Opis
Joslyn road between Upland and Walton seriously needs to be fixed. The road is terrible and is causing damage to cars. Stop just "filling" in the holes and actually fix them correctly before citizens get tired of the car repairs and starts going after the city for there repair bills.
6 Skomentujs
Road Commission (Guest)
Shannon:
The Road Commission for Oakland County shares your frustration. Unfortunately, there simply is no money available to resurface this road. It, like many, many other roads across the county SHOULD be resurfaced. However, due to the road-funding crisis we face in Michigan there is NO money to do so.
In fact, as a result of declining road funds, we predict far more roads will fall into disrepair in the coming several years. As we have said, take a look at the roads around you today. This is the best they are likely to be for a long time.
Because of the decline in road funding (we receive 5% less state road funding today than we received in 2000, while the costs of maintaining roads has gone up dramatically during this period), we have been forced to eliminate all road resurfacing projects except those paid for with federal dollars.
However, based on the amount of federal funding we receive, it will take us 137 years to repave all of the roads on our system on which federal funds can legally be spent. By that time, most will have long ago returned to gravel. That's the good news.
The bad news is that only one third of our system is federal-aid eligible (meaning we cannot legally spend federal dollars on the remaining two thirds of the road system). For that remaining two thirds of the system, there is NO funding available for resurfacing.
In fact, that is why more than 30 county road commissions across Michigan have already returned more than 100 miles of paved roads to gravel -- they could not afford to maintain the paved surfaced and there was no money available to resurface. In those situations, the only option is to pulverize the road and return it to gravel. I suspect we will see a lot more of that in coming years.
Why are we in this situation? Because Michigan has been among the bottom 10 states in the nation in per capita state and local road funding for more than 45 years. That means that since at least 1964, Michigan residents have been paying less to maintain their roads than the residents of most other states. Unfortunately, we have gotten what we paid for: An inferior, crumbling road system.
So, yes, we agree Joslyn should be resurfaced. Unfortunately, because Michigan has not made its roads a priority, there are no resources available to do this.
One final note: Unfortunately, we are also not able to patch the potholes on this road as frequently as we have in the past. As a result of our dropping budget, we now have 15% fewer employees than in 2007. That is a lot of bodies no longer available to patch potholes, plow snow, grade gravel roads, fix road flooding issues, etc., etc.
Road Commission for Oakland County
terri (Guest)
Road Commission (Guest)
Terri:
Yes, we're very serious.
M-59 is a state highway under the jurisdiction of the Michigan Department of Transportation, not the Road Commissionf or Oakland County.
As noted above, we agree that work needs to be done on many roads across Oakland County. Joslyn is far from the worst. Please see message above. There simply is no money for many of the badly needed repairs.
Are we doing some work this year? Of course, where federal funding was awarded, we are able to make improvements. And actually, there is much more federally funded work going on this year than usual becuase of the influx of one-time federal "stimulus" dollars through the American Recovery and Reinvestmetn Act (ARRA). If it were not for ARRA, there would be very little work going on this year. In the future, there will be much less work taking place, since all the ARRA money will be spent this year.
Road Commission for Oakland County
Kevin Thompson (Guest)
Road Commission (Guest)
Zamknięte The Glutton (Guest)