Crews in Dakota County are reporting more and bigger holes in streets than last year.
By Liala Helal liala.helal@startribune.com
Heavy steam rose as asphalt mix — heated to 260 degrees — ran down a chute behind a Burnsville dump truck. City maintenance workers shoveled the mix into a pothole on Aston Circle, fighting the heat on an afternoon when temperatures were only in the 30s.
"Too hot!" worker Andrew Wheeler said as the steam turned a thicker white. "This stuff is hot enough to take the skin off your bones." He wiped the sweat from his forehead and kept going.
Pavement-crumbling pothole season is upon Minnesota again, and city crews in Dakota County are trying to stay ahead of the game in a year when the problem is worse than last year — potholes are popping up quickly, and there are more of them. This spring's longer freeze-and-thaw cycle is the culprit — with warm days but freezing nights, water and melting snow expand in pavement cracks and break it up. The situation may get worse in the next few weeks.
"We're just getting into it, and as the frost comes out it's going to get a lot worse," said Lakeville Street Superintendent Troy Grossman. "It's too early to tell how bad it's going to be."
More and more cities, including Burnsville, Lakeville, Eagan and Apple Valley, are offering online pothole reporting services, then dispatching their crews to trouble spots. Burnsville has already gotten more than half as many requests as it did in all of 2012.
But it's not just the weather — it's also the aging roads.