We manage energy project development, environmental permitting, remediation and compliance, insustrial hygiene, health & safety, auditing, environmental management, government relations. We solve your problems in all of these areas. We move quickly and dig deeply to reach your goals. We work wherever you are.
How can SMG help you?
SMG POV
With the polar vortex causing relentless snowstorms this winter, cities across the country are running out of road salt. Road salt which is basically the same salt that we eat is the most inexpensive way to melt the snow. Although a potential lifesaver for everyone on the road, it can be detrimental to environment. More than 22 million tons of road salt used nationwide each year doesn’t just disappear after the snow melts. Salt water runoff ends up in rivers and streams, thereby gradually increasing salt concentrations in waterways and groundwater. The salt can dehydrate roadside plants, kill aquatic life, cause rusting of vehicles, result in corrosion of roads and irritate animals’ paws.
The good news is that increasing awareness regarding environmental concerns forces agencies across the country to seek smarter techniques to minimize the use of road salt while achieving the same performance. Municipalities are using smart plow trucks equipped with computers that track storm conditions, pavement temperatures, and local weather to determine the optimal amount of salt needed. Other strategies include spraying wet salt, which keeps the salt from slipping off the road, and pre spraying before a storm. Other potential options include mixing the road salt with chemicals such as magnesium chloride, potassium acetate as well as inexpensive materials such as gravel, pumice, sand, molasses, beet juice, and cheese brine. Improved deicing techniques such as heaters embedded in road surface, pervious pavement surface which can soak the snow right through, improvement in road design that reduces runoff are being developed.
FEATURED PROJECT
PROBLEM
A local company engaged in manufacturing imported a small amount of a chemical substance defined under TSCA. Faced with a potential EPA enforcement action with penalties assessed for noncompliance under TSCA of up to $32,500 per day per violation, the company called SMG for help.
SMG'S APPROACH
SMG analyzed the company’s current TSCA procedures and assisted the company in developing a proactive, cost-effective compliance procedure. SMG also facilitated a training program to educate employees about TSCA.
MG worked with the company to develop mechanisms that assured adherence with the policies that were being implemented for compliance. Procedures to promptly correct any potential violations and prevent future violations were also put into place.
RESULTS
SMG was able to show that the company complied with the relevant TSCA regulations and was improving their TSCA policies and procedures to assure that future issues were less likely to occur. The company was not subjected to the proposed penalties and now has mechanisms in place to maintain TSCA compliance.