Saratoga NewsPhotograph by Sarah Lombardo Saratoga street maintenance staffer Rick Torres uses the city's new sandbagger device to fill sandbags at the city's corporation yard. City's sandbag machine makes prevention a self-service affairBy Sarah LombardoA new machine at City Hall and a sharp eye for a sale, has made it a little easier for residents to prepare for rains this winter. The city recently acquired a new sandbagging machine, which allows residents or city staffers to fill five sandbags at once. "It allows an individual to fill sandbags without the help of another person," John Cherbone, acting public works director, said. And that means a 30- or 40-minute job that took two people is reduced to a 15- or 20-minute job that only requires one person. Best of all, however: it was on sale. The city purchased the machine for less than $1,000 about three months ago after Cherbone spotted the device for the first time on sale in a trade magazine. "I thought it would be a really good way to help the public," he said. "And we are a designated sandbag distribution center, so it would help the city as well." And save money. The sandbagger not only makes the job of flood prevention a self-service affair for residents, but, Cherbone said, it frees up a city crewmember by turning a two-person job into a one-person operation. In case of bad weather or flooding, that would mean one extra person available for on-site work, while only one person would be needed to prepare sandbags. The device, Cherbone said, is the epitome of simplicity. With a few shovels of sand put into the machine's hopper, the sandbags are filled. All that's left to do then is remove the bags and tie them closed. "It's a really simple mechanism when you think about it," he said. "It'll pay for itself in a short time." According to staffers, public response to the new machine has been positive from the few residents who have needed to use it. With more storms predicted in the coming weeks, however, more residents could find themselves stopping in to use the sandbagger. And this year, the process shouldn't be so time-consuming for Saratogans. "It's a pretty low-tech approach to doing something more efficiently," Cherbone said.
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This article appeared in the Saratoga News, December 16, 1998. |