{"id":14090,"date":"2024-10-28T20:36:24","date_gmt":"2024-10-28T20:36:24","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/9thstreetjournal.org\/?p=14090"},"modified":"2024-10-28T20:36:24","modified_gmt":"2024-10-28T20:36:24","slug":"on-the-ballot-paving-miles-of-dirt-roads","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/9thstreetjournal.org\/2024\/10\/28\/on-the-ballot-paving-miles-of-dirt-roads\/","title":{"rendered":"On the ballot: Paving miles of dirt roads"},"content":{"rendered":"
On a recent Friday, Lu Tahaj, 52, trudged up Macon Street, an unpaved road around the corner from her house on West Markham. Seventeen houses line the roughly 900-foot stretch of gray dirt and gravel on a hill above Ellerbe Creek.<\/span><\/p>\n
The school day was over, yet Tahaj still wore her uniform from Durham Public Schools, where she works as a child nutrition assistant. She\u2019s called the city again and again about paving the road, she says. But more than 20 years after she first arrived in Durham from Greece, the winding gray dirt remains.<\/span><\/p>\n
\u201cI\u2019m tired,\u201d Tahaj said. \u201cI\u2019m very tired.\u201d <\/span><\/p>\n
Because the dirt road lacks proper infrastructure to handle floodwater, rainy days are a particular challenge. After a strong storm two weeks ago, water streamed down the hill and flooded Tahaj\u2019s basement, carrying gravel along with it. When it’s not raining, she breathes in suffocating dust from the road, she says. In lieu of curbs, deep ditches run alongside the road. Recently, she and her neighbors picked up a pedestrian after he fell into the ditch.<\/span><\/p>\n