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Untitled : WINNING THE FIGHT _ A four-wheel drive truck wit"!!, ' ~lid toward the center of the road because of the figlit the ,\ front and wing plows of the Town of Wappinger Wednes- piled snow w,as giving. Riding behind this plow but not J" dJY afternon succeeded in widening Osbofne Hill Rd. sO shown in the picture was another truck with a kont plow 'tllat two vehicles could pass. Since the storm, drifting snow operated by Bdb Crosbier with Jim Knight operllting the bJocked off this county highway, allowing only space for plows. Bott. vehicles were able to widen the road but crews QIle vehicle. Ken Croshier, the driver, and Gary 'Hinn- were expected tn be back today i~ another attempt to get 'dchs, plow operator, encountered difficulty in trying to the piled snoW back furtber. As these plows were at work push bacl, the snow, drifted from seven to 10 feet. As the on one-imd of the hill the Town of Fishkill tru~k was giv- plow. crawled up the Nil on the Wappinger side, its rear ing an assist at the Fishkill side. (Photo by McCloskey) Rural Areas Win Fight\Seeks Falls ,A gainst Drifti~ " ~.' Dutchess County and area town highway departments on Wednes- day, afternoon fillally won their battle against the record-sh~tter- ing 18 inch weekend blizzard, Dutchess COUllty Highway Sup\lr- mtcnc1ellt .cu~~,_ Q'}lrien 'said oWlnglme a:btlllit' snow wasn't a bad task but giving the plowing crews hardship was the gale-like n'orth-northwest winds that blew in after the storm abated late Sun- day afternoon, Mr, O'Brien said that the wind made poor visibility for the plow crews, He said, "they couldn't see very fa~ ahead and sometimes they had to stop when snow com- pletely blocked their view," "Generally," Mr. O'Brien said, "all county roads are in pretty good shape." He said the problem harassing county highway crews was in the Town of North East where sever'al roads were com- pletely blocked because of the se- vere drifting. Use Snow Blower (" He said it was necessary to put the county's snow blower to work in that section on Tuesday after- noon. "It did a pretty good job," the highway engineer said. He estimated that the after-the-storm ~'inds in that vicinity moved along at between' 40 and 50 miles an hour creating serious drifting. ApproximatelY 94 plows operated in the county outside of the cities of Beacon 'and Poughkeepsie and the Towns of Poughkeepsie and LaGrange, Mr. O'Brien reported. He said the county used 22 of its own plows and about 18 towns use about four plows each. The state' pays the county for plowing the main highways and the county also arranges with most of the towns to plow county and,. in some laces, state highwa . <" sa e was UI e a lot of snow." Mr. O'Brien said lit was very dry and light ~hicl1, made p low i n g comparatlvely, easy. He said the northeast-e~st sections of the county had freez\l1g rain and sleet before the beginning of the severe weekend snowfall. . Most roads, Mr. O'Brien. ex- plained, were dry before the stor~ hit the area and because of thl~ plows could scrape it right dO~1l to the pavement. Most of the malll roads were almost complet~l~; clear of snow on Tuesday UlOrll1~~, but in many places they were. no plowed the normal width, . Mr, O'Brien said crews of h1 department were able to keep ztl highways open even during tn height of the blizzard, which h said was the 'worst since 1947. H said even before the new',weekeq' snoW there were drifts up to niy! feet in the Town of North Ea~ The snow blower was operated i. that area last week, he said. , By today Mr. O'Brien said 1;1, roads would be in good shape b crews would be busy for the ne, few days trying to widen some \ . them. A Virgil Knight, Superintendent' . Highways in the Town of Wapp1' gel', said at noon yesterda.y t11 l'all our roads are open, \11 !1l they were open as of Tuesda}\' He said the very bad drifting S~ _ day night, Monday and Tues \ gave considerable amount of elit _ work to his forces . ' s Notes Trouble spots . Although all roads are ope~,: ~ , Knight said, "they are not as WIl as they should be but, eventual! we will have that problem licked.' He said the steep ,Wheeler Hil1 Rd. and roads in Academy Acres were the real trouble suots in the town sy~tem of 4i~lj " fIetl~~i'l j Pfl' ellipse of the n ss ~ sOllle tD'n'ro~ds "we ; a 'probtem w,re:P' He said t nks of ~now on either side of n roads are up so higb that pu g them back c:eates a problem:, s "there is no place to push thelsnow." His forces were)llut. almost con- tinuously since thjy:.first went to work late Saturday night. The county roads plowed. out by the Town of Wappingj!r 'ididn't give us too much trouble as.there is some room to push the snow bacll," he explained. Of the county roads ,plowed by his equipment Osborne Hill was the most troublesome, Mr. l{night said. He was forced to send his largest piece of equipment, a four- wheel d~'ive truck with wing plow attached, to Osborne Hill on Wednesday afternoon to lick the badly drifted sections. Up until Wednesday some parts of Osborne Hill were only wide enough for one-way travel. Drifts on the Wap- pinger side of this road are .easilY seven to 10 feet high. Through arrangement with the County Highway Department, the \Town of Wappinger plows the en- I tire length of Osborne Hill al- though a considerable part of it lies in the Town of Wappinger. A~ (Continued on Page 2)