Randomness (
randomness) wrote2010-01-07 10:21 pm
"500 plows in the whole of the UK"
So, I just heard on PRI's "The World" radio news show that the United Kingdom has 500 snowplows for the entire country.
They gave no context for this number. The story certainly gives the impression that this is very few, but how many is a reasonable number? I don't know how many snowplows Massachusetts has, for example.
Leaving aside whether this is true, whether this number only counts plows under the control of the Ministry of Transport, or what... I still don't know how that number compares with places which get more snow.
I'm not blaming the show, as this was more or less an atmosphere piece about how England has come to a sliding, slippery halt because of the weather; but I am really wondering what a baseline number of plows is for a place that gets snow regularly.
They gave no context for this number. The story certainly gives the impression that this is very few, but how many is a reasonable number? I don't know how many snowplows Massachusetts has, for example.
Leaving aside whether this is true, whether this number only counts plows under the control of the Ministry of Transport, or what... I still don't know how that number compares with places which get more snow.
I'm not blaming the show, as this was more or less an atmosphere piece about how England has come to a sliding, slippery halt because of the weather; but I am really wondering what a baseline number of plows is for a place that gets snow regularly.

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But I'm only using a single data point and weak conjecture. I'd love to learn more about the issue, but would rather go to bed at this point.
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Depending on the severity and duration of the storm the operation could include as few as 2 vehicles to over 60 pieces of equipment. In a full-scale operation over 2/3 of the equipment on the streets will be private contractors working for the Town.
That's probably part of why data is so hard to find.
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Maybe they meant England, and not the entire UK?
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I was about to chime in with this precise point, but I thought that was actually the City of Seattle, not King County. Pretty positive that's true, too—King County actually goes right up to the Snoqualmie Pass summit (to the great chagrin of some folks East of Issaquah who'd like to subdivide), so at the very least, somebody out that direction owns a bunch of snow equipment.
In any case, I think that's still close to true, but they went out and bought removable plow blades for a lot of the parks department trucks in the late 1990s, so they're not quite as hosed as they once were. In theory, anyway...
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"They told me to plow I-90 until I got to the end, starting in West Stockbridge, so I did. Man, that's a lot longer drive than I expected.
Looks like there's a lot of plowing to be done here. Where do you want me to start?"
It'd also be funny to take a few plow batteries to the UK and Ireland, except they drive on the other side of the road. That, and we're getting more snow today, so we need them ourselves.
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So, I forgot where the guy was from, either US or Canada, but I think from around the Great Lakes. Either way, he worked for the same company my brother used to work in Brazil, and they have factories in lots of different countries. In any case, a few years ago, both of them were in France and overheard some story of people getting killed by avalanches during winter. So the guy says "that's weird, where I'm from, they have patrols and equipment and they use dynamite to prevent avalanches that are serious enough to kill people, why don't they do it here, the tech is really simple?" and the French guy says essentially, "C'est la vie, they know it's risky, they go anyway, why should we have to pay to save their asses?" -- which makes me wonder if people in Europe in general are just so used to snow hosing everything that they don't care the country stops for a while.
And I'll join the other voices, I don't think even places in US have enough snow equipment to deal with storms except that they hire private people to work for them during emergencies. Because no matter how small the area they are talking about is (even if it's just England, for example, instead of UK), 500 plows seems a tad too little. Definitely they won't be done in a day or two.
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From http://www.dnd.ca/site/commun/ml-fe/article-eng.asp?id=3569:I remember seeing the signs for this when we drove down the Trans-Canada.
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I doubt they are counting personal snowplows that individuals would have on their private vehicles. In my town here in MA. every other person has a pickup with a snowplow.
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Minneapolis, Mn: 45 inches average annual snowfall, 100 pieces of snow control equipment, about 1500 miles of roads, $7 million annual budget.
My totally unscientific reading of wikipedia leads me to believe that the January weather in the UK is more similar to that in Atlanta and as far as I can tell, Atlanta occasionally deploys two sand trucks but doesn't admit to owning much of anything else.
Arlington, Va doesn't bother plowing if snowfall is less than four inches and the sun is going to shine. Since the vast majority of the populated UK areas has more days with snow falling than days with snow lying, I'm starting to think 500 plows might be totally reasonable.
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They didn't want to use salt on the roads, because "it might go into Puget Sound." Finally, somebody pointed out that Puget Sound is SALTWATER.
This year they were prepared, with salt/brine/etc. Of course, we haven't had any snow (yet).
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If you have a truck and a drive-way or garage, you can invest in a plow and get on the State call-list. It's kind of a brilliant system, even if the down-side is that it relies on our abhorrent love of gas-gusslers.
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Stevens County would never have plowed out Bentley Road. It was then, and may still be, simply an oiled gravel road, and it didn't rate plowing by the county.
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this is 100% true
Re: this is 100% true
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I only vaguely remember numbers, but Somerville has somewhere between 30 and 60 pieces of snow removal equipment, and have a snow removal budget of about $340K. It is the one budget item that is allowed to go over as needed. Cambridge had somewhere between 50 and 85 pieces of snow removal equipment, and has a snow removal budget of about $500K. I forget the area figures and road mileage figures completely. I didn't finish the article, but it was pretty interesting. (It was nominally about the Somerville manager of snow removal.)
I bet you could figure out what magazine I'm speaking of and find it.
this annoyed me as well