YEG imagineer
Active Member
Once again we get a storm that we knew was coming for multiple days and yet I did not see evidence of one snow plow yesterday in my area of 111th Street to 23rd Avenue to Terwilligar Rec Centre at 8 PM. Snow had been going for about 9 hours at that point. Today I see two snow plows with blades lifted while driving through snow and dropping dirt on top of the snow. I call this the Edmonton Method where we do to the minimal of work in the maximum amount of time to get the worst possible result. My question is what do snow removal employees do when there is no snow? Unless most work Monday to Friday office hours. Shouldn't snow removal be a priority that if all workers are on hand to remove then they could get time off in lieu later on (extra vacation or some other inducement for the down time). I wonder if any data is available for the amount of accidents that occur due to delayed and ineffective snow clearing. And the city policy is not even to clear residential roads unless its 5 cm packed.
Coming originally from Eastern Canada, I have never seen the Edmonton Method anywhere else. Is there any data from COE that shows that the current Edmonton Method is scientifically competent compared to snow removal methods in other snowy winter countries and cities. Or is it just an Edmonton pulled out of my pants kind of idea?
Coming originally from Eastern Canada, I have never seen the Edmonton Method anywhere else. Is there any data from COE that shows that the current Edmonton Method is scientifically competent compared to snow removal methods in other snowy winter countries and cities. Or is it just an Edmonton pulled out of my pants kind of idea?