Public Works

Department of Public Works

The Department of Public Works is principally responsible for:

  • refuse collection, recycling
  • yard debris and leaf pick-up
  • road maintenance
  • plowing and salting Town/Village roadways, lots & sidewalks
  • maintaining Town/Village buildings, parks, and recreation areas
  • Spray Park maintenance

The Department of Public Works also

  • maintains and repairs 13 miles of storm sewer including catch basins
  • maintains and repairs 18 miles of sanitary sewer including 4 sewage pumping stations and 1 storm sewer pumping station
  • maintains, repairs and cleans 42 lane miles of road and road signage including 3 sets of traffic control units
  • performs crosswalk, parking and pavement striping
  • maintains all Town/Village owned trees, plants and mulch areas
  • is responsible for the mechanical operation, maintenance and repair of all DPW vehicles and equipment, as well as all police and fire vehicles

Departments

Public Works Links

Contact

Office Hours

January through December
Monday - Friday - 7:00 am to 3:30 pm

200 Ontario Street
East Rochester, New York 14445

William Marr
Superintendent of Public Works
bmarr@eastrochester.org

Bill Marr, East Rochester Superintendent of Public Works picture

Pete Calabrese
Foreman
pcalabrese@eastrochester.org

Monroe County Hazard Mitigation Plan Update

Monroe County is updating its Hazard Mitigation Plan.  This plan enables participating communities to be eligible for federal funding to rebuild stronger after disaster strikes.  Your feedback helps ensure that crucial mitigation projects can happen. Please take our citizen preparedness survey:

Citizen preparedness survey ...

After Hours Emergencies

If you have a sewer or similar type problem after working hours, on a weekend, or on a holiday please call 9-1-1. Inform the operator of the problem and he/she will notify the DPW as soon as possible.

About the ECOPARK

The ecopark is an innovative partnership between Monroe County and Waste Management of NY that provides county residents with a "one-stop drop-off" to dispose of or recycle certain items. The ecopark is a drop-off facility and, except for household hazardous waste (HHW) materials, residents are responsible for unloading their own vehicle.

Visit the ecopark website...

East Rochester Sidewalk Construction & Replacement Program

East Rochester Sidewalk Construction & Replacement Program Read more

On Tuesday February 27th, 2024 the Town/Village of East Rochester and MRB Group will 
be hosting an informal Public Information Meeting. The meeting is open to residents to stop 
in at any time between 5:30pm to 8:00pm to ask questions with regards to the scope of the 
project. 

The meeting will be held in the Jean Daniel Community Center located on the 1st floor 
of the Eyer Building (317 Main Street, East Rochester, NY 14445). 
 

Documents to download

2024 Town/Village of East Rochester Board Meeting Schedule

2024 Town/Village of East Rochester Board Meeting Schedule Read more

The Town/Village Boad will hold regular monthly meetings in 2024. Each meeting will begin at 7pm. For the complete schedule, please select READ MORE or download the attached document.

Documents to download

2024 Town/Village of East Rochester - Holiday Schedule

2024 Town/Village of East Rochester - Holiday Schedule Read more

After approval of the Town/Village Board, the Town/Village of East Rochester will observe the following list (for the full list, please select READ MORE) of Holidays for 2024. Please note the Town/Village offices will be closed on these days.

The Department of Public Works may work on these days to maintain continuity of operations.

Garfield Street Replacement Project

Garfield Street Replacement Project Read more

On Tuesday July 25th, 2023 the Town/Village of East Rochester held a Public Informational meeting in the Jean Daniel Community Center. The purpose of the meeting was to present the draft reconstruction plan for Garfield Street. This meeting was open to the public and all comments and feedback were welcome. There will no formal presentation, all information has been posted here on the web site.  
 

Documents to download

EAST ROCHESTER VOLUNTEER FIRE DEPARTMENT--125 YEARS OF SERVICE

EAST ROCHESTER VOLUNTEER FIRE DEPARTMENT--125 YEARS OF SERVICE Read more

On May 23, 1898, a group of businessmen from Despatch (as East Rochester was known until 1906) met at Branshaud’s Hall on East Commercial Street to set up the first fire department.  On May 29th, the first official meeting was held, and the Despatch Fire District was formed.  During subsequent meetings committees were formed to find estimates for needed equipment, as well as for property and a fire hall.  It was determined that $1800.00 was the amount needed to outfit this first department.  Equipment included:  one dozen rubber coats, boots, and helmets, a hose cart, an alarm bell, a ladder truck, and three chemical carts.  Needless to say, the first fire trucks were either pulled by horses or pulled by hand.

Select READ MORE for the full article on the East Rochester Volunteer Fire Department!

RSS
The Way We Were - East Rochester, 1925

Published on Thursday, May 2, 2024

The Way We Were - East Rochester, 1925

Submitted April 2024, by Anita M. Mance, Historian

Several weeks ago, I decided to write my April article about what was happening in East Rochester during the last solar eclipse here in January 1925.  I searched through photographs, interviews, newspaper articles, files, and advertisements.  Sadly, I was able to find nothing about activity here in our village to celebrate the event.  So, I decided instead to write about what daily life was like in East Rochester ninety-nine years ago.
     
In 1925, East Rochester was twenty-eight years old.  Our village was bordered by a number of  farms – those belonging to the Worthing, Ransom, and Harris families were among the largest.  The population of our village was 5813.  People traveled to our community by car, train, or trolley.   The President (Mayor) of our village, Howard Worden, would have been very busy keeping up with the speed with which our community was developing.  Many industries were here, including:  the Carshops, Piano Works, Ontario Drill Company, Despatch Lumber, Lawless Brothers Paper Mill, Pierce Oil, Crosman Seed, and Brainerd Manufacturing.
     
By looking through advertisements from the 1920s, we can see that our business district was thriving.  Businesses included:  Pierce-Hazzard Pharmacy (where hot water bottles and steam vaporizers sold for $1.50), George March’s Pure Food Shop (where Heinz ketchup cost 19 cents), Fawcett’s Restaurant (diner made from an old trolley car), Saxton’s Variety Store, East Rochester Candy Kitchen, King’s Shoe Store, Fryatt’s Dept. Store, LaDue Millinery Shoppe, Baier Bakery, J.L. Welch Men’s Shop, L.J. Farrell (electrical contractor who sold washing machines for $155.00), W. D. Hewes Insurance. Mauro’s Hotel and Athletic Club, and the Rialto Theatre (the largest movie house between Rochester and Syracuse).
     
Our village government offices, police, and fire departments were housed in the Municipal Building on Main Street opposite the Eyer Building.  1925 was a special year for the fire department with its first real fire truck being delivered from the American LaFrance Company.  The truck, known as Ol’Betsy, is showcased in the front of our current firehouse.  Our village library was housed in the Merchants Despatch Transportation Reading Room – a little white house In Edmund Lyon Park behind the church.
     
Kate Gleason was very busy creating affordable housing with the Concrest and Marigold Gardens developments on the western border of our village.  She had already donated acres of land in the middle of East Rochester for a park; and with the help of workers from her father’s company, Gleason Works in Rochester, cleaned up the property and developed the area into our first park—Edmund Lyon Park, dedicated in 1916.  Kate had also designed a nine-hole golf course built near where Route 490 is now located.  The clubhouse on Roosevelt Road was called Genundewah Court.  It is now an apartment building.  
     
Our school district was comprised of two buildings on East Avenue.  The elementary school was built in 1924.  It is now called the Lois E. Bird Elementary School.  A high school had been built in 1911.  It was located where the Morgan Middle School now stands.  Part of the current middle school building formed the newer high school built in 1937.  By 1922, 1000 children attended our schools.  Louis Bird was the School Superintendent.  It is interesting to note that in 1920 our school was the first in Monroe County to serve milk and crackers mid-morning.  In the spring of 1924, high school students published the first edition of the school newspaper,  The Brown and White.  
     
Attending church services and activities was an important part of family life.  Churches active at the time were:  First Baptist Church, St. Jerome’s Catholic Church, Parkside Methodist, Trinity Evangelical Lutheran, St. Matthias Episcopal, First Presbyterian.  A number of volunteer organizations also existed, including:  ER Study Club (a women’s group), ER Masons, St. Nicholas Society (an organization for Italian families), and Despatch Pioneers.
     
We do not know for sure if there were any eclipse celebrations in our village ninety-nine years ago.  In 1925, villagers may have gathered on the hill of Harris Farm (the original Tunis Brizee farm) and in Edmund Lyon Park (our only park at the time) – the same places where many in our community gathered on April 8, 2024.

   
 

Rate this article:
No rating
Comments (0)Number of views (517)
Print