For years, neighbors said Oates Road has needed an upgrade. It's gotten so bad, there are signs along the road warning drivers of the danger.
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"On a scale of 1 to 10, I would say, 10," driver David Thompson said. "It needs attention. Definitely. It's imperative."
"It's like when you're at a carnival and you're doing bumper cars, that's what it's like," driver Eddie Gage said. "Bumper to bumper. Not meaning that you're bumper to bumper with the car. You're bumper to bumper with potholes."
It's a problem J.W. Lodge knows well. His family runs Lodge Lumber on Oates Road.
For years, his family has pleaded with the city to do something.
"It's frustrating," Lodge said. "Frustrating are my feelings."
To get attention, Lodge launched a website, and placed signs along the street. Eyewitness News learned over the past eight months, 65 reports to the 311 hotline were made about potholes and road conditions.
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Lodge took the concerns directly to city hall. Nearly a year ago, he showed leaders photos of the street.
"It's a bad road," Mayor Sylvester Turner told Lodge at the April 2018 council meeting. "It does need to be reconstructed. It is a question of resources."
Months later, drivers are still waiting for those resources.
"It's gotten significantly worse in the last six months," Lodge said.
Councilmember Robert Gallegos oversees the area. He said the street is scheduled to be resurfaced in three years. But he feels like that would be a waste. Instead, he wants to reconstruct the road.
He tried to work with the county last year, but he says the commissioner never responded. There's a new county commissioner, and Gallegos said they're open to partnership projects.
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Repairs could still be months or years away. It's time drivers say you simply don't have when you rattle along this road.
"I would almost describe it as on the back of a bull at the rodeo right now, being blind-folded, and that's how it throws you around in your car," Lodge said.
One frustrated person posted a sign along this road asking Mayor Turner where he is. While some are frustrated with the mayor, Lodge says this problem started before he took office.
Houston Public Works sent Eyewitness News a statement about Oates Road:
"Oates is a road that was not build for continuous daily use by industrial vehicles. City streets that are being used as industrial roads like Oates present a unique challenge for the City. Houston Public Works put an overlay on Oates five years ago and performed routine maintenance as requested by the community. Transportation and Drainage Operations also filled 53 pothole requests from March 2018 to today. The need for reconstruction has been identified and the evaluation is making its way through our Capital Improvement Projects process."
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