Highway department uses toilet paper to help repair roads

ONEIDA COUNTY - During the summer, roadways in parts of Oneida County look a little odd. Many people are wonder why it looks like there's toilet paper on the roads. That's because it is in fact toilet paper people are finding on the roadways, one-ply to be exact.

The highway department is working on their crack-sealing operation. It's a process where they go and fill existing cracks in the roadways with a hot tar. Part of this process includes drilling into the pavement before the tar is laid.

"First thing we do is go through all the major cracks and router them out," said Oneida County Highway Commissioner Freeman Bennett. "Then we dry them and apply a tar at approximately 350 - 380 degrees. Between state and county roads this year, Oneida County will be crack sealing approximately 60 miles of road."

Full story: WJFW

Add new comment

Warning
Please refrain from adding URLs to unrelated or commercial websites. This site is moderated and comments with inappropriate links are rejected. Thank you for your understanding.

No profane language is allowed! Posts that contain profanity will not be published.

Plain text

  • No HTML tags allowed.
  • Web page addresses and e-mail addresses turn into links automatically.
  • Lines and paragraphs break automatically.
Image CAPTCHA
Enter the characters shown in the image.