View
216
Download
0
Category
Preview:
DESCRIPTION
Ohio 15 2015
Citation preview
By Patrick PfannerTHE SANDUSKY REGISTER
Area bridges in need of repairs could contin-ue to decay if funding needs arent reached soon. U.S. Sen. Sherrod Brown (D-OH) released a
county-by-county report detailing the numberof bridges that need work in the state. In total,more than 6,500 bridges are deemed deficient orfunctionally obsolete.Brown called for a long-term transportation
bill for the state as critical funding for Ohioroads and bridges is set to expire this month,according to a news release.According to Brown’s report, the deficient
bridges are defined as one of the following:• Functionally Obsolete: A bridge that is no
longer functionally adequate. These bridgesmay be perfectly safe and structurally sound, butmay be the source of traffic jams or may nothave a high enough clearance to allow an over-sized vehicle.• Structurally Deficient: A bridge that has one
or more structural defects that require attention.
This status does not indicate the severity of thedefect but rather that a defect is present.Of those 6,500 deficient bridges statewide,
more than 200 are in Erie, Huron, Ottawa,Sandusky and Seneca counties. But these bridges aren’t all owned or main-
tained by the respective counties. For instance,only 12 of the 20 deficient bridges in OttawaCounty are maintained by the county. Thatmeans it's up to the county and other entities tomaintain their bridges.“Ottawa County has developed a Bridge
Capital Improvement program that we use toselect, scope, and schedule improvements forour bridges,” Ottawa County engineer Ron Lajtisaid. "The program is based upon a very simpleconcept of expected service life for any givenbridge.”Lajti said each bridge has an average service
life of about 50 years before it needs majorupgrades or an outright replacement."Using this concept, we want to replace at
least 2 bridges every year to assure that in thefuture we can minimize or eliminate deficien-
cies within our bridge inventory,” Lajti said.The county has conservative plans to replace
five bridges, one per year, through 2019 andupdate two bridges in 2018 and 2019.Bridges slated for replacement include:• 2015: Bridge on Portage South Road over
Wolf Creek. Financed by an equal combinationof county funds and money from a state loan.• 2016: Bridge on Graytown Road over
Turtle Creek. Financed 95 percent by federalfunds and 5 percent county funds.• 2017: Bridge on Graytown Road over
Packer Creek. Financed 95 percent by federalfunds and 5 percent by county funds.• 2018: Bridge on Rider Road over Beef
Creek. Tentatively financed completely bycounty funds.• 2019: Bridge on Wildacre Road over Cedar
Creek. Financed 95 percent by federal fundsand five percent local funds.Additionally, the county plans to update the
Slemmer-Portage bridge over Indian Creek,which will tentatively be funded completely bythe county, Lajti said.
“Sherrod Brown, along with many other sup-porters, is correct in this call for action on a long-term transportation bill,” Lajti said.
This story was reprinted with permission from the SanduskyRegister.
(This story also can be found onConstruction Equipment Guide’s Web site atwww.constructionequipmentguide.com.)
Close on the heels of an auc-tion in Columbus, Ohio,Alex Lyon & Son held a job
completion auction in Galion,Ohio, for Green Freight Ltd. onJune 19.As well as a large number of
truck tractors, dump trailers andwalking floor trailers, equipmentup for bid included hydraulic exca-vators, skid steers and attachments.The equipment brought in active
bidding from both onsite auctionattendees and online bidders vyingfor the equipment on the block.
(This story also can be found on
Construction Equipment Guide’s
Web site at www.constructionequip-
mentguide.com.)
Alex Lyon & Son Holds Job CompletionAuction in Galion for Green Freight Ltd.
OHIO STATE EDITION A Supplement to:
Your Ohio Connection: Ed Bryden, Strongsville, OH • 1-800-810-7640
“The Nation’s Best Read Construction Newspaper… Founded in 1957.”
July 182015
Vol. XVIII • No. 15
624
199
23
4
4
3030 30
422
68
68
22
22
50
3525
50
52
6
6
27
22
80
80
90
7671
7175
70
75
71
77
77
74
70
70
(L-R): Brian Tinch, along with Kevin and Kris Kildow of Kildow Construction,check out a Bobcat T650 skid steer at the auction.Jack Lyon calls out the bids from his “Jack in the Box” truck.
Michael Kilcoyne (L) of Shychuck Inc. and Mark Berryof Mr. Berry Enterprises both entered winning bids onseveral of the attachments up for sale.
Area Bridges in Need Continue to Decay
Photo/Luke WarkThe bridge over Turtle Creek onGraytown Road near Graytown isamong a handful of bridges in OttawaCounty slated to be replaced after U.S.Sen. Sherrod Brown (D-OH) recentlyreleased a county-by-county reportdetailing the number of bridges thatneed work in the state.
Page 2 • July 18, 2015 • www.constructionequipmentguide.com • Ohio State Supplement • Construction Equipment Guide
The Ohio State Department of Transportation received bidsfor transportation-related improvement projects.The following is a list of some of the projects let.
Project No: 150057Type:Major reconstruction.Location: CUY-US 6-12.20 (Part 1 and Part 2).State Estimate: $37,900,000.00Contractors and Bid Amounts:• Great Lakes Construction Company, Hinckley, Ohio
— $41,496,959• Terrace Construction Company Inc., Cleveland, Ohio
— $42,848,591• Anthony Allega Cement Contractor Inc., Valley View,
Ohio — $45,935,294• Karvo Paving Company, Stow, Ohio — $48,814,353
Completion Date: June 15, 2018
Project No: 150126Type:Major reconstruction.Location:MAH-/TRU-IR 80-4.50/0.00 (Part 1, Part 2 &Part 3).State Estimate: $85,480,000Contractors and Bid Amounts:• Shelly & Sands Inc, Columbus, Ohio — $91,150,300• Great Lakes Construction Company, Hinckley, Ohio
— $101,208,531• Walsh Construction Company II LLC, Crown Point,
Ind. — $105,133,911Completion Date: July 31, 2018
Project No: 150137Type:Minor widening.Location:HUR-US 224-06.16 Phase 4.State Estimate: $1,507,000Contractors and Bid Amounts:• Set Inc., Lowellville, Ohio — $1,847,553• Dellinger Excavating Inc., Monroeville, Ohio —
$2,038,059Completion Date:Dec. 15, 2015
Project No: 150169Type:Minor widening.Location: CUY-SR 252-04.11 HSPState Estimate: $1,084,000Contractors and Bid Amounts:• Terrace Construction Company Inc., Cleveland, Ohio
— $1,105,184• Karvo Paving Company, Stow, Ohio — $1,238,566• Perk Company Inc., Cleveland, Ohio — $1,297,971• Fabrizi Trucking & Paving Company Inc., Valley City,
Ohio — $1,349,531Completion Date:Oct. 30, 2015
Project No: 150171Type: Two lane resurfacing.Location:D06-SP-FY15.State Estimate: $790,000
Contractors and Bid Amounts:• Shelly Company, Thornville, Ohio — $1,325,000• Kokosing Construction Company Inc., Columbus,
Ohio — $1,717,230• Shelly & Sands Inc, Columbus, Ohio — $1,999,999
Completion Date:Oct. 15, 2015
Project No: 150182Type: Bridge repair.Location: JEF-SR 7-22.42.State Estimate: $4,782,000Contractors and Bid Amounts:• Shelly & Sands Inc, Columbus, Ohio — $4,643,564• Dot Construction Corporation, Canfield, Ohio —
$4,972,877• Beaver Excavating Company, Canton, Ohio —
$5,641,184Completion Date:Oct. 31, 2015
Project No: 150184Type: Interchange.Location: LUC-US 20A-5.56 Roundabt @ Eber.State Estimate: $1,675,000Contractors and Bid Amounts:• Geddis Paving & Excavating Inc., Toledo, Ohio —
$1,268,255• Vernon Nagel Inc., Napoleon, Ohio — $1,277,374• Gerken Paving Inc., Napoleon, Ohio — $1,277,702• B & J Concrete & Construction Company, Toledo,
Ohio — $1,283,495Completion Date:Oct. 30, 2015
Project No: 150185Type: Four lane resurfacing.Location:MAH-US 422/SR 289/SR 289D-0.00/2.17/0.05.State Estimate: $2,207,000Contractors and Bid Amounts:• Shelly & Sands Inc, Columbus, Ohio — $1,966,395• Shelly Company, Thornville, Ohio — $2,046,369• Karvo Paving Company, Stow, Ohio — $2,048,452• R T Vernal Paving Company Inc., North Lima, Ohio
— $2,288,434Completion Date: Sept. 30, 2015
Project No: 150187Type: Two lane resurfacing.Location:MED-SR 94-1.16.State Estimate: $1,316,000Contractors and Bid Amounts:• Chagrin Valley Paving Inc., Chagrin Falls, Ohio —
$1,214,001• Karvo Paving Company, Stow, Ohio — $1,255,504• Shelly Company, Thornville, Ohio — $1,296,145• Kokosing Construction Company Inc., Columbus,
Ohio — $1,299,877• Shelly & Sands Inc, Columbus, Ohio — $1,345,364
Completion Date:Oct. 31, 2015
Wood • Hamilton • Stark • Henry • Greene • Knox • Franklin • Clermont • Crawford • Union • Cuyahoga • Brown • Licking • Medina• Williams • Harrison • Adams • Mercer • Butler • Clark • Ashtabula • Sandusky • Portage • Athens • Logan • Lake • Erie • Wyandot• Warren • Fairfield • Miami • Paulding • Darke • Muskingum • Ottawa • Holmes • Jefferson • Trumbull • Summit • Washington • VanVert • Licking • Wood • Hamilton • Stark • Henry • Greene • Knox • Franklin • Clermont • Crawford • Union • Cuyahoga • Brown •Licking • Medina • Williams • Harrison • Adams • Mercer • Butler • Clark • Ashtabula • Sandusky • Portage • Athens • Logan • Lake
Ohio..
‘Buckeye State’ Highway Lettings
Construction Equipment Guide • Ohio State Supplement • www.constructionequipmentguide.com • July 18, 2015 • Page 3
Page 4 • July 18, 2015 • www.constructionequipmentguide.com • Ohio State Supplement • Construction Equipment Guide
By Kantele FrankoASSOCIATED PRESS
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Waste from the decontamina-tion and decommissioning of a Cold War-era uranium plantin southern Ohio will go to an on-site disposal facility undera U.S. Department of Energy plan approved by the OhioEnvironmental Protection Agency.The Portsmouth Gaseous Diffusion Plant in Piketon pro-
duced enriched uranium until 2001, and the shutdown leftbehind old buildings, industrial chemicals and radioactiveareas. Approval of the on-site waste disposal plan helps pave
the way for major physical cleanup and redevelopment at theproperty roughly 60 mi. (96.5 km) south of Columbus, Ohio,Craig Butler, EPA director said in a statement.“Careful consideration has gone into making this a viable,
safe plan for cleanup and revitalization of this site,” Butlersaid.The disposal plan clears the way for initial steps to create
a disposal cell that could be used to store waste that meetscertain standards. The plan also allows for some materials,such as those with certain types of contamination, to be takento appropriate off-site locations, the EPA said.The Energy Department also has recommended plans for
possibly demolishing dozens or hundreds of old buildingsand structures at the property. That plan hasn’t yet beenapproved by the EPA.The disposal plan had support from local officials and
lawmakers representing the area. Blaine Beekman, PikeCounty commissioner said the long-awaited decision is crit-ical to get the cleanup rolling and to support lawmakers’efforts to secure continued federal funding for the project.“They can say, ‘Look, here’s the plan for the cleanup. Let's
get it done,’” Beekman said.There are still unanswered questions, including exactly
which types of waste will go where, said UnitedSteelworkers local president Herman Potter, who representshundreds of Piketon workers. Union officials also wants toensure that construction of the disposal facility doesn’t inhib-it other redevelopment at the site, and they worry the lan-guage of the plan leaves room for extending the duration ofthe project and reducing needed jobs _ a big concern in apocket of high unemployment, Potter said.Some area residents and environmental activists also have
objected, with complaints about the selection process andconcerns about future use of the disposal site.U.S. Sen. Rob Portman, a Republican from southwest
Ohio, said the community agreed to on-site disposal to accel-erate the cleanup but remains concerned about the site'sfuture now that the Energy Department estimates the workwill take another three decades. Portman said he’ll continuepushing for the project to be expedited.
(This story also can be found on ConstructionEquipment Guide’s Web site at www.constructionequip-mentguide.com.)
DAYTON, Ohio (AP) A southwest Ohio hospital is plan-ning a two-year, $47.5 million expansion of its suburbancampus in a Dayton suburb.The Dayton Daily News reported that Dayton Children's
Hospital is planning construction of a 70,000-sq. ft. medicaloffice building and a 16-room emergency department at its11-acre campus in Springboro. The plan also calls for an out-patient surgery center with four operating rooms.Hospital officials expect the office building to open next
summer and the emergency department six months later. Thesurgery center will be completed last.The hospital currently provides urgent care, rehabilitation,
sports medicine and imagining services at the Springborosite.Dayton Children's Hospital also expects to complete a
new $140 million, 260,000-sq. ft. patient tower on its maincampus in Dayton in the spring of 2017.
(This story also can be found on Construction Equipment
Guide’s Web site at www.constructionequipmentguide.com.)
Dayton HospitalPlans $47.5 MillionCampus Expansion
On-Site Waste Disposal Part of Uranium Plant Cleanup
Construction Equipment Guide • Ohio State Supplement • www.constructionequipmentguide.com • July 18, 2015 • Page 5
800.392.2686
YOUR SOURCE FOR
SALES AND RENTALS CRAWLER TRUCKS, STUMP CUTTERS
AND FORESTRY MULCHERS
Page 6 • July 18, 2015 • www.constructionequipmentguide.com • Ohio State Supplement • Construction Equipment Guide
AGC of Ohio members Elford Inc. and TuttleConstruction were among the 37 firms named the nation’ssafest construction companies in 2014 by AGC of America.AGC of America oversees the Willis Construction SafetyExcellence Awards (CSEA), an annual ranking of construc-tion safety programs. The winners were selected after dozensof firms made presentations about their safety programs dur-ing AGC of America’s annual convention in early March.Elford received first place honors in the building division’s
250,000 to 450,000 work hour category, and Tuttle placedsecond in the building division’s 100,00-250,000 work hourcategory. They received the recognition during awards cere-mony at the convention held in San Juan, Puerto Rico.CSEA awards are distributed for a number of categories
based on the amount and type of work performed. The num-ber of entries are narrowed by a panel of AGC member con-struction safety professionals, and award winners wereselected by a panel of five independent safety professionalswithin the government, corporate and insurance industries.Final judging for the awards program took place during theconvention.Both companies were also honored by AGC of Ohio with
Ohio Construction Safety Excellence Awards. Elford wonthe award for the building category over 350,000 workhours, and Tuttle Construction for the building categoryunder 350,000 work hours. Limbach Co. received an OhioCSEA of the specialty category. The three firms receivedtheir awards during the annual AGC of Ohio SafetyLuncheon on April 10.Also during the luncheon, the following companies
received a National AGC Safety Awards Certificate ofCommendation for an incident rate of zero or 20 percentbelow their division average in 2013: Atlas Industrial, TheDotson Co., Dugan & Meyers Construction Co., MonarchConstruction, Ozanne Construction, Panzica ConstructionCo., Rudolph/Libbe Inc., and Trisco Systems Inc.
(This story also can be found on Construction Equipment
Guide’s Web site at www.constructionequipmentguide.com.)
AGC RecognizesOhio MembersWith Safety Awards
Elford Inc. of Columbus, Ohio — first place winner. Tuttle Construction Inc. of Lima, Ohio — second place winner.
HUDSON6681 Chittenden RoadHudson, Ohio 44236P: (330) 655-5900F: (330) 655-5969
COLUMBUS3155 E. 17th AvenueColumbus, Ohio 43219P: (614) 475-2880F: (614) 475-0069
CINCINNATI8131 Regal Lane
West Chester, Ohio 45069P: (513) 777-5556F: (513) 777-4494
www.themcleancompany.com
Let’s face it. When it comes to Heavy Duty Equipment, from the outside, brands tend to run together. Thereal separator? Performance. As in ‘how reliable’ and ‘how productive’. That’s why Hyundai designs theirequipment with features that matter. From the minute-by-minute, online ability to connect with your machines and know their exact productivity, to the best warranty in the business - 3 years/3000 hours full machine and 5 years/10,000 hours structural. Hyundai is an original in a look-alike world.
Visit hceamericas.com for the complete story.
CONSTRUCTION EQUIPMENTCONSTRUCTION EQUIPMENTSALES • SERVICE • PARTS • RENTALS
BURNS MHNortheast Ohio
800-752-1220 • www.burnsjcb.com 855-509-1689 • www.hy-tek.net 513-681-2200 • www.mhjcb.com
Central Ohio Southwest Ohio
SALES • SERVICE • PARTS • RENTALS
P I T T S B U R G H P H I L A D E L P H I A W A S H I N G T O N D .C . T O R O N T O
ILL RIGS FOR RENTDRILL RIGS FOR RENT1.800.PILE.USA -or- www.ecanet.com
AUTHORIZED DEALER:
EQUIPMENT CORPORATION OF AMERICA
B U I L D I N G F O U N D A T I O N S S I N C E 1 9 1 8
PHILADELPHIAPO Box 387Aldan, PA 19018P 610.626.2200F 610.626.2245
PITTSBURGHPO Box 306Coraopolis, PA 15108P 412.264.4480F 412.264.1158
WASHINGTON, D.C.6300 Foxley RoadUpper Marlboro, MD 20772P 301.599.1300F 301.599.1597
TORONTO166 Bentworth AveToronto, Ontario M6A 1P7P 416.787.4259F 416.787.4362
Construction Equipment Guide • Ohio State Supplement • www.constructionequipmentguide.com • July 18, 2015 • Page 7
Page 8 • July 18, 2015 • www.constructionequipmentguide.com • Ohio State Supplement • Construction Equipment Guide
Recommended