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Friday, July 30, 2004
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PTC working on long-range plan for cart path replacementFoot by foot, Peachtree City public works crews are replacing worn and damaged golf cart path in Peachtree City. Tom Corbett, the citys new director of public works, estimates that over a mile of paths have been repaved since April; in the previous six months, about two miles of cart paths were repaved. Surveys have shown that the citys cart paths, weaving through wooded areas to connect the entire city, are used by about 98 percent of the population, according to city public information officer Betsy Tyler. Poor cart path conditions, in turn, are responsible for a large amount of the complaints received by City Hall, said Mayor Steve Brown. The repaving of cart paths can be difficult because the work is done in much tighter spaces than normal road paving, Corbett noted. You have to cut back the vines and run off the native wildlife to work safely, Corbett said with a laugh. Corbett said he was new to this cart path business but he is impressed how much the city crews have been able to get done. The city is also evaluating a long-term plan for how often sections of the golf path should be replaced. Were going to look at what makes the most sense and also what we can afford in the long run, Corbett said. Tree roots are one of the most significant dangers for the paved golf cart paths, as they can punch right through the asphalt, Corbett noted. When tree roots grow, whatever is in the way will get pushed out of the way, Corbett said. In some areas where the path is replaced, crews will remove the tree roots, unless doing so might kill the tree itself, Corbett noted.
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2004-Fayette Publishing, Inc.
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