Waynesboro, VA - City Hall

Waynesboro, VA - City Hall Official page of the City of Waynesboro, Virginia. City of Waynesboro, VA

PUBLIC WORKS IS SHARING MILLING & PAVING FOR 6/4 - 6/15/26:đźš§ City of Waynesboro Milling & Paving Schedule đźš§The City of W...
06/03/2026

PUBLIC WORKS IS SHARING MILLING & PAVING FOR 6/4 - 6/15/26:
đźš§ City of Waynesboro Milling & Paving Schedule đźš§
The City of Waynesboro's paving contractor is scheduled to perform milling and paving operations on multiple streets throughout the City from June 4–15, 2026.
This work represents 27 of the 69 locations identified for improvement as part of the City's 2026 paving program. Additional streets will be scheduled as work progresses through the paving season.
Residents and businesses located within active work areas should plan ahead:
đźš— Parking
• Move vehicles before work begins each day.
• Use off-street parking or park outside active work zones.
• Follow all temporary "No Parking" signs posted by the contractor.
đźš§ Access
• Milling operations generally create minimal access impacts. Temporary access restrictions may occur while equipment is actively working in a specific area, but interruptions are typically short in duration.
• Paving operations may result in longer temporary access restrictions while fresh asphalt is placed and allowed to cool.
• Contractors work to maintain access to homes and businesses whenever possible and restore access as quickly as conditions allow.
📍 Follow the paving crews' progress on our interactive map:
https://wybova.maps.arcgis.com/apps/dashboards/4b9d5f7dbc854ed7a4e49a3c8a72c110
A detailed daily schedule is provided below. Please note that schedules may change due to weather, equipment availability, or operational needs. Work is weather dependent:
📍 https://www.waynesboro.va.us/DocumentCenter/View/16149/Daily-Paving-List-68-to-61526

PUBLIC WORKS IS SHARING MILLING & PAVING INFO:đźš§ Transportation Series: Roadway Resurfacing Begins đźš§Over the past several...
06/03/2026

PUBLIC WORKS IS SHARING MILLING & PAVING INFO:
đźš§ Transportation Series: Roadway Resurfacing Begins đźš§
Over the past several months, residents may have noticed transportation improvements taking place across Waynesboro, including sidewalk repairs, ADA accessibility upgrades, curb and gutter improvements, and stormwater-related infrastructure work.
Now we’re moving into the next major phase of this year’s Transportation Series: roadway resurfacing.
Beginning this week, milling and paving operations will start at locations throughout the City as part of Waynesboro’s annual roadway maintenance program.
🛣 Why this work matters
Roadway resurfacing helps:
âś” Extend pavement life
âś” Improve ride quality
âś” Protect past infrastructure investments
âś” Reduce future maintenance costs
âś” Improve safety and drivability throughout the city
📍 69 roadway locations are included in this year’s paving program.
A complete list of planned roadway locations is available here:
[https://www.waynesboro.va.us/DocumentCenter/View/16147/2026-Paving-Program-Locations-updated-6326]
đź“… Work schedules will be released in phases as crews move through the city.
The first schedule, covering June 4–15, includes 27 roadway locations and will be posted separately.
đźš— What residents should know
Milling and paving operations are active construction processes that move throughout the day as crews progress along each roadway.
Residents and businesses located within active work areas should expect temporary traffic impacts, parking restrictions, heavy equipment activity, and short-duration access interruptions during active milling and paving operations.
Additional schedule-specific information and roadway updates will be shared throughout the paving season.
Thank you for your patience as we continue investing in the transportation infrastructure that serves residents, businesses, visitors, emergency services, and school transportation every day.
🔄 More Transportation Series updates to come.

PUBLIC WORKS IS SHARING A TRAFFIC IMPACT NEAR WAYNESBORO HIGH SCHOOL WITH A ROAD CLOSURE FROM JUNE 1 - 14, 2026 (AFFECTE...
05/29/2026

PUBLIC WORKS IS SHARING A TRAFFIC IMPACT NEAR WAYNESBORO HIGH SCHOOL WITH A ROAD CLOSURE FROM JUNE 1 - 14, 2026 (AFFECTED BUSINESSES WILL BE ACCESSIBLE)

TRAFFIC IMPACT — WAYNESBORO HIGH SCHOOL PROJECT
Beginning Monday, June 1 through Sunday, June 14, 2026, a section of Main Street near Waynesboro High School will be closed for utility work related to the high school construction project.
Closure Area:
Main Street between Poplar Avenue and New Hope Road
This work will support multiple underground utility connections for the new classroom addition and gymnasium project. Detour signage will be in place around the work zone using Broad Street.
Important Information:
• Local businesses within the affected area will remain open and accessible to customers during construction
• “Local Traffic Only” signage will help maintain customer access within the closure area
• Access to businesses and nearby properties will be facilitated throughout the project
• Sidewalks near active excavation areas may be temporarily restricted for pedestrian safety
We appreciate the cooperation of nearby businesses, residents, and motorists as this work is completed safely and as efficiently as possible during summer break operations.
Please use caution near the work zone and follow posted traffic control signage.

05/27/2026

**UPDATE** THE TREASURER AND COMMISSIONER OF REVENUE OFFICES WILL BE OPEN TOMORROW 5/28/2026**DUE TO POWER ISSUES AT 503 W MAIN STREET THE TREASURER'S OFFICE AND THE COMMISSIONER OF REVENUE OFFICES ARE CLOSED UNTIL FURTHER NOTICE.

PUBLIC WORKS IS SHARING THEIR FINAL HIGHLIGHT POST FOR PUBLIC WORKS WEEK:Public Works Week 2026Rooted in Service, Powere...
05/23/2026

PUBLIC WORKS IS SHARING THEIR FINAL HIGHLIGHT POST FOR PUBLIC WORKS WEEK:
Public Works Week 2026
Rooted in Service, Powered by Community

As Public Works Week comes to a close, we want to thank the employees who help care for the systems, services, and infrastructure many people rarely have to think about every day.

Throughout the week, we shared stories from employees working in traffic operations, stormwater, sewer maintenance, emergency response, and snow operations.

Some work underground.
Some work overhead.
Some work overnight.
Some work during storms.
Some work quietly behind the scenes long before problems ever become visible to the public.

In each conversation, employees spoke less about themselves and more about responsibility — helping protect public health, maintain safe travel, preserve infrastructure, protect local waterways, respond during emergencies, and serve the community well.

During this winter’s “Snowcrete” storm, employees from multiple Public Works divisions worked long shifts together in rapidly changing conditions to help keep roads open, maintain emergency access, respond to water main breaks, and support one another across the City.

Several employees spoke about the trust required in that kind of service — trusting the people beside you, adapting together, and continuing to move forward even when conditions become difficult.

Much of what Public Works employees do is not highly visible. In many cases, if the public never notices the work at all, that often means things are functioning the way they should.

But these services matter to daily life throughout Waynesboro in ways both large and small.

This week gave us an opportunity to slow down, listen, and better understand the people behind those services.

To all Public Works employees: thank you for the care, professionalism, patience, teamwork, and public service you bring to the Waynesboro community every day.

PUBLIC WORKS IS SHARING MORE HIGHLIGHTS FOR PUBLIC WORKS WEEK:Public Works Week 2026The Infrastructure Most People Never...
05/23/2026

PUBLIC WORKS IS SHARING MORE HIGHLIGHTS FOR PUBLIC WORKS WEEK:
Public Works Week 2026
The Infrastructure Most People Never See
Most people never think about the sewer system unless something goes wrong.
But beneath Waynesboro are 137 miles of sewer lines, 3,532 manholes, thousands of cleanouts, aging clay pipes, hidden easements, pump stations, roots, groundwater infiltration, and infrastructure that has to function every single day — often without anyone ever noticing it exists.
For the City’s Sewer Division, that invisible work never really stops.
“We used to be a lot more reactive,” Brian Fitzgerald explained. “Something would fail, back up, or overflow, and then you’d respond to it. But there were places we couldn’t even get to anymore.”
Some sewer easements had become so overgrown over the years that crews could barely locate the manholes hidden underneath them.
“With the new brush cutter, we started uncovering areas people hadn’t accessed in decades,” Brian said. “Some of those manholes were completely hidden.”
What began as repeated sewer problems near the Shenandoah area eventually expanded into a broader preventive maintenance effort throughout the City.
Now, using the City’s new sewer flush truck alongside underground camera inspections, crews are systematically cleaning, inspecting, and evaluating sections of sewer line before failures occur.
The flush truck uses high-pressure water jets capable of cutting roots, clearing grease buildup, removing gravel and debris, and restoring flow inside sewer pipes.
“It breaks through with forward jets,” Brian explained, “and the rear jets pull everything back to the manhole.”
But the real transformation isn’t just cleaning the lines.
It’s finally being able to see underground.
“You really need that camera in there,” Corey Snyder said. “Otherwise you’re basically blind. The flush truck and camera truck together give us the ability to actually understand what’s happening underground.”
That visibility changes everything.
A sewer backup call may initially appear to be a simple blockage. But once crews inspect the line, they may discover root intrusion, broken joints, pipe offsets, groundwater infiltration, damaged cleanouts, or larger structural failures that require replacement.
Many of Waynesboro’s older sewer lines are still made of vitrified clay pipe — shorter pipe sections connected by joints where roots and groundwater can enter over time.
“The majority of the problems are in the older clay lines,” Corey explained. “That’s where roots get in through the joints.”
Crews are now replacing sections of aging clay pipe with PVC and upgraded gasket systems designed to reduce infiltration and root intrusion.
But the work is complicated.
Some areas are low-lying and prone to overflows during heavy rain events. Some sewer infrastructure crosses wooded easements, golf courses, and difficult terrain. Some problems only reveal themselves after storms, holidays, or periods of heavy usage.
“You can feel the difference when it rains,” Brian said. “The last few weeks were dry and we barely had sewer calls. Then it rains and suddenly you’re getting multiple calls.”
Holidays can create similar spikes.
“More people in homes, more laundry, more food waste, more dishes, more usage,” Corey explained. “That’s when things hang up.”
And many of the blockages crews encounter are preventable.
“Flushable” wipes that do not actually break down, grease poured down drains, towels, toys, broken cleanout lids, roots, and debris all contribute to sewer backups crews respond to throughout the year.
“We’ve pulled towels out of lines,” Corey said. “Grease is another major issue.”
The crews also monitor known overflow locations during heavy rain events, checking manholes throughout the City when storms move through.
“When the system overloads, it has to find somewhere to go,” Corey explained.
If overflows occur, crews respond by clearing blockages, restoring flow, removing solids, disinfecting impacted areas, and following behind with camera inspections to identify the larger issue causing the problem.
Behind all of it is work most residents never see:
Clearing easements.
Inspecting underground lines.
Mapping infrastructure.
Replacing aging pipe.
Preventing repeat failures.
Reducing infiltration.
Protecting waterways.
Protecting public health.
And increasingly, shifting the City’s sewer system from reactive emergency response toward long-term preventive maintenance.
“It’s only going to benefit the City in the long run,” Corey said. “Less infiltration. Less root intrusion. Less manpower going back to the same locations over and over again.”
Even the new flush truck itself changed daily operations for crews.
The previous equipment required workers to physically wrestle heavy sewer hoses manually.
“This new truck is hydraulic,” Brian explained. “The old one would jerk you around. This one is a whole lot safer.”
For residents, most of this work remains invisible.
But every cleared line, every inspected manhole, every replaced section of pipe, and every prevented backup helps keep essential infrastructure functioning beneath the City every single day.

In observance of the Memorial Day holiday, Government offices will be closed on Monday, May 25, 2026.HAVE A SAFE & PLEAS...
05/22/2026

In observance of the Memorial Day holiday, Government offices will be closed on Monday, May 25, 2026.

HAVE A SAFE & PLEASANT HOLIDAY

PUBLIC WORKS IS UPDATING US ON THE WAYNESBORO HIGH SCHOOL RE-STRIPING WORK:⚠️ TRAFFIC IMPACT UPDATE – WAYNESBORO HIGH SC...
05/22/2026

PUBLIC WORKS IS UPDATING US ON THE WAYNESBORO HIGH SCHOOL RE-STRIPING WORK:
⚠️ TRAFFIC IMPACT UPDATE – WAYNESBORO HIGH SCHOOL CONSTRUCTION PROJECT ⚠️
Due to continued rain and wet pavement conditions, the roadway re-striping work associated with the Waynesboro High School construction project has been delayed.
At this time, the temporary traffic pattern changes and potential road closures previously expected along Main Street between Poplar Avenue and New Hope Road will likely shift to Tuesday and Wednesday of next week (May 26 & 27, 2026), weather permitting.
Crews require dry pavement conditions for roadway striping to properly adhere and cure safely.
Once work begins, motorists should continue to expect:
đźš§ Temporary road closures and lane shifts
đźš§ Changing traffic patterns
đźš§ Delays and extra travel time in the area
đźš§ Construction vehicles entering and exiting the site
đźš§ Flaggers, signage, and temporary lane markings
These traffic pattern changes are part of the approximately 18-month Waynesboro High School construction project and are being implemented to help provide safe space for construction operations, material deliveries, and future scaffolding work.
The City appreciates the public’s patience and understanding as crews work safely and weather conditions are monitored. Additional updates will be provided as scheduling is finalized.

05/21/2026

PUBLIC WORKS IS SHARING MORE PUBLIC WORKS WEEK INFORMATION:
Public Works Week 2026
The First Week Back During “Snowcrete”

When Derek Snyder returned to Public Works after six years away, he didn’t ease back into routine work.
He arrived in the middle of one of the most difficult winter storms many employees had ever experienced — a storm crews would later nickname “Snowcrete.”
“They kind of used me as a floater,” Snyder said. “Whoever needed help, that’s where I went.”
Snyder came in after the storm had already started, moving between wards helping open turn lanes, assist stuck equipment, and support crews wherever conditions were becoming the worst.
While he was familiar with snow operations from his previous years with the City, this storm quickly became something different.
“At first we weren’t running chains,” Snyder explained. “It was snow at first and then it became ice.”
As conditions changed, crews across Waynesboro had to adapt in real time. Snowplow operators described visibility disappearing in blinding snow while packed ice built up on windshields faster than wipers could clear it. Equipment operators sometimes had to stop repeatedly to scrape ice away by hand just to keep moving safely.
What began as a snow event quickly became an ice event.
“Everybody ended up getting stuck,” Snyder said. “Equipment was getting stuck because everything would just spin.”
Normal snow removal tactics no longer worked. Instead of trucks opening roads first, crews often had to send heavier equipment ahead just to break paths through ice-packed neighborhoods before plows could follow behind.
“For the most part it was one backhoe breaking in through neighborhoods for the trucks,” Snyder said.
At the same time, Public Works crews were also responding to water main breaks across the City. Experienced operators were sometimes pulled away from snow crews to repair broken water lines in freezing temperatures while other employees stepped into unfamiliar leadership roles to keep snow routes moving.
Most employees worked 12-hour shifts for days at a time.
Snow response in Waynesboro is organized into four wards, each with assigned crews, equipment, routes, and responsibilities planned before a storm begins.
But during Snowcrete, conditions changed so quickly that crews constantly had to adapt within those operations.
Employees from different Public Works divisions worked together within each ward, coordinating routes, responding to stuck equipment, adjusting to changing road conditions, and helping keep emergency access routes open across the City.
“Everybody’s got to work together,” Snyder said. “Not just people you work with on a daily basis. Kind of as a group you have to build and learn how each other works.”
Operators described crews communicating continuously by phone while moving through routes, with trucks, loaders, salt drivers, and equipment operators often breaking off to handle changing conditions in different parts of their ward before regrouping again.
For Snyder, returning during the middle of Snowcrete also reinforced something else — the trust crews place in one another during emergency operations.
“For me it was kind of nice because they just kept me in a piece of equipment where they knew I was comfortable and sent me where they most needed me,” he said. “That kept me going, kept me busy.”
For many residents, the most visible part of Snowcrete was waiting for roads to be cleared. Behind the scenes, crews were balancing emergency access routes, snow removal, equipment breakdowns, water infrastructure repairs, and rapidly changing conditions across the City.
Snyder says crews understood many residents felt trapped and frustrated during the storm — especially once roads turned to ice.
“Not everything gets hit at once,” he said. “But we will get there.”
He hopes residents remember that while crews may not have reached every neighborhood immediately, employees were working around the clock to keep primary roads open and emergency access available throughout the storm.
“Everybody down here, from the time they clock in until the time they leave, they are pushing snow,” Snyder said.
As part of Public Works Week, the City of Waynesboro is highlighting the employees who help keep essential services operating during emergencies — often in conditions residents never fully see.

PUBLIC WORKS IS ADVISING ABOUT TRASH COLLECTION FOR THE MEMORIAL DAY HOLIDAY:In observance of the Memorial Day holiday, ...
05/21/2026

PUBLIC WORKS IS ADVISING ABOUT TRASH COLLECTION FOR THE MEMORIAL DAY HOLIDAY:
In observance of the Memorial Day holiday, Public Works will be closed on Monday, May 25, 2026. Normal operations will resume Tuesday, May 26.
🗑️ Trash collection will operate on a one-day delay next week:
• Monday’s trash → Tuesday
• Tuesday’s trash → Wednesday
• Wednesday’s trash → Thursday
• Thursday’s trash → Friday
We wish everyone a safe and restful holiday weekend.

Address

503 W Main Street
Waynesboro, VA
22980

Opening Hours

Monday 8am - 5pm
Tuesday 8am - 5pm
Wednesday 8am - 5pm
Thursday 8am - 5pm
Friday 8am - 5pm

Telephone

+15409426600

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