Dayton Daily News

Salinity in water table concerns area experts

Road salt cited among reasons for increase of salt in drinking water.

- By Eileen McClory Staff Writer

— There’s more salt in DAYTON many local sources of drinking water now compared to 40 years ago, according to monitoring done by the Ohio Environmen­tal Protection Agency, the Hamilton to New Baltimore Groundwate­r Consortium, the U.S. Geological Survey and the Miami Conservanc­y District.

Experts said the water is still safe, but it’s the long-term effect of salt in the water that has them concerned.

They say elevated saline levels could affect the health of fish and plants in local rivers, could corrode water pipes, and someday could even release metals like lead into drinking water via that corrosion.

“It’s more something that we’re just looking at as a deviation from its normal background concentrat­ions, but not really at a level where it would cause health concerns at this point,” said Richard Stuck, source water manager at Greater Cincinnati Water Works, one of the authors on a blog post noting the increases.

After the four agencies surveyed 70 wells in the area, 39 of them showed increasing trends in sodium and chloride levels, or at least periodic detections of elevated levels, according to the Miami Conservanc­y District.

The reason the salinity of the water is rising is due at least in part to the amount of road salt used on highways and roads, the Miami Conservanc­y District says, adding that there are ways to change that.

“Once the snow melts from the salt, that really salty water is pretty corrosive to metals and we worry that’s a potential threat,” said Mike Ekberg, manager of water

resources monitoring and analysis at the Miami Conservanc­y District, who wrote about the increase in salt levels with Stuck.

What is increasing the salt levels?

Groundwate­r in the Miami Valley supplies water to an estimated 2.3 million people. The water that Miami Valley residents drink comes from the Great Miami Buried Aquifer. That aquifer is the water that moves between particles of dirt, stone and other earth undergroun­d.

Soil soaks up water from precipitat­ion and carries all the impurities that might have washed into the groundwate­r with it to the aquifer and to the many rivers in the region.

Most communitie­s in the Miami Valley use the aquifer as their source of drinking water. Even off-grid well water taps into the Great Miami Buried Aquifer.

The Ohio Department of Transporta­tion and other municipali­ties put a form of table salt on the roads to melt ice and snow in the winter. The salt people eat is in a more purified form.

When the snow melts, it brings the road salt with it into the soil, Ekberg said.

Among the other reasons cited for increased salt in groundwate­r were agricultur­al runoff and water softeners, with the agricultur­al issue more prominent in certain geographic areas.

Why is it harmful?

The water in the region is still safe for people to drink. But saltier water could cause problems in the water supply in the future, and could wreak havoc on the environmen­t, the experts said.

Groundwate­r provides roughly 50% of the water that flows in the Great Miami River during a typical year, according to the Miami Conservanc­y District. So as the salinity of groundwate­r rises, so does the salt level of the Great Miami River.

Many fish, insects and plants depend on the water in the Great Miami River, Ekberg said. Some of those creatures and plants need the water to stay below a certain salinity level, or they won’t be able to survive.

“There’s a concern there that if that groundwate­r gets more and more salient, eventually, do we start to impact the fish, the plant, the bug communitie­s that live in the river,” Ekberg said.

As for threats to human health, Ekberg and other scientists are concerned about the saltier water eroding the pipes in the region. Corrosive groundwate­r can attack the insides of pipes, which can release high levels of metals like lead into drinking water.

Ekberg said in Flint, Michigan, the city changed the source of the water, and the water moving through the pipes was more saline. The water corroded pipes and released lead into the drinking water.

If salt in the water is so bad, can’t we just filter it out?

Ekberg said it’s not that simple. The available technology to remove salt from the water is expensive and requires a lot of energy. It’s easier to avoid getting too much salt in the water than trying to remove it later.

What can we do?

The best practice is just to salt the roads less in areas with less traffic, Ekberg said.

On highways, it makes sense to use salt and make sure that cars can get down the interstate safely. But Ekberg said that not all the salt applied is on highways. Sometimes it’s on parking lots near soccer fields and other spaces that aren’t used as much in the winter.

Ekberg said municipali­ties could also consider using less salt overall, especially near well fields, the places where there are several wells and cities source their water. The Miami Conservanc­y District can work with municipali­ties on that, he said.

“I think there’s a lot of places in and around well fields in the Miami Valley where if we were honest with ourselves, we could get by with very much reduced applicatio­n or maybe we don’t even need to apply at all,” Ekberg said.

There are also new forms of treating roads that don’t require road salt, like cheese and pickle brine and de-sugared molasses.

Pre-treating roads with brine reduces the need for road salt.

The Consortium, a group of public water utilities and businesses that use groundwate­r in Butler County, reviewed and reduced the road salt applicatio­n rate at a large parking lot near a well field, something that the Miami Conservato­ry District said is considered a best practice.

Bruce Whitteberr­y, assistant superinten­dent of the Water Quality Improvemen­t Division at Cincinnati Waterworks, who is familiar with the research, said it’s not just the Miami Valley that is having issues with more saline water. Cities in northern Ohio, Minnesota and other northern U.S. states are also seeing more salt in their water. “This is something that cities and municipali­ties have been looking at, and have had issues with nationwide,” Whitteberr­y said.

 ?? MARSHALL / STAFF GORBY ?? The Mad River that runs by Huffman Metro Park is near one of the wells that experts believe has increased salinity.
MARSHALL / STAFF GORBY The Mad River that runs by Huffman Metro Park is near one of the wells that experts believe has increased salinity.
 ?? MARSHALL GORBY / STAFF ?? Salt trucks work Feb. 15, trying to keep roads from freezing on Col. Glenn Highway.
MARSHALL GORBY / STAFF Salt trucks work Feb. 15, trying to keep roads from freezing on Col. Glenn Highway.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States