Sanitation Commissioner John J. Doherty announced today
that starting Monday, November 17th, the Department of Sanitation will begin its
Annual Night Plow Operation that enables the Department to respond promptly and
effectively to snow and ice conditions around the clock.
This season, the Department will have a sufficient number
of employees assigned to work the night shifts in each of the city's 59
Sanitation Districts so that a trained and experienced workforce is available to
operate essential snow fighting equipment on the night and early morning
shifts. These two shifts are 4:00 PM to Midnight and Midnight to 8:00
AM. During the winter, the day shift starts at 7:00 AM.
The Department has a front line defense of 365 salt
spreaders that are dispatched prior to the start of the impending snowfall to
salt arterial highways and bus routes. The department has a storage
capacity of 235,000 tons of rock salt, and 330,700 gallons of calcium chloride
deicing solution at 44 facilities throughout the city. Once snow begins to
accumulate on the City's streets and highways, approximately 2,000 plows can be
mounted on various DSNY trucks in order to clear snow from the City's more than
6,000 curb miles of streets.
Commissioner Doherty said: "I am pleased to announce that
the Department is ready for action in the event a major snowfall hits the Big
Apple. All Sanitation personnel are gearing up for another winter that may
bring heavy snowstorms, but the Department will be prepared whether only an inch
or mounds of snow hit New York City."
When the Department is not handling snow and ice
situations, night shift Sanitation Workers will collect household refuse and
recycling. As a result, some neighborhoods may experience minor
inconveniences. Night collection crews have been advised to work as
quietly as possible. The Department's snow season begins in mid-November
and runs through mid-April.
For further information on Sanitation services, call the
Citizens Service Center at 311 or visit the Department's website at www.nyc.gov/sanitation.