|

By LAUREN ETTER
SPIRITWOOD, N.D.—A hulking yellow machine inched along Old
Highway 10 here recently in a summer scene that seemed as normal as
the nearby corn swaying in the breeze. But instead of laying a
blanket of steaming blacktop, the machine was grinding the asphalt
road into bits.
"When [counties] had lots of money, they paved a lot of the roads
and tried to make life easier for the people who lived out here,"
said Stutsman County Highway Superintendant Mike Zimmerman, sifting
the dusty black rubble through his fingers. "Now, it's catching up
to them."
Outside this speck of a town, pop. 78, a 10-mile stretch of road had
deteriorated to the point that residents reported seeing ducks
floating in potholes, Mr. Zimmerman said. As the road wore out, the
cost of repaving became too great. Last year, the county spent
$400,000 on an RM300 Caterpillar rotary mixer to grind the road up,
making it look more like the old homesteader trail it once was.
Paved roads, historical emblems of American achievement, are being
torn up across rural America and replaced with gravel or other rough
surfaces as counties struggle with tight budgets and dwindling state
and federal revenue. State money for local roads was cut in many
places amid budget shortfalls.
In Michigan, at least 38 of the 83 counties have converted some
asphalt roads to gravel in recent years. Last year, South Dakota
turned at least 100 miles of asphalt road surfaces to gravel.
Counties in Alabama and Pennsylvania have begun downgrading asphalt
roads to cheaper chip-and-seal road, also known as "poor man's
pavement." Some counties in Ohio are simply letting roads erode to
gravel.
The moves have angered some residents because of the choking dust
and windshield-cracking stones that gravel roads can kick up, not to
mention the jarring "washboard" effect of driving on rutted gravel.
But higher taxes for road maintenance are equally unpopular. In
June, Stutsman County residents rejected a measure that would have
generated more money for roads by increasing property and sales
taxes.
"I'd rather my kids drive on a gravel road than stick them with a
big tax bill," said Bob Baumann, as he sipped a bottle of Coors
Light at the Sportsman's Bar Café and Gas in Spiritwood.
Rebuilding an asphalt road today is particularly expensive because
the price of asphalt cement, a petroleum-based material mixed with
rocks to make asphalt, has more than doubled over the past 10 years.
Gravel becomes a cheaper option once an asphalt road has been
neglected for so long that major rehabilitation is necessary.
"A lot of these roads have just deteriorated to the point that they
have no other choice than to turn them back to gravel," says Larry
Galehouse, director of the National Center for Pavement Preservation
at Michigan State University. Still, "we're leaving an awful legacy
for future generations."
Some experts caution that gravel roads can be costlier in the long
run than consistently maintained asphalt because gravel needs to be
graded and smoothed. A gravel road "is not a free road," says Purdue
University's John Habermann, who organized a recent seminar about
the resurgence of gravel roads titled "Back to the Stone Age."
Paving grew in popularity in the early 20th century as more cars hit
streets and spread when the federal government built the Interstate
Highway System.
Over the years, many of the two-lane arteries that connect country
roads with metro areas have deteriorated under rising traffic and
the growing weight of farm combines, logging trucks and other heavy
equipment.
Frederick Wachtel, county engineer in Coshocton County, Ohio, says
his budget, largely driven by fuel taxes and vehicle registration
fees, was off 5% last year, the first decline in nearly 20 years. He
is now letting some of his roads return to nature.
In Spiritwood one day recently, a soft breeze carried the scents of
cow manure and hot asphalt over the tall broom grass. The giant
Caterpillar chugged along at a speed of 2.4 feet per minute and
pulverized Old Highway 10 into a black dust with chunks of rock and
pavement. A piece of equipment following behind rolled the surface
flat.
The machines rumbled along a path carved by homesteaders' covered
wagons in the 1800s. Over time, grain elevators and railroad depots
sprung up along the route, which became known as the Old Red Trail.
Later, the road was paved and renamed Highway 10.
After Interstate 94 was built alongside the road in the 1950s, it
became Old Highway 10. Traffic volumes gradually dropped until Old
10 became a lazy backcountry road dotted with abandoned farmsteads.
In the 1960s the state gave Old 10 to the counties it ran through,
leaving them to pay for upkeep. North Dakota's Stutsman County got a
30-mile stretch.
The gift became a burden. The Stutsman highway department, which
gets the bulk of its funds from local property taxes, state fuel
taxes and vehicle registration fees, let the road fall into
disrepair as it juggled other projects. Every year without major
maintenance, the road became more expensive to fix.
Judy Graves of Ypsilanti, N.D., voted against the measure to raise
taxes for roads. But she says she and others nonetheless wrote to
Gov. John Hoeven and asked him to stop Old 10 from being ground up
because it still carries traffic to a Cargill Inc. malting plant.
She says the county has mismanaged its finances and badly neglected
roads.
"Our expenses outweigh the income," says Mr. Zimmerman, who has been
with the county highway department for nearly 30 years. He says the
county will pay about $2,600 per mile annually for the newly
ground-up road, as against about $75,000 per mile to reconstruct it.
Gayne Gasal, who lives along the redone stretch of road, says it has
turned out "better than we all thought." But Sportsman's Bar owner
Hilda Kuntz worries that the classic cars and bikers that roll
through town in the summer will stay away.
"It's going to kill my business," she said.
Write to Lauren Etter at
lauren.etter@wsj.com
Printed in The Wall Street Journal, page A1 JULY 17, 2010
* * * * *
The 20th century brought a lot of
advancements to rural Americans. Paved roads, electricity and
telephone service were probably among the most important. Those
paved roads allowed farmers, ranchers and other kinds of rural
producers to get their products to market safely and dependably. A
big improvement over the unimproved roads which damaged vehicles,
interrupted trips, caused accidents and made the producer to market
journey an ordeal.
The tax coffers were greatly enriched by
the flow of goods to market. It would have been nice if someone had
thought to reinvest some of those taxes in maintaining the roads
that were essential to the stream of taxes. I somehow suspect that
after the taxes were given away to those in the inner city who chose
not to produce or contribute anything to society, there was nothing
left to repair the roads.
So now the farm to market roads will be
gravel in a lot of places, and the heavily laden trucks will tear
the roads up, and then the roads will tear up the trucks. The trip
will be slower, with smaller trucks. Food will be more expensive at
the market. The non-contributors won't care, because the government
will give them a cost of living raise. The rest of us will pay more
taxes to cover that raise and also pay the higher price for our
groceries.
Welcome to Utopia.
|