Black Diamond yard fills with cars sliding on unsanded road

PORT ANGELES — Black Diamond Road turned into a sheet of ice Sunday and was closed for two hours beginning at 5:30 p.m. after several cars slid into ditches and yards.

It was reopened at about 7:30 p.m. after a Clallam County road crew sanded the surface, County Sheriff’s Sgt. Nick Turner said.

That was an emergency response, since the county had no plans to plow any county roads until Tuesday despite the snowfall.

Clallam County road crews are not plowing roads on weekends or holidays — such as Monday’s Martin Luther King Jr. Day — this year because of budget cuts.

The move will save about $150,000 per year in overtime costs for road crews, County Engineer Ross Tyler has said

“It’s crazy,” Michelle Farmer, a resident on Black Diamond Road, said late Sunday.

“The county has no money in its budget.”

Farmer’s problems began Saturday night as snow began to fall.

She was trailering a horse to a barn on Monroe Road when the truck and trailer slid on snow, coming to rest against a guardrail.

“I had to get the horses out and walk them to the barn,” she said.

That was bad enough, she said, but when county snowplows still hadn’t shown up Sunday, the situation deteriorated.

Four inches of snow fell on top of the ice and inch of snow from Saturday, the road in front of their house turned to a skating rink — and her yard became a parking lot.

By 4 p.m. Sunday, there were six cars in ditches within sight of the Farmer family’s house, while two Clallam County sheriff’s deputies struggled to chain their cars and an ambulance threatened to slide into a ditch.

The family had just pushed one car back on the road when Farmer said her daughter spotted another one out her window.

“She yelled, ‘Mom, somebody fell in our yard again,’” Farmer said.

“This corner is always an issue,” she said.

“But today, there was no plowing, no sanding, no nothing. It’s been horrible,” she said.

Thankfully, no one had been hurt, she said.

Cars and trucks continued driving up and down the road, even as deputies were trying to put chains on their car tires.

“Oh, here goes my patrol car,” one deputy said as a truck slipped and slid down Fors Road, approaching his location on Black Diamond Road.

Crews out early today

County crews will be out early today sanding roads, with school bus routes receiving first priority, Tyler said.

Crews will then work their way to smaller outlying roads.

“Due to freezing levels extending down to sea level in most areas, but varying accumulations of snow, most county roads are slippery with hard packed snow,” Tyler wrote in an Monday email.

“In the eastern parts of the county, it appears that snow accumulations were less however drivers should consider the roads to be slick even if bare pavement is visible,” he added.

The county will adjust its plowing and sanding schedules according to the weather, Tyler said.

________

Reporter Arwyn Rice can be reached at 360-417-3535 or at arwyn.rice@peninsuladailynews.com.

Reporter Rob Ollikainen can be reached at 360-417-3537 or at rob.ollikainen@peninsuladailynews.com.

More in News

Gwyn Gallis, left, helps Pauline Olsen at the Soroptimist booth at the Port Angeles Senior and Community Center during a holiday craft fair on Saturday. Soroptimists were even selling their annual Elegant Gourmet Coupon Book for $10. They can also be purchased at Blackbird Coffee House, Fogtown Coffee Bar, Jim’s Pharmacy, Odyssey Book Store, Sweet Spot Sequim and Sequim Shoe Repair. More than a dozen vendors filled the building for holiday shoppers. (Dave Logan/for Peninsula Daily News)
Craft fair

Gwyn Gallis, left, helps Pauline Olsen at the Soroptimist booth at the… Continue reading

Lawsuit alleges Jefferson board violated public meetings act

Hospital commissioner says discussions were held inappropriately

“My Heart Is Good” co-authors Ron Charles, left, and Josh Wisniewski, on the shore west of Port Angeles near Deep Creek, will discuss their new book at three public events. (Empty Bowl Press)
‘My Heart Is Good’ tells ‘an untold story’

Book focuses on tribal leader who worked on fishing rights

Man who died in collision is identified

Trooper says driver attempted U-turn at midspan

Bagpiper Rick McKenzie, who performed “Amazing Grace” during the 2023 regional Veterans Day ceremony in the hanger at U.S. Coast Guard Air Station/Sector Field Office Port Angeles, is scheduled to perform at this year’s ceremony, which will be held at the Port Angeles High School auditorium due to the federal government shutdown. (Keith Thorpe/Peninsula Daily News)
Veterans Day event moved to Port Angeles High School auditorium

Ceremony moved from air station due to federal government shutdown

Jackie Anderson, with Jax, has retired as officer manager for Sequim Animal Hospital after 32 years with the business. “I love the animals, but I love my clients because they love their animals in the good times and the bad times,” she said. “I’m going to miss the people.” (Matthew Nash/Olympic Peninsula News Group)
‘Touchstone’ for Sequim Animal Hospital retires

Jackie Anderson spent 32 years at business

EYE ON THE PENINSULA: Peninsula boards to discuss timber, budgets

Meetings across the North Olympic Peninsula

Electronic edition of newspaper set Tuesday

Peninsula Daily News will have an electronic edition only… Continue reading

Veterans Day ceremony set at Port Angeles High School

The Clallam County Veterans Association will host a Veterans… Continue reading

Suggs flips Port Angeles council race, leads by 10 votes

Sanders maintains lead for position OMC board