Albany Times Union

Salt study scaled back

DOT may now keep some data from public

- By Ry Rivard

Are lawmakers bowing to risks of lawsuits from residents with unsafe water?

State lawmakers recently scaled back a study of road salt pollution in the Adirondack­s, apparently bowing to concerns that the study could expose the state to liability from residents with unsafe water.

Late last year, Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo signed a law that would require the state to form a task force to examine the effects of road salt pollution in the Adirondack­s. Each year, the state dumps millions of pounds of salt on roads to keep them clear of ice and snow.

Some of that salt has seeped into North Country drinking water supplies, made water unsafe to use and threatened people with financial ruin, the Adirondack Explorer has reported over the past year.

The governor’s approval of a study of that damage came with caveats.

The original law focused on creating a task force to study the runoff from state Department of Transporta­tion salt trucks and required the department to turn over 20 years of data that, in turn, could become public.

In a memo accompanyi­ng his signature in December, the governor worried the study ignored other sources of salt runoff and could endanger drivers with mandates that didn’t take public safety into account.

A bill to quietly amend the law was introduced in early January and signed by the governor in mid-february.

The amended law addresses the governor’s concerns, but also adds language that protects DOT from making public informatio­n that could be used against it in court. Now, transporta­tion officials don’t have to turn over as many records to the task force about salt use, and the informatio­n they do provide about how much salt they use “shall not be redisclose­d” without the consent of department officials.

“It all boils down to liability,” said Brittany Christenso­n, the executive director of Adkaction, one of the environmen­tal groups involved in lobbying for a salt study.

The state is already largely insulated from liability for salt damage because the salt is put on roads each winter to prevent other problems, namely traffic accidents, and it’s been hard for alleged victims to afford the outside experts and attorneys necessary to challenge the state in court.

One rough estimate, by the team of Virginia Tech researcher­s who helped uncover the water crisis in Flint, Mich., found nearly 500,000 New Yorkers drink from wells that could be contaminat­ed by salt, though the researcher­s admitted that analysis was on the high end.

But the cases that do land can be expensive for the state. A handful of out-of-court settlement­s related to salt dumped or stored in the past 20 years have cost DOT more than $100,000, according to records the department recently provided to the Explorer. Late last year, a judge found salt runoff from the New York State Thruway Authority damaged a Finger Lakes farm, causing $91,000 in damage the state must pay for.

DOT officials wanted changes to the study because they felt the original law unfairly singled out salt put down by the department. Local government­s and even private owners of large paved areas also use lots of salt to clear local roads, parking lots and sidewalks. The law now requires the task force to study that damage, as well.

DOT spokesman Joseph Morrissey said the new measure is “strong legislatio­n that facilitate­s partnershi­ps with local officials and can only help strengthen NYS DOT’S position as a national leader in the safe and balanced applicatio­n of road salt in the North Country and across New York.”

State Assemblyma­n Bill Jones, who sponsored this year’s amendment, said it deals “more holistical­ly” with the salt problem.

“These changes stem from negotiatio­ns with the governor, who supported expanding the scope of the task force and developing a program within the realities of the state’s budget deficit,” he said in a statement.

Jones said he expects full transparen­cy from the state, particular­ly on matters relating to public health and environmen­tal protection.

Christenso­n and others are still supportive of the study. She said some of the amendments to the law make sense, including the explicit call for local leaders and scientists to be on the task force, which has yet to be named.

The state transporta­tion department is also already working on pilot projects in and around Lake Placid and Lake George that will examine whether it can safely use less salt.

The new law calls for other state testing areas elsewhere in the park, depending on the availabili­ty of money from the state.

Some local highway department­s are moving more quickly to curb salt use. Warren County’s public works department, for instance, is already treating 100 miles of roads with a saltwater brine and using more advanced plows that do a better job clearing roads.

This story originally appeared in the Adirondack Explorer, a news organizati­on dedicated to the promotion and protection of the Adirondack Park in Northern New York State.

 ?? Mike Lynch / Adirondack Explorer ?? A truck spreads salt on a highway in the Adirondack­s. A state study of road salt pollution was amended to keep data from becoming public.
Mike Lynch / Adirondack Explorer A truck spreads salt on a highway in the Adirondack­s. A state study of road salt pollution was amended to keep data from becoming public.

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