September-October 2007

Choices in Dust Control

Stabilizing seaports, airports, and dusty roads

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By Mary Ellen Hare

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“Dust wasn’t considered a significant health and pollution problem until the mid-1970s,” says Marty Koether, a managing partner of EarthCare Consultants LLC, based in Tucson, AZ. “And each situation has a unique set of circumstances–—soil conditions, climate, weather, road use, disturbed or undisturbed soil, environmental concerns, financial considerations, and so on.”

Photo: Mohave County Public Works
Photo: Mohave County Public Works
Photo: Mohave County Public Works
Mohave County, AZ, maintains 1,500 miles of dirt and gravel roads.

Also known as The Dust Doctor, Koether and his two partners started their consulting company in 1995. Before that he worked in paving and asphalt restoration, along with erosion control, using geotextiles and hard armor.

“It was while I was working on erosion control projects that I discovered a real need for dust control,” Koether says. “To me, soil stabilization is synonymous with dust control and sediment and erosion control. Unless you have a stable surface, you will always have dust during the dry season, and you will have sediment runoff and erosion during rain events. Basically, by stabilizing the soil, we achieve both dust control and erosion control.”

Since his initial involvement in dust control, Koether has participated in a number of dust palliative studies for evaluation of soil stabilization and dust control products. He has worked with Mohave County, AZ; the City of Scottsdale, AZ; and the City of Phoenix Aviation Department, as well as URS Corp., on evaluations of fugitive dust control measures for the Arizona Department of Emergency and Military Affairs. From 2003 to the present he has provided soil stabilization products, services, and consulting to Mohave County Department of Public Works to stabilize native road subgrades prior to chip-sealing.

Koether and his partners recommend Soil-Sement, manufactured by Midwest Industrial Supply Inc. in Canton, OH. “In 1995 I did over six months’ worth of research on the different soil stabilization products that were on the market. What we discovered then was that Midwest Industrial Supply was the grandfather of the dust control industry regarding environmental stewardship.

“Environmental concerns of using dust control products are a significant issue nationwide,” continues Koether. “Effective dust control improves air quality, but we have to remember that we must protect other resources, such as water. Soil-Sement does not carry any chemicals into the stormwater system because it is not water soluble, so in the same way paint doesn’t run off your house when it rains, it doesn’t run off the surface that it has been applied to during wet conditions.” He notes that Midwest Industrial Supply has subjected the product to tests according to EPA guidelines regarding water quality, toxicity, and carcinogenic properties.

“Research and testing proves that stormwater runoff from areas treated with Soil-Sement will not contain concentrations that exceed benchmark values of the parameters designated in the National Pollutant Discharge Elimination System [NPDES] Storm Multi-Sector General Permit for Industrial Activities,” Koether says, adding that the product’s Material Safety Data Sheets (MSDSs) “do not contain any of the disclaimers found in the majority of the other manufacturers’ products’ MSDSs. This industry isn’t really regulated. It is a ‘buyer beware’ market, and people really need to study the products they intend to use in great detail.”

Not only environmental safety but also performance should be tested, he believes. Koether claims there is not enough unbiased testing of dust suppressant products within the industry. “Until industry standards for testing fugitive-dust emissions are implemented and repeated under controlled conditions, an element of doubt will continue to linger over the industry. Contractors are being forced to make decisions without knowledge of which products work best under the conditions at hand.”

One of the places where Soil-Sement is in use today is Mesa, AZ. Larry Tucker is a transportation supervisor for the city, which has a population of 450,000. With an annual rainfall of approximately 7 inches, which tends to fall in about five separate rains, the city of Mesa is dry and dusty. And keeping up with the Air Quality Particulate Standard set by the Arizona Department of Air Quality is a regular, ongoing task.

“We’ve increased our street sweeping in the last five years,” Tucker says. “We sweep regularly on major streets, on streets beside freeways, and on any street beside a dirt lot.”

Tucker says the City of Mesa no longer allows parking or activity of any kind on an untreated lot or surface—for example, an unpaved parking lot. “We have to coat those areas with a soil palliative or with recycled asphalt.”

Unpaved road shoulders pose another challenge for the city. Unless there is a curb or gutter, the area must be treated. “We shoot Soil-Sement over unpaved shoulders, all 32 miles of them,” Tucker says, adding that the entire treatment process costs the City of Mesa approximately $150,000 a year.

The city has been using Soil-Sement for four or five years, according to Tucker. He says it is faster and easier to apply than recycled asphalt or a rock product such as an aggregate-based course. Tucker says Soil-Sement costs less than an aggregate but must be applied frequently, as often as once a year in an area without traffic. “We’re more likely to use it on dirt lots and shoulders.”

Photo: EarthCare Consultants
Product sampling in Mohave County, AZ

Glenn Gagnon, sales operations foreman for Mesa, oversees crews in charge of grading, rights of way, drainage ditches, and retaining and catch basins. He says the city has used many other products but prefers Soil-Sement. “It’ll last about a year,” he says. “We couldn’t get that life out of the others.” Gagnon says the city has tried lignite sulfide, “a smelly brown product”; calcium chloride; various resinous products; and a variety of polymers.

The product, which Gagnon says “smells and looks like Elmer’s glue,” is shot out of a distribution truck, making it relatively easy to apply.

Dust abatement is a “big deal” in Mesa, according to Tucker. “We’re always on the border of compliance,” he says, referring to air-quality standards that limit dust to 10 parts per million.

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There is only 1 mile of dirt road in all of Mesa, so the main areas of concern are those where traffic is not the main issue. “Every temporary parking lot or construction site must have a water truck and a sweeper, and those areas are swept at least once daily,” Tucker says. “In a high-traffic area like a freeway, you’ll see a fleet of sweepers. We don’t have much wind, but there’s a particulate problem if there’s any wind at all.

“We’re out there all the time,” he adds, “at least 165 days a year.” Next Page >

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