From: glen mccready
To: 0xdeadbeef@substance.abuse.blackdown.org Date: Thu, 22 Aug 1996 19:25:38 -0400
Forwarded-by: Keith Bostic <bostic@bsdi.com> Forwarded-by: "Rob Pike" <rob@plan9.bell-labs.com> ANDREAS, Pa. (AP) - Workers repairing a stretch of roadway paved straight over a dead deer that one official says was hard to miss. A gooey spread of oil and rocks covers the deer's head, neck and shoulders along Route 895. ``The deer was lying there dead for three to four weeks,'' said Keith Billig, mayor of nearby Bowmanstown, about 65 miles northwest of Philadelphia. ``I never saw anything like that before in my life.'' It is against state policy to pave over a deer, said Walter Bortree, a Pennsylvania Department of Transportation engineer. ``We do not routinely oil and chip over deer kill,'' Bortree said. ``If in fact the deer was in the work area, it should have been removed before the work was done.'' Bortree said the private contractor that did the work for the state probably missed seeing the deer because it was on the edge of the road. But Billig said the animal is in plain view. ``You can't miss it,'' he said. ``It's in a straightaway. If they couldn't see it, then they can't see the numbers on their checks either.''