Cars & Driving · Capital Region
Washington County roadside work belongs with Public Works early
Washington County drivers and property owners should separate a road-service report from a road-work permit before a roadside job begins.
Published July 7, 2026 · Last verified July 7, 2026
Washington County road questions come in two flavors. Some are service reports, like potholes, trees or debris down, dead animals in the roadway, or plugged culverts. Others are work-permit questions, where someone plans to do work that touches a public road space.
The county Public Works page keeps both lanes visible. It points residents to an online request form for road-service issues, and it lists Public Works permit materials, including a Work Permit Application and Work Permit Instructions.
That split is worth making before a project gets noisy. A driveway edge, utility work, drainage fix, equipment move, or shoulder question can feel like a town errand until it reaches a county-road line.
Washington County also has a geography that makes road ownership easy to blur. A drive can move from a village street to farm road, then toward the Hudson, the Batten Kill, the Champlain corridor, or Adirondack-edge hills. The road name matters more than the mailing address.
For a resident, contractor, or small business, gather the road name, closest cross street, photos, and a short description of the work or problem. Then decide whether you are reporting a road issue or asking permission to work near the road.
That little sorting step can save a second call and keep the first conversation pointed at the right desk.