CONTACT US   SUBSCRIBE   PREMIUM   ADVERTISING

75F Hi 81F
Lo 70F

Recent Blog Posts

Mayor Returns to the City's Streets, Literally

By Staff Reporter of the Sun
December 18, 2007

Fresh from a trip to China and Indonesia, Mayor Bloomberg is turning his attention away from issues of international importance and toward one that is decidedly local: potholes.

Share Share Email

At his first public event since returning to New York from his week-long travels abroad, Mr. Bloomberg kicked off the start of pothole season by urging New Yorkers to call the city's help hotline, 311, to report any craters in the road.

The city fills the equivalent of 22 potholes every hour, 24 hours a day, 365 days a year. In the past five months, more than 70,000 potholes have been filled. Mr. Bloomberg said that since 2002, the city has filled 1.25 million potholes.

Although potholes may not be the most glamorous item on Mr. Bloomberg's to-do list, he tried to draw a connection yesterday between filling holes in the ground and the essence of government. He said the city's efforts to keep streets in good repair is making a vital difference when it comes to traffic fatalities, which are down more than 20% since 2001.

"That's one of the factors that goes into this amazing statistic that life expectancy in New York is now greater than in the country as a whole," he said. "In the end, that really is the essence of government. What we are supposed to be doing is letting people live longer and enjoy the wonderful things about America."

Potholes appear in the road most often in winter, when rainwater and runoff from melting snow seeps beneath roadways and subsequently expands when it freezes. Mr. Bloomberg said 99% of all potholes reported to the city are repaired within 30 days, a jump from the 65% of reported potholes filled within 30 days in 2002.

"Now, potholes are as much a part of city life as hot dog carts and yellow cabs, although that hasn't stopped us from doing everything we can to fix them once they appear," he said.

Yesterday also marked the end of the city's repaving season. The city has paved 5,000 lane-miles of streets since 2002, the equivalent of a quarter of all city streets receiving a new coat of pavement since 2002.


Reader comments on this article

TitleByDate

A Paving Question Raised [58 words]

Larry Littlefield 

Dec 18, 2007 09:03

Dog Days of Summer
A New York Sun Advertorial Section

NEW YORK >

Rochester Billionaire Targets Silver With New PAC

Crane Inspector Pleads Not Guilty

New York Moves To Defend Gun Law

Hedge Fund Scammer Tells NY Judge He Tried Suicide

Murder, Rape Numbers Mar Positive Crime Statistics

Mosque Leaders Convictions Upheld by Appeals Court

NATIONAL >

'Paradise Is Burning': Fires Prompt California Evacuations

FARC Hostages Return to America

White House Says Ruling Could Free Detainees in America

McCain Extols Free Trade in Colombia

Race Profiling Considered In FBI Terrorist Probes

Bush Vows More Troops in Afghanistan

ARTS+ >

Painting for Eternity: Pietre Dure at the Met

America's Birth Papers at the NYPL

Phillip Pearlstein, Objectifying the Nude

'Tis the Season for Big Bands

'Red Cliff' Investors Cover Costs

Movies in Brief: 'Diminished Capacity'