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{{alert|We are in the process of creating this page and it therefore is undergoing formatting, which we hope to complete by the end of February, 2016. Other changes and updates to information on salt management will be posted in the [http://stormwater.pca.state.mn.us/index.php/What%27s_New What's new] page in the manual. Information on ''road salt and water quality'' can be found on [https://www.pca.state.mn.us/water/road-salt-and-water-quality MPCA's website]|alert-under-construction}}. | {{alert|We are in the process of creating this page and it therefore is undergoing formatting, which we hope to complete by the end of February, 2016. Other changes and updates to information on salt management will be posted in the [http://stormwater.pca.state.mn.us/index.php/What%27s_New What's new] page in the manual. Information on ''road salt and water quality'' can be found on [https://www.pca.state.mn.us/water/road-salt-and-water-quality MPCA's website]|alert-under-construction}}. | ||
− | In February 2005, a | + | In February 2005, a pollution prevention grant was secured to develop and test an education outreach program for local government and private applicators of road salt. The key objectives of the outreach were to: |
*develop best management practices (BMPs) for application of road salt; | *develop best management practices (BMPs) for application of road salt; |
.
In February 2005, a pollution prevention grant was secured to develop and test an education outreach program for local government and private applicators of road salt. The key objectives of the outreach were to:
The target of this training is private applicators. However, other interested parties and local government officials are also being trained. In this way local officials will be knowledgeable about the training that is going on in their city, can learn the newest techniques, and be in a position to continue training in their city. Also, cities have the opportunity at these training sessions to address the audience and cover any other environmental concerns affecting lakes and streams.
Audience: Contractors and staff maintaining private/public walkways and/or parking lots, property managers writing contracts, distributors of anti-icing/de-icing products, snowplow drivers— those who make it happen. Anyone else interested in reducing salt use.
Purpose: Through education and outreach, applicators of road salt can learn best practices and significantly reduce their use while maintaining road safety.
Why is it important? This class will help:
The following training schedule is changed periodically as training events are completed/added.
Because of the expanded training schedule, we no longer maintain the schedule in the stormwater manual. The training calendar can be accessed here.
Audience: Winter Maintenance Supervisors and Leadership
Purpose:
This is an organizational certification. This means a private or public entity. The organization can include one assessment submittal for the whole organization or multiple submittals for an organization as long as each submittal has a unique address. (i.e. the city of Medina, MNDOT’s Plymouth truck station, Ace Snow Removal west metro branch, or Johnson Lawn and Snow).
To become Smart Salting Level 2 certified an organization must:
Reports should include all of the surface type(s) in which you are involved, not a separate report for each surface type.
It does not matter what the reports say, you can have poor practice, and you may have increased salt use. Becoming Smart Salting Level 2 Certified does not require you or people from your organization to be Level 1 certified, recommended not required. You do not need to attend a Level 2 training to become Level 2 certified.
What will MPCA do for you?
Please note: The organization certification period will be indefinite as long as the organization updates and resubmits the Best Management Practices and Salt Savings reports. We are hoping for a shift in positive practices and salt savings, depending on where you are in your operations this may or may not be possible. You may want to comment on your situation. If you have any salt saving numbers from a change in practice, please share to help make the tool the best it can be.
File:Control point calibration.pdf
File:Open loop calibration.pdf
Note a 5 gallon bucket of salt weighs about 58 pounds.
Explanation. 100 pounds of material or approximately (1 ¾ buckets) of material in 30 seconds.
100 x 4 = 400 lbs per lane mile.
File:Roadsalt-calibratingmanualsanders.pdf
File:Roadsalt-calibrationdatarecord.pdf