming blacktop, the machine was grinding the asphalt road into bits.

    "When [counties] had lots of money, they paved a lot of the roads and tried to make life easier for the people who lived out here," said Stutsman County Highway Superintendant Mike Zimmerman, sifting the dusty black rubble through his fingers. "Now, it's catching up to them."

    Outside this speck of a town, pop. 78, a 10-mile stretch of road had deteriorated to the point that residents reported seeing ducks floating in potholes, Mr. Zimmerman said. As the road wore out, the cost of repaving became too great. Last year, the county spent $400,000 on an RM300 Caterpillar rotary mixer to grind the road up, making it look more like the old homesteader trail it once was.

    Paved roads, historical emblems of American achievement, are being torn up across rural America and replaced with gravel or other rough surfaces as counties struggle with tight budgets and dwindling state and federal revenue. State money for local roads was cut in many places amid budget shortfalls.

    In Michigan, at least 38 of the 83 counties have converted some asphalt roads to gravel in recent years. Last year, South Dakota turned at least 100 miles of asphalt road surfaces to gravel. Counties in Alabama and Pennsylvania have begun downgrading asphalt roads to cheaper chip-and-seal road, also known as "poor man's pavement." Some counties in Ohio are simply letting roads erode to gravel.

    The moves have angered some residents because of the choking dust and windshield-cracking stones that gravel roads can kick up, not to mention the jarring "washboard" effect of driving on rutted gravel.

    But higher taxes for road maintenance are equally unpopular. In June, Stutsman County residents rejected a measure that would have generated more money for roads by increasing property and sales taxes.

    "I'd rather my kids drive on a gravel road than stick them with a big tax bill," said Bob Baumann, as he sipped a bottle of Coors Light at the Sportsman's Bar Café and Gas in Spiritwood.

    Rebuilding an asphalt road today is particularly expensive because the price of asphalt cement, a petroleum-based material mixed with rocks to make asphalt, has more than doubled over the past 10 years. Gravel becomes a cheaper option once an asphalt road has been neglected for so long that major rehabilitation is necessary.

    "A lot of these roads have just deteriorated to the point that they have no other choice than to turn them back to gravel," says Larry Galehouse, director of the National Center for Pavement Preservation at Michigan State University. Still, "we're leaving an awful legacy for future generations."

    rest here

    http://online.wsj.com/article/SB1000...363737746.html
    Outside of a dog, a book is man's best friend. Inside of a dog, it's too dark to read. -Groucho

  • #2
    Re: Back to the Stone Age

    No need to worry, a work crew is on its way....







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    • #3
      Re: Back to the Stone Age

      "Down-graded asphalt" or "poor man's pavement" reminds me of "deficits don't count" or "just grow the pie bigger" and "paper dollars are just as good as silver dollars, only more convenient and better for your pants-pockets.".... The new buzz-words for this process is "down-shifting" in America or making the lifestyle in America "more sustainable for the ecology".

      In other words, "Let the people eat cake."

      The U.S. Mint still goes through the annual accounting ritual of making a payment to the U.S. Treasury for the seniorage in counterfeiting U.S. coin--- in other words, the surplus value gained by the sovereign authority in making coins out of inferior metals. And similarly, in America, counties are becoming richer (or more fiscally-solvent) by not having to spend as much money in making (and annually maintaining) roads made out of asphalt pavement.

      After all, a road is just a road, isn't it, no matter what the road is made of? And poor-man's pavement is better for the pockets of the county governments.
      Last edited by Starving Steve; September 13, 2010, 05:56 PM.

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      • #4
        Re: Back to the Stone Age

        Very interesting. In 2005, I travelled for 7 hours on a gravel road, from Samburu National Park (central Kenya) to Marsabit (far north Kenya). It was the only road to Marsabit, so we had no choice.

        It was a very bumpy ride, but I didn't mind, because for me it was quite an adventure. Got to see wild ostiches and baboons, plus local tribes people herding camels (northern Kenya is dry and dusty).

        But travelling gravel roads in America will be a DRAG. And I expect, given the political environment and Peak Cheap Oil, we will see a lot more of this in future.

        It's another sign of the triumph of the FIRE economy in the U.S. Our super-rich citizens demand to keep or even increase their huge tax cuts of the last 30 years. The middle class and lower classes are being squeezed due to stagnating or decreasing wages, lack of job opportunities, rising medical costs, etc. and can't pay more in taxes to maintain the roads.

        It's another sympton of the declining standard of living in the U.S.

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        • #5
          Re: Back to the Stone Age

          you know, I'm kind of in favor of this. If fair and practical choice of roads for return to gravel is used, instead of the roads being paved for political purposes.. I live in a suburb, and there are many roads that simply serve the local residents and are not thoughough fares. They don't reall need to be paved. They do need to be plowed, and I don't know how gravel roads hold up plowing. What is the cost of paving the road vs. perhaps a yearly road crew that would pour out gravel and compact it?

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          • #6
            Re: Back to the Stone Age

            To some degree this is missing the point. There usually is money to pave the roads. There is not enough money to pave the roads AND build that new palatial government office complex. Or the new sports park. Or the dog walking park. Or the Green space walking trails. Or any of a number of other marginal "nice to have" projects that are a leftover from the boom time way of thinking. Coming up with a list of priorities is part of what we elect our leaders to do. In my area they do a crappy job. We have all these nice parks and facilities yet they are laying off teachers and experienced police personnel. The Jail is a relic from the 50s meant to house a fraction of what it is holding now. Looks like something out of Mayberry RFD. This is in one of the wealthiest counties in the nation. They have incredibly expensive "crisis command" vehicles that sit idle in an area where a crisis is a broken traffic light. Our spendthrift leaders have pissed away the huge tax revenues of the recent past and now they are crying foul because they can't budget worth a damn. It is SOP in every economic downturn for politicians to attempt to cut costs in the most dramatic way, by laying off Police, Fire, teachers, and cutting any other service that they know will cause an inconvenience and hopefully leave the taxpayer with the idea that they really do need to raise taxes. What you won't find is a huge layoff in management nor big cuts in favored projects. Our brilliant leaders are going ahead with plans to buy a struggling golf course at an overpriced value to turn into "green space". Meanwhile they quit sending home progress reports at school to "save paper".

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            • #7
              Re: Back to the Stone Age

              I look at the World,

              and it's turning.

              I look at the Floor,

              and it needs sweeping....

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