THE INDEPENDENT

The Latest

Snow Removal on Campus

Story by Bob Brockley

Author: Bodine, James/Friday, February 22, 2013/Categories: Uncategorized

Rate this article:
No rating

Durango experiences many stormy mornings, leaving the sidewalks covered in snow, and many students do not notice that by the time they arrive on campus, there are virtually dry sidewalks and snow removal has been taken care of before classes begin.

“If they never notice us, but arrive in the parking lot and walk to class without getting the tops of their shoes wet, then great” said Eric Lipp, a grounds supervisor at Fort Lewis College.  “That means we are doing our job.”

Swift snow removal is possible because a well-structured snow removal plan organizes responsibilities between three distinct teams from the Physical Plant and custodial staff, Lipp said.  

When a storm’s first snowflakes begin to fall, the FLC Police Department initiates the plan by notifying the Physical Plant.

The first crew to go out is the plow drivers who work for Labor, Trades, and Crafts. L.T.C. Physical Plant is responsible for all heavy machinery work on campus.

Once an accumulation of three inches is reached, the grounds crew is put on “call-out”, meaning that Lipp’s crew begins work at 5 a.m.

They use plow trucks, snow blowers, and shovels in a race to clean routes to classrooms by 8 a.m., Lipp said.

The first priority is to clear routes to facilities used by disabled students in morning classes. These are routes which LIpp’s team has mapped out according to these student’s schedules, he said.

There have not been any snow-related access problems for disabled students thus far, said a nurse at the FLC Health Center.

Rooftop snow loads, which can form dangerous, structurally damaging icicles, are the responsibility of the Structural Trades Department, Lipp said.

Finally, the Custodial Department is responsible for the entryways to the buildings.

The snow management plan is effective, and the crew as a whole upholds a very high standard, Lipp said.

“Look around town and you’ll see, that by 8 a.m., we have the cleanest sidewalks in town,” he said.

This year, the Grounds Crew is using a new Kubota Recreation Utility Vehicle to plow. It is equipped with a spreader used to distribute deicing pellets that are an alternative to salt.

Magnesium Chloride pellets are used on campus because they are more environmentally responsible and also very effective, he said.

Unlike salt, they do not kill grass or damage the concrete during freeze/thaw cycles, he said.

 
Print

Number of views (544)/Comments (0)

Please login or register to post comments.

All News

A New School is Coming to Fort Lewis College

Julian Zastrocky

Mountain Middle School capitalizes on the "empty" space behind Animas High School.

Fort Lewis College approved Mountain Middle School's request to build a new building next to the recently built Animas High School location. It approved a 420 million dollar budget to help with the building process.  Tom Stritikus, president of Fort Lewis College, is slated to release an email tomorrow announcing the decision formally to the student population. “We are so...

Bones from the Bisti Badlands

Anja Tabor

What it takes to get a dinosaur to Fort Lewis College

A dinosaur skeleton cast and cousin of the Tyrannosaurus rex moves onto campus from the Bisti Wilderness Area in New Mexico, also known as the Bisti Badlands. The fossil is being loaned to the college for undergraduate research this semester, professor of geosciences, Gary Gianniny said. But how is the cast coming to Fort Lewis College? The most recent discovery of the dinosaur was found...

Screaming Rubber Band Chickens

AJ Repinski

Contestants test their pain limit for Snowdown glory.

  Contestants and spectators pack into 11th Street Station’s “Screaming Rubber Band Chickens” Snowdown event at 4:30 p.m. on Feb. 2.    11th Street Owner Marcos Wisner prepares a tournament-style bracket for the event. Randomly drawn for the bracket after entering, contestants prepared themselves for several rounds of rubber band slaps all...

ASFLC Meeting 1/24

AJ Repinski

During the first ASFLC meeting of the spring semester, several important agenda items were viewed. 

During the first meeting of the 2024 spring semester, the Associated Students of Fort Lewis College viewed several key agenda items. During the meeting, two resolutions successfully passed.  First, the proposed Financial Allocation Board Bylaw Amendments were approved. The new bylaws state RSO II’s wishing to become RSO III’s no longer need to apply solely in the fall...

Measuring CO2 with Machine Learning

AJ Repinski

How artificial intelligence could replace expensive measuring instruments.

Artificial intelligence seems almost inescapable in today's increasingly technology driven world. Deep learning models, such as OpenAI’s Chat GPT, have been at the forefront of public amazement and controversy since their mainstream introduction in late 2022. Today, Fort Lewis College students are discovering new ways that artificial intelligence can be used to reduce the costs...

First2345791011Last