Roderick Bell wins statewide street sweeper competition

July 12, 2019

Published by eruiz

At the annual American Public Works Association Georgia Chapter (APWA-Ga) Conference, Roderick Bell, a Parks & Beautification Department Crew Leader, was recognized for winning the statewide street sweeper competition.

 

The competition was held in Perry, GA at the annual Public Works Equipment Show, and included an obstacle course to sweep around to imitate curbs, gutters…the everyday conditions in which they would have to work. The competition is timed, and points are deducted for hitting the obstacles.

 

“It’s great to have this level of skill in our departments serving the community,” says Public Works Director Marvin Land. “Our crews in all the departments work hard day in and day out to clean up and maintain the county, and they deserve to be recognized.”

 

With just three street sweepers, the Macon-Bibb Parks & Beautification Department picked up 491.84 tons – or 983,680 pounds – of dirt, trash, and debris off of our roads in FY2018 (July 1, 2017 – June 30, 2018). A single street sweeper can collect about 3.6 yards of material on a single run, and each sweeper can get about three collection runs per day, for a total of nine per day. The weight of the 3.6 yards varies depending on what is collected, but a good average is about 3,000 pounds per load.

 

Sweepers can work on all roads in Macon-Bibb County, but they are scheduled based on calls from the public and requests made through SeeClickFix, the county’s mobile and online service request system. Additionally, they sweep the streets before and after major community events like the Pan African Festival, Cotton Avenue Revival, Bragg Jam Macon Beer Festival, Magnolia Soap Box Derby, the Christmas Parade, and more.

 

Once a sweeper is full, it has to make the return to the offices on Lower Poplar Street to dump it out to later be put in a dump truck for the landfill. A sweeper, in order to collect the most off the roads, travels between four and eight miles per hour with its brushes down. Once full, it brings the brushes up and drives back to the office at about 15 – 20 miles per hour.

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