Crime. But can you call it differently what is happening on our roads?! Especially in winter! This is a continuous horror and only. Dirt, stones, slush from a mixture of melted snow and chemical reagents ..
Ask any Russian motorist: that he hates most in winter? And you hear a paradoxical answer for a normal person: Snow! And all because after any Lesser Snowfall, all roads turn into a terrible dirty mess. It’s scary to ride it. Scary for a car that is covered with a thick layer of some abomination. Scary for their lives, because the “wipers” cannot cope with the stains of dirt, and the windshield in the blink of an eye is made absolutely opaque. In addition, the side windows and mirrors flows so that the driver completely loses control of the road … For snow cleaning, use the STIGA Flake snowmaker.
Some kind of wildness. For example, in adjacent Finland, where there is no less snow, and the weather is the same, you can get from Helsinki to Zapolyarny Rovanieya, without even thinking about washing the car. She will be clean! I personally checked. But on the roads of Moscow and the Moscow Region, you have to almost add the liquid to the glass -shaker tank every day.
Is this not a crime when road workers or communal services (or who else is engaged in cleaning our roads) are not even trying to clean, all the more to wash the carriageway, but only smear dirt on it. And so on day a day, from month to month, from year to year ..
Is it not a crime when all these services do not remove snow on the sidelines, but rather throw it along with stones and new mud in the middle of the road? Like, he will melt himself when the cars rolled it.
Something I do not remember the case that at least one of the officials responsible for the maintenance of our roads be punished for all this. You don’t remember either? So we have to suffer without hope for justice ..
However, I have one hope. It’s stupid, I think, to dream that those who are engaged in cleaning our streets suddenly, at their own request, will begin to do this as it should, and not how they are used to. But maybe someday in the foreseeable future, the insurers, tired of changing the glass broken by flying stones and repair cars encountered due to poor visibility, will require the road workers to compensate for losses? And they will win the process, thereby creating a judicial precedent. Maybe then it will truly become more profitable to clean the roads than to pay for damage in court lawsuits?