when i saw a video of a
windrow plow in action this week, my heart leapt (in a good way). when can we get ours?
not anytime soon, it turns out.
a windrow plow does its work in vaughan, ont.
city of vaughan
the idea of a city clearing windrows is hardly new. north york doubled the size of its grader fleet in 1985 and attached to the underbodies of half of them a scraper, or “snow gate,” that could be lowered and raised at driveway entrances. those graders simply followed the street plows, approximately an hour later, pushing snow from driveways and leaving it at the side of each.
scarborough followed suit two years later. without extra available graders, it instead used small tractors and
front-end loaders to push the snow to the sides of driveways.
ottawa, meanwhile, studied the idea in 2003, but concluded it was too costly, with an estimated annual price tag, assuming it used part-time staff and leased front-loaders (800 loaders would be needed, apparently), of just over $21 million, the equivalent today of about $33 million.
i don’t know how many driveway heart attacks it would take before taxpayers would willingly swallow a $33-million+ increase to the current $92-million snow removal budget.
too much geography, too high a cost
other factors entered into the decision not to add windrow-clearing to ottawa’s plate, including the vast physical size of the city, and the greater frequency, amount and density of snow we get compared to the gta. the pre-amalgamation city of ottawa tried a pilot project 35 years ago, using a snow gate plow on one plow route for a full season, but it was deemed a failure. five years later, the city considered adopting a user-pay system, but opted not to run a trial when it determined the cost would be $115 per driveway, the equivalent today of $215.