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Montreal

City workers' soggy pothole fix irks NDG resident

A Montreal man who captured city workers on video dumping asphalt into potholes in the pouring rain says hes outraged by what he says is the citys lacklustre effort to address the issue of crumbling roadways.

Borough says repairs intended to be temporary

RAW: City workers plug potholes in the rain

10 years ago
Duration 0:56
Workers in NDG fill soggy potholes with asphalt.

A Montreal man who captured city workers on video dumping asphalt into potholes in the pouring rain says hes outraged by what he says is the citys lacklustre effort to address the issue of crumbling roadways.

The video, shot yesterday near the intersection of West Hill Avenue and De Maisonneuve Boulevard by Ranjit Vijay, shows workers shovelling the material into sizable potholes, which are brimming with water.

If they do it in the pouring rain, theyre not going to do a proper job and a long-lasting job," he said.

"Theyre going to come back again, waste taxpayers money, and thats why our roads are like that...This is a waste of money. If they would have waited two or three hours until the sun was shining, fine.

A day after the repairs were made, the potholes were gone, but the patches provided a pretty rough ride for motorists.

Michel Therrien, a spokesman for the Cte-des-NeigesNotre-Dame-de-Grceborough, said the repairs were intended to be temporary.

"Until the weather gets better, we are doing emergency repairs to improve [safety] on the street," he said.

The city willfixthem properly when weather permits, he said.

However, some experts say applying even a temporary patch in the rain is futile.

"All surfaces where new asphalt is spread should be dry and clean,"said civil engineer andMcGillUniversity professor emeritusSaeedMirza.

"You see you got the water there and the bond between the two surfaces would notbe proper and the result would be that, within a day or two or within a few weeks as thetraffic moves over it, the repair would be completely lost."

He said Montrealand many cities across North America are taking the wrong approach to pothole repair and, in turn, wasting time and money. Dumping asphalt into the hole and leaving rough ends only means the patch is worn off quickly, he said.

"This is wasting millions and millions of dollars on what I'd call ineffective repair,"said Mirza.

Doing a proper repair jobwould require waiting for a dry day andcutting a larger, square hole in the roadway to ensure rough edges aren't worn off, but it would save the city and residents money and frustration, he said.