This winter's traffic tie-ups from snowstorms and squalls have generated a loud refrain from metro-area drivers: "More salt!"
But researchers, public works officials, traffic experts and environmentalists are actually looking for ways to use less.
"People think they can have snowfall and not have to reduce their speeds," said Gene Merriam, a former DNR commissioner and now president of the Freshwater Society, which sponsored Thursday's 12th annual Road Salt Symposium in Chanhassen. "We have to change the culture."
About 175 people, many of them road officials in boots and reflective vests, attended the event at the Minnesota Landscape Arboretum. There, they heard about a Minnesota Pollution Control Agency study of 74 metro-area lakes, now in its third year, which has found that 28 of the lakes have excessive levels of chloride, most of it from road salt.
And because salt dissolves but does not degrade, and sinks instead of traveling on, those concentrations are only expected to increase if salt remains the primary de-icer in the metro area and around the state, said Brooke Asleson, project manager of the MPCA's Twin Cities Metro Area Chloride Study.
While salt hasn't compromised drinking-water quality or led to any human illnesses, rising concentrations are likely to disrupt annual water dynamics in lakes, affecting water quality and aquatic life, said Heinz Stefan, a professor of engineering at the University of Minnesota.
As a result, various state and local agencies aren't waiting for further study but are acting now to establish salt concentration standards for water bodies and developing strategies on reducing salt, Asleson said.
But that may not be easy. Northern cities rely on salt to keep roads and sidewalks safe. Last year, for example, the Minnesota Department of Transportation, which has been working to cut back on salt, used 267,860 tons of it and 2,544,466 gallons of salt brine on 12,000 miles of state highways and interstates. Cities and counties that maintain their own roads add to that volume.