May-June 2006

Controlling the Dust

Watching out for neighbors, regulators—and profits.

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By Dan Rafter

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How effective has Envirotac II been? Effective enough so that the US military uses it to protect the men and women fighting overseas. The military uses Envirotac II to help keep US soldiers in Iraq and Afghanistan safe from brownouts, those swirling and dangerous storms of sand kicked up by planes and helicopters landing in desert lands. Too much dust can blind aircraft operators, leading to potentially fatal accidents. Military officials credit many helicopter and other aircraft crashes to this specific problem.

The most famous example of the military using Envirotac II is currently taking place in Afghanistan. Officials and soldiers at Camp Rhino in the deserts in this country routinely use the product to control dust on their landing sites. The soldiers there, though, don’t call the product by its proper name. They refer to it by the far less glamorous moniker of Rhino Snot. Don’t think Vermillion dislikes this, though. Environmental Products and Applications quickly copyrighted the nickname.

Environmental Products’ relationship with the military started shortly after the terrorist attacks of September 11, 2001. At the request of military officials, workers with Environmental Products filled two 5,500-gallon bulk trucks with Envirotac II in late 2001, and drove them to an Air Force base in Riverside, CA. Product testing turned out to be successful, and it’s now keeping runways in the dustiest regions of Afghanistan safe for aircraft landings.

If dust control products are accepted by the military, it would stand to reason that contractors dealing not with life-and-death matters but with profits and efficiency would do the same.

The good news? Many contractors, spurred on perhaps by the threat of fines or the desire to save money, are turning more frequently to dust control suppressants to keep their work sites calm.

Tony Witte, vice president and general manager with Corrective Asphalt Materials in South Roxana, IL, sees this. He distributes dust suppressant products manufactured by other companies to contractors throughout much of the greater St. Louis area. At the same time, his company is often hired as a subcontractor to tackle dust control projects for builders or developers. So he is well aware of just how important controlling fugitive dust is becoming for everyone from builders and developers to government officials.

“People around here are using dust control products more than they have in the past,” Witte says. “We have a lot of air-permit regulations in the St. Louis area where we work. There are reports made on any fugitive dust that may leave a site.”

Witte also uses Coherex on many of his contracts. For instance, every two to three weeks, Witte’s crews apply it to the roads leading in and out of the CSXI railyard in Fairmont City, IL. Controlling dust here is no easy task. The reason? Rock. Next Page >

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