Saturday, April 04, 2026

Government At Work (No Irony Here)

Break up has arrived in Anchorage.  It waited until almost April this year, but finally, the messy harbinger of warmer weather, of white replaced by green, is with us. 

Below is a picture of the small lake at the end of my street.  (The Municipality had already sent in plows to scrape the ice off the roads in our subdivision.  They even (for the first time) posted No Parking signs every hundred feet or so in the ice berms the day before.  

So the streets were in good shape on April 1.  It was just at the last 100 feet  to the main road where things were bad.  I had to walk through this obstacle course on my way to and from my volunteer gig at my local elementary school. 

 



Looking from the other side of the lake and ice field.



On Tuesday, March 31, when I got back home,  I called the Street Maintenance Department and explained the problem.

On Thursday, April 2, when I was walking to school, there was a big truck with hoses at the corner, and on my way home, the water was mostly gone, but not the ice.




But by later in the day, the ice was gone too and the sewer drain had been cleared so newly melting snow had a place to go.  If you look closely at the photo below you can see the drain on the left just below the middle - the black rectangle.  


This is a kind of responsiveness we haven't seen in Anchorage for a while.  

People tend to notice government when it doesn't work.  When it's working fine, we take it for granted and don't notice the mostly invisible work being done to keep things running smoothly.  

So I just want to thank Mayor Suzanne LaFrance's administration for being responsive and clearing the streets.  

I'd also note that during the winter, the sidewalk snow plows along Lake Otis - at least between Tudor and Northern Lights - were out early after every snow storm and making a walkable space for pedestrians.  

2 comments:

  1. I agree with your assessment of how well the Municipality of Anchorage has kept on top of the ice and snow throughout the city this past winter.

    My family and I live in West Anchorage (Sand Lake), and our neighborhood has been kept clear of ice and snow all winter despite the massive amounts of snow we've had.

    I agree that city services seem invisible when all's working well and only when neighborhoods remain uncleared literally for weeks (such as under former Mayor Dave Bronson) do people notice the job's not getting done.

    The current mayor pledged that street clearing would improve under her leadership, and she sure seems to have kept her promise.

    ReplyDelete
  2. Thanks for adding your Sand Lake experience of this winter's snow and ice removal.

    ReplyDelete

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