By the end of Tuesday, 10 days of inclement weather is expected to cost Knox County roughly $405,000, and the city well-over $300,000.
The majority of the money is tied to the salt placed in the
brine to make the roads more navigable during the snow and ice storms. The rest
is mostly for overtime to pay the city and county road crews.
County spokesman Michael Grider said salt costs $115 per ton, and so far the county has put down 3,000 tons. The county also has spent another $60,000 in overtime.
At this point, there are no additional county costs, Grider
said, but officials will have to repair some equipment, including snow plows
and the spreaders used for the brine.
“We started with 4,000 tons of salt, so by the end of the
day we will have used 75 percent of it,” Grider said.
Knoxville at this point is on the hook for about $305,500 in
weather-related costs as of Sunday night, said city spokesman Eric Vreeland,
adding that during the past 10 days through Sunday crews put down 1,800 tons of
brine.
About $250,000 of the city’s costs so far are for salt;
another $54,000 for public service employee overtime; and $5,500 for the
overtime, labor and some equipment costs in the city’s fleet services
department.
City crews Monday night and early Tuesday morning placed
another 500 tons of brine on the roads, but those costs have not been factored
into the bottom line.
City leaders should have the final numbers in the coming days.
City and county officials both said the storms so far have
not affected their overall spending plans for the current fiscal year, since the
budgets do factor in some storm costs. Both governments said they’re nowhere
close to tapping reserve funds.
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