The Day

Why our roads are covered with snow

- DAVID COLLINS d.collins@theday.com

Driving home from Boston Saturday, through the tail end of the day’s slight snowstorm, I couldn’t help but notice the significan­t difference between the plowed state of roads in Connecticu­t compared to Massachuse­tts and Rhode Island.

Indeed, passing over the Connecticu­t border on Interstate 95 was like crossing into a different climate, from wet and bare roads to ones covered with a fair amount of light and drifting snow.

My first thought was to make yet another unflatteri­ng comparison between Connecticu­t and Rhode Island, the little state to our east that seems to be able to do everything we can’t here, from solving its pension crisis and taxing interstate trucking to ponying up college tuition assistance.

This widening divide in the prospects of the two neighborin­g states couldn’t be more obvious in Stonington, where crossing the border from the busy Westerly downtown into near-blighted Pawcatuck, with all its vacant storefront­s, is more like arriving in a different country than another state.

It doesen’t seem that long ago that it almost seemed the other way around, from rich Connecticu­t to poor Rhode Island.

They are even better in Rhode Island at snow removal in a storm, it looked to me Saturday night, as I gripped the wheel a little tighter after arriving in Connecticu­t.

It turns out, though, that the difference between the condition of the roads in Connecticu­t and its neighborin­g New England states is apparently by design, not haphazard or the result of neglect or budget cuts.

Indeed, a spokesman for the state Department of Transporta­tion told me this week that Connecticu­t limits its use of salt on the roads to 200 pounds per lane mile, which turns out to be as much as less than half what some other states use.

Keven Nursick, DOT spokesman, said this formula, which is firmly establishe­d as Connecticu­t’s official storm response, is based on scientific analysis. The only chemical upgrade occurs when it is very cold, and another gallon of liquid magnesium chloride is added.

The effect of this modest treatment is that there indeed may be snow remaining on the road in the midst of a snowstorm, Nursick said. The goal is not to get down to wet and bare pavement.

Rather, Connecticu­t is trying to achieve a balance between clearing roads and protecting road infrastruc­ture and nearby watercours­es. The lower salt mix should also spare cars and trucks

from additional corrosive exposures.

And so, Nursick assured me, it should come as no surprise that motorists in a snowstorm will find more snow-covered roads as they arrive in Connecticu­t, which apparently is more environmen­tally sensitive in its snowstorm response.

For Thursday’s storm there won’t likely be pre-treatment, because there is already so much material on the roads, in place for when the storm comes, he said.

The difference between Connecticu­t roads and those in other states has nothing to do with budgets or the amount of manpower the state is devoting to the storms, he said.

I’m glad to know that, I suppose. I am certainly glad to know that the difference between cleared roads in Rhode Island and Massachuse­tts and snow-covered ones in Connecticu­t is evidently at least by design, with a higher purpose, like cleaner water.

If only Connecticu­t could take such a high-minded and purposeful approach to solving its pension crisis, or filling all those empty storefront­s in Pawcatuck.

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