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Denver will now send out residential plows when 6 inches of snow or more is forecast

Until the start of this year, Denver Public Works only sent out its residential plows when a foot or more of snow fell

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will be deployed across Denver as a major winter storm Wednesday into Thursday.

The move for Denver Public Works, which until the start of this year only sent out its residential plows when a foot or more of snow fell. Now, residential plows will be deployed when six inches or more snow are in the forecast.

“We’ve called out the residential plows in the past when faced with very large snowstorms,” Jose Cornejo, executive director of Denver Public Works, said in a statement. “This year, we are transitioning the program into one that will be helpful to residents on more occasions throughout the winter season.”

A winter storm warning is in effect for Denver until 11 a.m. on Thursday. The National Weather Service in Boulder says up to a foot of snow could fall in and around the  Denver metro area between Wednesday and Thursday morning. Travel in the metro area is expected to be treacherous as the weather system bears down Wednesday afternoon.

The city’s residential snowplow program was developed in response to blizzards in 2006 and 2007. It has since been deployed about a dozen times.

In March, , Denver Public Works did not send out residential plows because the storm did not meet their criteria for deployment, which angered many residents. At that point, the residential plow program only spanned from Nov. 15 to March 15.

The mandate the residential plow program can be deployed at any time during the winter weather season and that the manager of Denver Public Works will recommend the program be utilized to the mayor when necessary.

Denver Public Works says under its new residential plow policy, it expects to deploy the residential plows in a timelier fashion and stay ahead of the deeper snow accumulations that come with moderate to severe snow events.

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