I used to think March 1st meant Spring was around the corner. This year it means Winter is just getting warmed up. Last week’s blizzard followed by mid-week “flurries” convince me that May is a better hoped-for date for a reprieve.
Meantime let’s give credit to all
those who kept us moving in the worst of what Winter has had to throw at us.
ON THE RAILS: While some railroads (like NJ
Transit and the LIRR) “temporarily suspended most service” (i.e.
shut down) before or during the blizzard, Metro-North kept chugging along,
albeit on a reduced schedule. Amtrak
kept the Northeast Corridor technically open which in a blizzard counts as a
small miracle. Understandably, people
were warned to stay off the roads, but if travel was absolutely necessary the
train could get you there. So thank you
to the crews that worked tirelessly to keep the station platforms plowed, track
switches cleared and the trains still running.
ON THE ROADS: Here’s where the miracles happened. The faceless teams of plow operators and salters worked night and day reopening our interstates as quickly as possible. Even on Wednesday, with another brief storm, my drive along the coast on I-95 from Fairfield County to Rhode Island appeared clean and well plowed. I saw several conga-lines of plows clearing the travel lanes and shoulders and using bucket and dump-trucks to remove what remained.
Where does all that snow
go? Most is what they call “toss snow”, literally
tossed off to the side of the road. On
bridges and overpasses, giant snow blowers are called into action. In cities
like Hartford larger amount of snow are trucked to state property to await
melting.
But there was so much snow to
be removed this week that CT’s Department of Energy and Environmental
Protection (DEEP) temporarily allowed
dumping in local rivers and even Long Island
Sound. That’s despite the fact that
plowed snow carries road salt (chlorides), sand, oil, tire particles, litter,
fertilizers, and other contaminants, which can degrade water quality, harm fish
and aquatic life.
Clean water is important. So
is clean pavement.
CDOT uses salt
brine to pretreat our highways, roughly the
equivalent of 100 pounds of salt per lane-mile in each direction, lowering the
freezing temperature of water to - 6 degrees F.
Years ago they used sand but abandoned that for environmental
reasons. Then come the plows and salt
trucks. 
Morton Salt mines
Understandably, rock salt is
in short
supply this year so it now costs over $80 a ton. Most comes from Morton
Salt’s mines in upstate NY while some is also imported by
the shipload from as far away as Chile.
In some states, fracking
brine (euphemistically called “produced water”) is
used for highway treatment. But that’s
banned in Connecticut due to its residual radioactivity.
All of these salty corrosives
aren’t good for your car, damaging the frame, underbody, brake and fuel lines,
suspension components, and fasteners. Rust never sleeps. That makes washing your
vehicle after a storm even more important… after, of course, removing
the ice and snow atop your vehicle lest it fly off at high
speed endangering other drivers.
CDOT had almost 650 trucks
clearing 10,000+ lane miles of state highways during the blizzard. In your town or city your local DPW cleared
the local roads. And in shoreline
communities like Madison the 22” of heavy, wet snow was still being cleared
days after the storm.
So effective were the CDOT
crews that Governor Ned Lamont later dispatched CDOT personnel (drivers and
mechanics) and equipment to Rhode Island and Massachusetts to assist in their
clean-up.
Thank you also to neighbors
who didn’t park their cars on local roads impeding plowing and then cleared their
sidewalks, incentivized by local
ordinances.
And then there are the private
plow operators whose long hours during and after the blizzard have made for a
lucrative if exhausting period of work.
The Winter of ‘26 isn’t done
with us yet. The crews will keep
plowing. We’ll keep salting. And come April we’ll all complain about
potholes instead.

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