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RoyJ 06-27-2004 12:18 AM

OT- Need 4WD??
 
From the St. Paul Pioneer Press

Posted on Sat, Jun. 26, 2004

SUV travels road to ruin

Damage by Twin Cities driver tops $80,000

BY KEVIN HARTER

Pioneer Press

Soon after a boy riding his bike was told to steer clear of freshly
poured concrete on a road-widening project between Stillwater and
Somerset last week, a Twin Cities woman drove her SUV around orange
barrels and churned though more than 1,000 feet of wet concrete,
according to authorities.

Her insurance company will be getting a bill for at least $80,000 to
remove and replace the damaged stretch of Wisconsin 35/64 roadway, just
north of County Road V, which was re-poured Friday, said Wisconsin
transportation officials and the project contractor.

The St. Croix County Sheriff's Department investigated the June 17
incident, Sheriff Dennis Hillstead said, but no charges have been filed.
The woman is not being identified because it was determined to be an
accident.

"I've seen it happen before, but nothing like this," said Jim Bednar,
project manager for SEH, a Rice Lake-based engineering firm. "Usually
when it happens, they drive 20 to 40 feet, not 1,000."

The woman, who had two child passengers in the SUV, drove onto the fresh
concrete despite road-construction signs, orange barriers and parked
construction vehicles, Bednar said.

The 9-inch thick roadway had been poured about four hours before, said
Bednar, and the bottom 4 inches had begun to harden. The woman continued
driving as the SUV sunk into the top 5 inches of the concrete.

"She must have put it in four-wheel-drive to keep going," he said.

Work crews didn't witness the incident, but when they returned later,
they called the sheriff and began looking for the vehicle. The boy on
his bike who had been told to stay off the wet pavement told them he saw
the driver and gave a description.

The driver was soon located, Bednar said, and she said that while she
did not stop initially, she planned to return to the scene.

jbjeep 06-27-2004 01:16 AM

Re: OT- Need 4WD??
 
an accident...oh sure...yup, I beleive that!



On Sun, 27 Jun 2004 04:18:05 GMT, RoyJ <spamless@microsoft.net> wrote:

>> From the St. Paul Pioneer Press
>>
>>Posted on Sat, Jun. 26, 2004
>>
>>SUV travels road to ruin
>>
>>Damage by Twin Cities driver tops $80,000
>>
>>BY KEVIN HARTER
>>
>>Pioneer Press
>>
>>Soon after a boy riding his bike was told to steer clear of freshly
>>poured concrete on a road-widening project between Stillwater and
>>Somerset last week, a Twin Cities woman drove her SUV around orange
>>barrels and churned though more than 1,000 feet of wet concrete,
>>according to authorities.
>>
>>Her insurance company will be getting a bill for at least $80,000 to
>>remove and replace the damaged stretch of Wisconsin 35/64 roadway, just
>>north of County Road V, which was re-poured Friday, said Wisconsin
>>transportation officials and the project contractor.
>>
>>The St. Croix County Sheriff's Department investigated the June 17
>>incident, Sheriff Dennis Hillstead said, but no charges have been filed.
>>The woman is not being identified because it was determined to be an
>>accident.
>>
>>"I've seen it happen before, but nothing like this," said Jim Bednar,
>>project manager for SEH, a Rice Lake-based engineering firm. "Usually
>>when it happens, they drive 20 to 40 feet, not 1,000."
>>
>>The woman, who had two child passengers in the SUV, drove onto the fresh
>>concrete despite road-construction signs, orange barriers and parked
>>construction vehicles, Bednar said.
>>
>>The 9-inch thick roadway had been poured about four hours before, said
>>Bednar, and the bottom 4 inches had begun to harden. The woman continued
>>driving as the SUV sunk into the top 5 inches of the concrete.
>>
>>"She must have put it in four-wheel-drive to keep going," he said.
>>
>>Work crews didn't witness the incident, but when they returned later,
>>they called the sheriff and began looking for the vehicle. The boy on
>>his bike who had been told to stay off the wet pavement told them he saw
>>the driver and gave a description.
>>
>>The driver was soon located, Bednar said, and she said that while she
>>did not stop initially, she planned to return to the scene.



jbjeep 06-27-2004 01:16 AM

Re: OT- Need 4WD??
 
an accident...oh sure...yup, I beleive that!



On Sun, 27 Jun 2004 04:18:05 GMT, RoyJ <spamless@microsoft.net> wrote:

>> From the St. Paul Pioneer Press
>>
>>Posted on Sat, Jun. 26, 2004
>>
>>SUV travels road to ruin
>>
>>Damage by Twin Cities driver tops $80,000
>>
>>BY KEVIN HARTER
>>
>>Pioneer Press
>>
>>Soon after a boy riding his bike was told to steer clear of freshly
>>poured concrete on a road-widening project between Stillwater and
>>Somerset last week, a Twin Cities woman drove her SUV around orange
>>barrels and churned though more than 1,000 feet of wet concrete,
>>according to authorities.
>>
>>Her insurance company will be getting a bill for at least $80,000 to
>>remove and replace the damaged stretch of Wisconsin 35/64 roadway, just
>>north of County Road V, which was re-poured Friday, said Wisconsin
>>transportation officials and the project contractor.
>>
>>The St. Croix County Sheriff's Department investigated the June 17
>>incident, Sheriff Dennis Hillstead said, but no charges have been filed.
>>The woman is not being identified because it was determined to be an
>>accident.
>>
>>"I've seen it happen before, but nothing like this," said Jim Bednar,
>>project manager for SEH, a Rice Lake-based engineering firm. "Usually
>>when it happens, they drive 20 to 40 feet, not 1,000."
>>
>>The woman, who had two child passengers in the SUV, drove onto the fresh
>>concrete despite road-construction signs, orange barriers and parked
>>construction vehicles, Bednar said.
>>
>>The 9-inch thick roadway had been poured about four hours before, said
>>Bednar, and the bottom 4 inches had begun to harden. The woman continued
>>driving as the SUV sunk into the top 5 inches of the concrete.
>>
>>"She must have put it in four-wheel-drive to keep going," he said.
>>
>>Work crews didn't witness the incident, but when they returned later,
>>they called the sheriff and began looking for the vehicle. The boy on
>>his bike who had been told to stay off the wet pavement told them he saw
>>the driver and gave a description.
>>
>>The driver was soon located, Bednar said, and she said that while she
>>did not stop initially, she planned to return to the scene.



jbjeep 06-27-2004 01:16 AM

Re: OT- Need 4WD??
 
an accident...oh sure...yup, I beleive that!



On Sun, 27 Jun 2004 04:18:05 GMT, RoyJ <spamless@microsoft.net> wrote:

>> From the St. Paul Pioneer Press
>>
>>Posted on Sat, Jun. 26, 2004
>>
>>SUV travels road to ruin
>>
>>Damage by Twin Cities driver tops $80,000
>>
>>BY KEVIN HARTER
>>
>>Pioneer Press
>>
>>Soon after a boy riding his bike was told to steer clear of freshly
>>poured concrete on a road-widening project between Stillwater and
>>Somerset last week, a Twin Cities woman drove her SUV around orange
>>barrels and churned though more than 1,000 feet of wet concrete,
>>according to authorities.
>>
>>Her insurance company will be getting a bill for at least $80,000 to
>>remove and replace the damaged stretch of Wisconsin 35/64 roadway, just
>>north of County Road V, which was re-poured Friday, said Wisconsin
>>transportation officials and the project contractor.
>>
>>The St. Croix County Sheriff's Department investigated the June 17
>>incident, Sheriff Dennis Hillstead said, but no charges have been filed.
>>The woman is not being identified because it was determined to be an
>>accident.
>>
>>"I've seen it happen before, but nothing like this," said Jim Bednar,
>>project manager for SEH, a Rice Lake-based engineering firm. "Usually
>>when it happens, they drive 20 to 40 feet, not 1,000."
>>
>>The woman, who had two child passengers in the SUV, drove onto the fresh
>>concrete despite road-construction signs, orange barriers and parked
>>construction vehicles, Bednar said.
>>
>>The 9-inch thick roadway had been poured about four hours before, said
>>Bednar, and the bottom 4 inches had begun to harden. The woman continued
>>driving as the SUV sunk into the top 5 inches of the concrete.
>>
>>"She must have put it in four-wheel-drive to keep going," he said.
>>
>>Work crews didn't witness the incident, but when they returned later,
>>they called the sheriff and began looking for the vehicle. The boy on
>>his bike who had been told to stay off the wet pavement told them he saw
>>the driver and gave a description.
>>
>>The driver was soon located, Bednar said, and she said that while she
>>did not stop initially, she planned to return to the scene.



jbjeep 06-27-2004 01:16 AM

Re: OT- Need 4WD??
 
an accident...oh sure...yup, I beleive that!



On Sun, 27 Jun 2004 04:18:05 GMT, RoyJ <spamless@microsoft.net> wrote:

>> From the St. Paul Pioneer Press
>>
>>Posted on Sat, Jun. 26, 2004
>>
>>SUV travels road to ruin
>>
>>Damage by Twin Cities driver tops $80,000
>>
>>BY KEVIN HARTER
>>
>>Pioneer Press
>>
>>Soon after a boy riding his bike was told to steer clear of freshly
>>poured concrete on a road-widening project between Stillwater and
>>Somerset last week, a Twin Cities woman drove her SUV around orange
>>barrels and churned though more than 1,000 feet of wet concrete,
>>according to authorities.
>>
>>Her insurance company will be getting a bill for at least $80,000 to
>>remove and replace the damaged stretch of Wisconsin 35/64 roadway, just
>>north of County Road V, which was re-poured Friday, said Wisconsin
>>transportation officials and the project contractor.
>>
>>The St. Croix County Sheriff's Department investigated the June 17
>>incident, Sheriff Dennis Hillstead said, but no charges have been filed.
>>The woman is not being identified because it was determined to be an
>>accident.
>>
>>"I've seen it happen before, but nothing like this," said Jim Bednar,
>>project manager for SEH, a Rice Lake-based engineering firm. "Usually
>>when it happens, they drive 20 to 40 feet, not 1,000."
>>
>>The woman, who had two child passengers in the SUV, drove onto the fresh
>>concrete despite road-construction signs, orange barriers and parked
>>construction vehicles, Bednar said.
>>
>>The 9-inch thick roadway had been poured about four hours before, said
>>Bednar, and the bottom 4 inches had begun to harden. The woman continued
>>driving as the SUV sunk into the top 5 inches of the concrete.
>>
>>"She must have put it in four-wheel-drive to keep going," he said.
>>
>>Work crews didn't witness the incident, but when they returned later,
>>they called the sheriff and began looking for the vehicle. The boy on
>>his bike who had been told to stay off the wet pavement told them he saw
>>the driver and gave a description.
>>
>>The driver was soon located, Bednar said, and she said that while she
>>did not stop initially, she planned to return to the scene.




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