
Drive five minutes in Peterborough and you’ll get a free chiropractic adjustment, courtesy of a pothole the size of a canoe. Welcome to a city where the roads are less a network and more a minefield — patched, cracked, and patched again until they resemble a Cubist painting. City Hall insists there’s a plan, and technically there is: budgets, capital works, preservation programs, even grants from Queen’s Park and Ottawa. The problem is, most of that money goes into Band-Aids when what the patient really needs is surgery.
Here’s the ugly truth: a lot of Peterborough’s roads are sitting on top of century-old sewers and storm drains that are quietly rotting away. You can lay down fresh asphalt, smile for the ribbon-cutting photo, and by next winter the whole thing crumbles like a shortbread cookie in slush. Everyone knows it, including the engineers. But fixing what’s underneath costs real money, the kind no council wants to vote for when there’s an election coming.
So we limp along on the “Pavement Preservation Program,” a fancy way of saying “crack sealing and duct tape,” with the occasional full resurfacing when things get truly embarrassing. Mayor Jeff Leal has actually called downtown streets “embarrassing” on the record — and he’s not wrong. George, Water, Aylmer: they’re less roads than obstacle courses, designed to test your shocks, your patience, and your ability not to curse in front of the kids.
Where does the money go? The city’s been throwing millions at roadwork — $8 million here from the feds, $10 million there from the province, and millions more out of the municipal budget. Yet we’re still dodging craters on Charlotte Street like it’s the surface of the moon. Part of the issue is sprawl: Peterborough keeps building subdivisions and strip malls, which cost more road-kilometres to maintain while generating less tax revenue per square foot than the old downtown grid. More roads, less money to fix them. It’s math that would make your accountant cry.
Then there’s the contractor question. If you’ve lived here long enough, you start to notice the same names on the orange construction signs year after year. Lowest bidder wins, and the lowest bidder might cut corners. After all, that’s why it’s the lowest bid. Nobody at City Hall likes to talk about it, but it’s the elephant in the work yard: shoddy work means repeat contracts. You don’t have to be a cynic to see the incentive.
Meanwhile, the weather does its best impression of a jackhammer. Freeze, thaw, snow, salt, repeat. Even the best pavement would struggle here, but what we’ve got isn’t the best. It’s barely passable. The result? An annual cycle of repairs that never catch up, a budget that never stretches far enough, and drivers who’ve given up filing damage claims because their insurance premiums went up after the third blown tire.
Other cities manage this better. Kitchener, London, even Sudbury seem to have smoother stretches than us, despite equally nasty winters. They invest heavier upfront — dig down, fix the guts, then resurface. It costs more at first but lasts longer. Peterborough prefers the cheap date version: slap on some asphalt, hope it holds, and send in the cones again next spring.
The roads here aren’t just bad. They’re symptomatic. Deferred maintenance, budget juggling, short-term fixes, long-term pain. Until City Hall decides to treat infrastructure like something more than a photo op, we’ll keep bouncing along in our own demolition derby. Strap in — it’s going to be a bumpy ride.