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And thanks to pet owners who got a little lazy in the bad weather, many city streets are now shellacked with dog feces. The combined assault of snowplows and rock salt has created another big problem in the Northeast: potholes. Crews on the pockmarked streets of New Jersey are applying temporary patches because the more permanent fillings require warmer weather. The winter has also left some bone-jarring holes in Connecticut, including some on a ramp off Interstate 84 in Hartford. In Philadelphia, yo-yoing temperatures that followed several sloppy storms of rain, freezing rain and snow over the past several weeks have also been unkind to streets. Crews are patching the holes with cold asphalt, a temporary fix until hot asphalt can be used in the spring. In New York, as residents dug out their cars in recent days, sanitation crews tried to remove the big piles not taken care of by nature. In some places, crews are hauling away the snow in dump trucks and taking it
to one of 36 giant hot tub-like snowmelters that sit over the sewers. Most of the tubs can melt 60 tons per hour, and in most winters, the job would be done by now, department spokesman Vito Turso said. "We have had snow upon snow upon snow," Turso said. "It's starting to feel like we're going to see snow on the streets until opening day at Yankee Stadium."
[Associated
Press;
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