The ICPRB has been working with the Virginia Department of Environmental Quality (VDEQ) and the Northern Virginia Regional Commission to decrease salt levels in area streams. The plan is to implement a voluntary management of the use of salts for roadways and walkways through the implementation of the Salt Management Strategy just published by the ICPRB and VDEQ.
Analyses from three different studies at multiple locations have
found increasing freshwater salinization in Northern Virginia. Salts are very
effective at deicing roads; however, after application, the salts are washed
off into local waterways or seep through soils into groundwater systems with
negative impacts on water quality and the environment. Salts pollute drinking water sources and are very costly to
remove. The only available technology to remove salt from the source water is
reverse osmosis which is cost prohibitive and requires a significant amount of
energy to run.
Due to their corrosive nature, salts increase the costs of
maintenance, repair, and replacement of infrastructure like roads, sidewalks,
driveways, bridges, and pipes; similar effects are seen on vehicles and other
property. Improved management and use of salts during winter weather events can
maintain public safety and minimize the negative impacts of salty runoff.
For the past year the VDEQ and the Northern Virginia
Regional Commission have gathered together stake holders to develop a Salt
Management Strategy and has been holding public meeting to hear community
concerns. Last week VDEQ virtually presented the Salt
Management Toolkit
to the public. It is a guide for the use of salt to increase public safety
and reduce environmental impact.
The Salt Management Toolkit is Virginia’s first
comprehensive and integrated strategy to improve the balance between the
impacts and benefits of salt application. The toolkit is designed to encourage
the continual improvement in winter maintenance practices, tracking salt use,
evaluating implementation of best practices, monitoring improvements in water
quality and increasing public awareness of the benefits and the unintended
impacts of salt use. The Salt Management Toolkit establishes a solid foundation
for the beginning of area-wide adaptive implementation of better salt management
in the future by expanding the progress already made by VDOT in anti-icing of
area roads by the use of brine solution.
For the past several years VDOT has sprayed a salt solution that is only about 23%
salt to pretreat the interstates (66, 95, 395 and 495) and the major roads (for
example Routes 1, 7, 28, 50, 15 etc.) In total VDOT only applies brine to
pretreat 2,150 lane miles of interstates, major roads and bridges. You’ve seen
the brine as light white lines sprayed in roadway lanes before storms. The
anti-icing treatment is most effective during the first hour when it prevents
the snow from bonding to the roadway. This makes it easier and more effective
to plow a road and has been effective in reducing salt use.
Take a look at the Salt Management Toolkit. The 30-day public comment period: runs from January 22, 2021 through February 22, 2021. Following the comment period, VDEQ will address community comments and transition into the implementation of the Salt Management Strategy.
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