Ohio gets cold year after year; this is record setting levels of cold in areas not used to cold.
I'd wager that if you combined the 10 lowest cities in texas you might have one slow plow between them. Why would they have a fleet of them?
(The answer is because they are smart and could rent them out to the other unprepared states but thats kind of a gamble and one most tax payers don't want to be made with their money; rent from a private owned business if needed.)
In NC where I work when we have snow, the groundskeeping team obviously can't do any other work. They get their large and small front end loader and attach plows to all their trucks and keep all the parking lots and walkways clear until it stops snowing.
We only get any snow maybe once or twice a year, and only enough to matter every other year, and they handle it with what I assume is minimal cost by repurposing existing equipment and people, and having a couple attachable plows stored somewhere.
Ohio gets cold year after year; this is record setting levels of cold in areas not used to cold.
I'd wager that if you combined the 10 lowest cities in texas you might have one slow plow between them. Why would they have a fleet of them?
(The answer is because they are smart and could rent them out to the other unprepared states but thats kind of a gamble and one most tax payers don't want to be made with their money; rent from a private owned business if needed.)
In NC where I work when we have snow, the groundskeeping team obviously can't do any other work. They get their large and small front end loader and attach plows to all their trucks and keep all the parking lots and walkways clear until it stops snowing.
We only get any snow maybe once or twice a year, and only enough to matter every other year, and they handle it with what I assume is minimal cost by repurposing existing equipment and people, and having a couple attachable plows stored somewhere.