Vermont Public Radio

Vermont's NPR

  • RSS Feeds
  • Podcasts
  • Help Center
  • Contact

Support VPR Help pay for the programming you enjoy
Pledge Online

Eye On The Sky Weather



Current Conditions in Burlington International Airport

59° Skies Fair
Windchill 57 °
Wind Northwest at 12 Gusting to 20 MPH

HD Radio Discount for VPR listeners

Learn more about this special offer

My Vermont

Audio and transcript of the My Vermont essays plus Vermont Edition coverage.

Learn more about My Vermont

VPR and NPR on your Phone

Get the latest updates from VPR and NPR news on your phone or Mobile device.

Learn about VPR Mobile

Vermont Edition

Vermont Edition brings you news and conversation about issues affecting your life - plus a bit of the unexpected.

Listen to Vermont Edition

Plant-A-Tree and the Global ReLeaf Campaign

Learn more about our partnership to plant-a-tree with American Forests.

Learn more

Join VPR at Fenway Park!

Unite your love for VPR and the Red Sox with a VPR trip to Fenway Park to see the Boston Red Sox play the Baltimore Orioles on Saturday, July 12th.

Learn more and get your tickets here

VPR wins 5 regional Murrow Awards

Vermont Public Radio has been recognized with five top awards for excellence in broadcast journalism in the 2008 Regional Edward R. Murrow Awards contest, including an award for its comprehensive coverage of climate change.

Read the winning pieces here

Vermont Women

Listen to the special series March 24-28th as VPR profiles Vermont women who have shaped our culture.

Vermont Women in History

Celtic Music Tour of Ireland

Join VPR and All the Traditions host Robert Resnik for a musical tour of Ireland, September 4-15, 2008.

Join VPR in Ireland in September!

Getting By: tell us your story about working in a minimum or low wage job

VPR recently explored living at or near the minimum wage in the series "Getting By" You can continue the discussion in our "VPR Asks" public action page.

Learn more about Getting By and continue the discussion

Future of Health Care

Archived audio of Vermont Public Radio's week-long series examining the symptoms of the health care crisis and some of the possible cures.

Listen

Commentary Series

Explore the archive of Commentaries by many of your favorite Vermonters.

VPR Commentary Series

Receive Our Newsletter

Douglas proposes emergency road repair program

Thursday March 27, 2008
John Dillon

Montpelier, Vt.

(Host) Governor Jim Douglas has come up with an emergency repair program in response to the chorus of criticism about the state's bad roads.

But administration officials and legislative leaders say the program is not designed as a long-term fix for the state's aging transportation system.

VPR's John Dillon reports:

(Dillon) Governor Douglas calls the plan "Operation Smooth Ride."

And it's clear the program is designed not only to fill gaping pot holes, but also to smooth over criticism that state government has failed to address the crumbling condition of its roadways.

Douglas says the Transportation Agency will find money in this year's budget to patch some of the worst roads.

(Douglas) ``I've asked the agency to quickly develop a $3 million program within its current fiscal year ‘08 appropriation to improve the condition of not only the state but also Class 1 town highways that have incurred some of the worst damage caused by this year's extreme winter weather.''

(Dillon) Transportation Secretary Neale Lunderville said his agency would target roads where a thin layer of blacktop will help them last for a few more years. He said the agency will repair between 80 and 100 miles of road, in addition to regular maintenance projects.

(Lunderville) ``The types of repairs that we're looking at- it's not just filling potholes. It's also doing what we call shimming, which is looking at areas that are rutted and making the road smooth across those, as well as some thin overlay treatments across the whole road width in areas where the road bed has really deteriorated.''

(Dillon) The $3 million will have to come out of existing projects or programs. The administration wants the Legislature to authorize the emergency repair.

Legislative leaders endorse the plan, but they say it doesn't meet the long-term needs. Richard Westman is a Cambridge Republican who chairs the House Transportation Committee.

(Westman) ``What I think you have to look at this in the context of is that there's a real problem immediately out there. And this is an attempt to do a short-term fix to deal with that. But given the level of spending that we're at over the long term, if we don't pick up our spending on paving, we're going to have more and more of these situations coming along.''

(Dillon) Senate President Peter Shumlin also endorsed the plan. But he says the roads need more than a quick fix.

(Shumlin) ``I think that the governor is minimizing the challenge that Vermont is facing with roads and bridges. We have a significant problem and we're losing the battle at between $50 and $70 million a year. And the longer we put it off, the sooner our kids are going to have to pay for our mistakes, our neglect and our debt.''

(Dillon) Transportation Secretary Lunderville says Operation Smooth Ride is not supposed to tackle the major infrastructure repairs.

(Lunderville) ``This does not get to that. This gets to the immediate problems we're having on the roads in Vermont today. This is medium-term fix that we're looking to make sure the ride is safe and smooth for Vermonters.''

(Dillon) Some lawmakers have urged the state to borrow more money for road projects. But the administration doesn't want the state to take on much more debt.

For VPR News, I'm John Dillon in Montpelier.

 

© Copyright 2008, VPR

This is the online edition of VPR News. Text versions of VPR news stories may be updated and they may vary slightly from the broadcast version.

« More VPR Stories

  • web tools supported by:
  • Contributing Listeners
Home More Streams VPR Classical VPR