Hampton Roads, VA - 11/09/2009
Scattered Clouds53°Scattered Clouds
Forecasts | Doppler Radar
Traffic Cameras & VDOT Alerts

VIDEO: Fake snow brings real smiles to Beach school

Posted to: Education News Transportation and Traffic Virginia Beach

Download free Flash player to view videos:
Get Adobe Flash Player
Video: A real snow job.
Craig Kimberley | The Virginian-Pilot


Maleyk Staton, 7, watches as salt water sprays from an anti-icing truck during a VDOT demonstration about winter on Monday. (Steve Earley | The Virginian-Pilot)



VIRGINIA BEACH

It was a bright, sunny afternoon at Diamond Springs Elementary School, but on the ground a small pile of "snow" caught the attention of about 100 children.

To kick off the Virginia Department of Transportation's snow season, the Hampton Roads district held a winter weather preparedness event Monday with the elementary school's Galaxy After-School Program.

A VDOT worker used a snowplow to push the knee-high pile of polymer snow from the middle of the parking lot to a curb near where the children were.

The children cheered with each of the three pushes from the pile to the curb, leaving a smaller pile of "snow" stretching the length of the plow.

Another VDOT worker then showed off the district's new de-icing truck. In the past, trucks filled with salt would normally be parked strategically overnight in advance of a predicted snowstorm. With the new truck, salty water can be sprayed on the roads before the storm, freeing up workers and equipment, said Bill Collier, the Norfolk residency administrator for VDOT.

The de-icing truck slowly backed up to where the pile of polymer snow once stood. As it pulled forward, the truck's water began shooting out the back, spraying the parking lot, sidewalk and nearby parked cars.

A loud chorus of "whoa" erupted from the children with each pass.

Following the demonstrations, the children visited each of the trucks, climbed inside, asked questions and honked the horns.

Over at the pile of newly plowed "snow," each child got a small bag and grabbed a handful of the cool, damp white stuff to take home.

Though it would soon turn back into a dry polymer, it could be re-hydrated later, said Lauren Hansen, a VDOT spokeswoman. If frozen, it could even become a snowball.

Hansen said this was the only event of its kind planned for the region.

Lauren King, (757) 446-2309, lauren.king@pilotonline.com



ADVISORY: Users are solely responsible for opinions they post here and for following agreed-upon rules of civility. Comments do not reflect the views of The Virginian-Pilot or its Web sites. Comments are automatically checked for inappropriate language, but readers might find some comments offensive or inaccurate. If you believe a comment violates our rules, click the "Report Violation" link below the comment.

Hey the voice

If it going to teach children, then how about teaching them to save money and live within a budget! The out of control spending has put out Nation where it is now.

Ya'll just don't get it.

Ya'll just don't get it. This was an educational experience for the students involved in the afterschool program. When it comes to educating the youth of today, who care how much $$$$$ are spent. Maybe this inspired on of the students to do something with their life. Wake up and realize that our children are the future of this country.

because...

They had to do this in such difficult times. You with the budget and such it was necessary to..... never mind... stupid VDOT..... You know, I once heard that if you spray $100 bills on the highway, it prevents freezing.... or we should lay off all the trucks and make the VDOT director shovel the whole system himself...

??

You all having Obama withdraw?

Almost forgot....

....this was news?

What?

You have to be kidding me. What a waste of time and taxpayer dollars.

Waste of money and time

I 64 and 264 is full holes, cracks, uneven pavement and VDOT is wasting money on this sort of nonsense. Time to fire those responsibe for this decision.

Comment viewing options

Select your preferred way to display the comments and click "Save settings" to activate your changes.
Please note: Threaded comments work best if you view the oldest comments first.

More News Stories

More articles from: Education rss feed    News rss feed    Transportation and Traffic rss feed   


Toolbox