Connecticut State Police and DOT issue warning to highway wood scroungers.

  • Active since 1995, Hearth.com is THE place on the internet for free information and advice about wood stoves, pellet stoves and other energy saving equipment.

    We strive to provide opinions, articles, discussions and history related to Hearth Products and in a more general sense, energy issues.

    We promote the EFFICIENT, RESPONSIBLE, CLEAN and SAFE use of all fuels, whether renewable or fossil.
Status
Not open for further replies.

ChadD

Burning Hunk
Nov 10, 2012
123
Connecticut

Leave the logs, DOT tells would-be wood foragers on I-95

Published April 01. 2015 10:39AM

Updated April 01. 2015 10:59AM

By Judy Benson
Contractors for the state Department of Transportation are felling trees within 30 feet of Interstate 95 northbound from Stonington to North Stonington, part of a statewide effort to catch up with needed roadside clearing that began after Hurricane Irene in 2011.

Kevin Nursick, spokesman for DOT, said Tuesday that the work began in December and resumed March 23 after a winter break. While the work has left large logs near the highway shoulder for a day or more until the wood chippers can turn them into mulch, people shouldn’t assume the logs are there for the taking, he said.

“Do people take it? No question they do,” he said. “But it is not legal. The wood is state property, and stopping on the highway is a safety problem. You aren’t supposed to stop on a highway unless it’s an emergency.”

Trooper Kelly Grant, spokeswoman for the state police, said that if police see someone taking wood, they will inform them that the activity is illegal and usually issue a verbal warning.

“We discourage improper stopping, because it’s dangerous,” she said.

Nursick said the eight-mile stretch of I-95 is being cleared using feller-buncher equipment that clasps and saws as many as 300 trees per day.

“We can do in one day what it used to take us three months to do,” he said. “The chipper is about a mile behind.”

DOT is paying the contractor about $6,000 per day for the services of both the feller-buncher and chipper equipment, he added.

The work will continue between Exits 91 and 93, near the Rhode Island border, for the next two weeks, Nursick said. Crews begin just after the morning rush hour and right lane closures are sometimes necessary.

http://www.theday.com/local/20150401/state-clears-trees-near-i-95-shoulder
 
I hope this is a April fools joke!
 
They ought to let people take it untill the chipper catchs up, might save a few days rental at 6k per day. Oh wait the government never tries to save $$$.
 
  • Like
Reactions: gregbesia and ChadD
They were clearing along I-395 before the winter right next to the state police barracks, I got warned there 3 times to move on during 3 different scrounge sessions. The cops were quite reasonable and actually pretty apologetic. They would give you a timeframe to get off the road, usually 30 minutes or so which let me fill up the truck at least. The trick was to buck as much as possible on the ground, then once you had a truckload, start loading since the state doesn't want bucked rounds lying on the ground as they are way harder to shred in bulk compared to a full tree.

Also, I tried to get all the way off the shoulder and put my truck between me and the traffic. No reason to be dumb about it. There were quite a few idiots with their truck inches from the travel lane - technically in the shoulder, but only barely.
 
Lol - please don't take the wood to heat your home and save money in the land of taxes, we need to spend your tax money by chipping this wood fuel so no one wins.
 
  • Like
Reactions: gregbesia
Hhhmmm...I thought it was legal...got my last truckload last night...there isn't a lot left...they started chipping it :-(
 
It's so freakin wasteful. I've only gotten one truckload so far. If it still looks OK today i'll try to get one more load tomorrow.
 
The government owns nothing. Everything they have was taken from someone else. Tell them to go pound sand.

Now stopping on the highway with your car on the shoulder...that's not a great idea and can get someone killed. If you can pull completely off the highway..who cares.
 
  • Like
Reactions: ChadD
Should be common sense not to stop along the interstate to load wood...lol You are not an emergency vehicle, no matter how bad you need wood.
 
Plus those chips are not environmentally friendly. They actually clog the tree's and bushes root system. You also don't know what the chips are shredded from. I know a lot of it is sumac and hackberry. Not the best mulch for sure. I don't want my kids playing on it if it's layed down for playgrounds or paths either.
 
The government owns nothing. Everything they have was taken from someone else. Tell them to go pound sand.

How about paying the native Americans for the wood we have been taking from their land?
 
And on that note...
 
Status
Not open for further replies.