|
News
Fremont
residents question repairs
by Chris De Benedetti, STAFF WRITER
Fremont Argus, August 19, 2006
FREMONT — Officials say the city of
Fremont cannot afford to maintain its streets adequately
while it grapples with budget woes.
If that is true, a growing number of
citizens want to know why street maintenance work has
been performed recently on a number of the city's
intersections.
Mike Haley points to the repairs
performed Thursday on tiny Tropic Way, a little-used
dead-end street — with no house fronts or driveways on
it — in the 28 Palms neighborhood.
"With all the potholes that (officials)
say they can't pave, and they go and (repair) a whole
strip of nothing?" said Haley, a Fremont resident since
1969. "It's a street to nowhere."
Haley said the street's repairs symbolize
why he opposes Measure L.
"I'll vote against it, (because of) the
way they're spending money," said Haley, a NUMMI
employee who also owns his own vacuum business. "It
boggles the mind."
But Fremont City Engineer Norm Hughes
said that Tropic Way is one of many Fremont streets
receiving a cost-conscious type of repair called cape
and slurry seal work. It is all part of a $1,139,000
project the City Council approved in April that is
intended to extend the life of the pavement at a much
cheaper cost than doing extensive asphalt overlay work.
Hughes said that, this year, about 110
streets are receiving a cape seal — the application of a
chip seal followed by a slurry seal within a few days.
Meanwhile, 23 roads will be given a slurry seal — a
low-cost paving surface that is a mixture of asphalt,
oil, water, rock and other additives.
Fremont maintenance crews also are
performing both cape and slurry seal treatments to a
small number of other streets, Hughes said.
"If we don't, we'll have entire streets
failing and we'll need total reconstruction," he added.
Based on current data, Hughes said, doing
asphalt overlay work is much more expensive — about $55
per square yard. By comparison, slurry seal is $1.75 per
square yard, and cape seal is $2.85.
But is the seal work really necessary for
something such as little-used Tropic Way?
"Even streets with low traffic need this
treatment to keep them from failing," Hughes replied.
"(By doing this), we won't need to overlay all of our
residential streets at once."
Staff writer Chris De Benedetti covers
Fremont issues. He can be reached at (510) 353-7002 or
cdebenedetti@angnewspapers.com.
|