Earlier this year I returned home to find my dirt road was in the process of being “maintained.”
I tried frantically to reach the road crew and ask that the loose dirt piled in the middle of my road be removed instead of spread out and left to blow.
It was too late.
Pennsylvania’s dirt roads are haunted by their legacy as oil and gas waste dumping facilities*.
For decades, rural dirt road residents were spoon-fed assurances that oil and gas wastewater, known as brine, would mitigate the horrendous dirt road dust issues.
We were told the more brine on the road, the better off we would be.
By 2016, dirt road residents in my township of Farmington, were gathering petitions pleading for the road spreading of brine to stop.
Signs saying ‘No Salt Brine, Please!” were springing up along properties.
Those that could stop the brine dumping, the Department of Environmental Protection and township officials, turned a deaf ear to residents.
The singular benefits to the oil and gas industry of cheap waste disposal and the convenience of road dumping production wastes anytime, anywhere, outweighed protests and concerns of dirt road residents held hostage by homes, mortgages and families.
Dirt road residents claimed brine road dumping made dirt roads even dustier.
Often dust would re-appear before a vac truck could finish its spreading run.
Over time we would learn this was scientifically true. Oil and gas wastewater caused chemical, mechanical and physical reactions that massively degraded dirt roads.
The slang term “brine” casts a wide net. It can be formation water, that salty mix most often talked about. But brine also contains a toxic brew of frack fluid, produced water and flowback.
There are fluids from well stimulation and acidization. There are waste fluids to be disposed of when wells are plugged.
Virtually anything that could be put in a vac truck got dumped on Pennsylvania’s dirt roads.
I needed to show that dumping oil and gas wastewater on dirt roads did not suppress road dust.
In 2018, road spreading was halted in many areas of Pennsylvania as a result of a settlement of an Environmental Hearing Board appeal with DEP’s Oil and Gas Program. [Read more here.]
Decades of oil and gas wastewater dumping had turned our township roads orange. Dust clouds produced by traffic were orange tinged.
Dust can injure.
On U.S. Environmental Protection Agency websites there are a number of exposure routes or ways dust contaminants can injure populations or individuals.
Human dust exposure can be by ingestion such as drinking polluted groundwater or eating garden vegetables.
Dust exposure can be dermal, the settling dust making contact with skin, clothes, furniture.
Exposure is oral or by inhalation affecting the lungs or sinuses.
Dust, or worse, brine laden dust, can lodge deep in the airways, making its way from there into the bloodstream.
Dirt roads need to be maintained. Road dirt fills ditches, potholes develop in the traveling surface.
Historically, townships-- like my own-- have used large graders to reclaim this dirt. The grader blade is angled so ditch dirt is pulled to the center of the road.
This disturbed dirt forms a triangular mound of loose dirt that snakes continuously down the entire length of the road.
Next, it gets flattened by a return trip of the grader.
Townships finish the job by making four or more passes with a York rake.
Left behind, covering the entire road surface, are inches of fluffy dirt that a kitchen broom can turn into choking dust.
Penn State says: “Fugitive dust emissions from dirt and gravel roads are the largest source of particulate matter less than 10 microns (PM10) in the United States.” [Eck, Evaluating Dust Suppressant and ]
Google says Pennsylvania has approximately 17,500 miles of dirt roads that have to be maintained by townships.
Lack of tax dollars means rural townships use the cheapest and easiest method to maintain dirt roads.
For dirt road residents, the dust issue is grim and complicated and leaves them begging for dust control.
The type of road maintenance practices that created the excessive dust also created the platform that allowed the oil and gas industry to commandeer dirt roads as waste disposal sites.
Often the practice was aided by township officials many of whom had connections to the oil and gas industry themselves.
All this was overseen and condoned by the demonstrably pro-oil Department of Environmental Protection.
Although in truth, the regulatory agency had few options to offer either side.
Often, the legislation needed to permit toxic waste disposal on dirt roads seemed to be no further than a campaign contribution away.
The fight over using dirt roads again for disposal of oil and gas wastewater is not over.
The oil and gas industry is moving steadily forward looking for a path to resume this deadly practice of road spreading their production wastes.
The pictures I took in 2017 show the orange, contaminant-filled respirable dust that is airborne when dirt roads are allowed to be brined.
Six years later, the 2023 pictures show the same quantity of respirable dust, but the roads are not brined or treated.
The color shows most of the oil and gas wastewater has been blown or leached out of the respirable dust stream
The difference is, we residents are no longer eating, wearing or inhaling unimaginable amounts of oil and gas wastewater.
The medical websites say humans breathe between 12 and 28 times a minute. We take over 20,000 breaths a day.
It is inconceivable that once again legislators, the township officials, the Department of Environmental Protection and even the oil and gas industry would again allow the dust stream that dirt road residents must coexist with to be laden with deadly, toxic, ruinous brine.
(Photos: These are Farmington Township dirt roads in Warren County. Top: 2017: Telltale orange road surface where oil and gas brine has been repeatedly dumped. Dust returning 2-5 hours later. Bottom: 2023: No oil and gas brine for several years but normal township rural dirt road maintenance leaving loose surface dirt that erodes and blows. Because of typical dirt road maintenance practices, no improvement of dust issues - courtesy of Siri Lawson.)
Resource Links:
-- *Note: DEP adopted regulations banning the road dumping of unconventional shale gas wastewater on roads in 2016. Wastewater from conventional oil and gas wells could still be dumped on dirt and gravel roads if they meet the requirements of the Residual Waste Regulations. So far, no operators have, but the practice has not been banned for conventional drillers and is still happening. [Read more here.]
-- Penn State’s Center for Dirt and Gravel Road Studies Field Guide for Environmentally Sensitive Maintenance of Unpaved Roads
-- Typical Road Dumping: The typical road dumping of oil and gas wastewater on dirt roads involves a vac truck making three or more passes on each section of road using a combination of an open value on the back of the truck and then a blanket pass with a homemade spreader bar that offers no control on the amount of brine spread.
There are no state standards restricting the amount of wastewater that can be dumped on roads, no setbacks from streams or wetlands to avoid contamination and no requirements for testing the wastewater before it is disposed of in this way. Read more here.
See Photos Here - Read more here. See Photos Here - Read more here.
Related Articles - Siri Lawson:
-- Op-Ed: Why Is the General Assembly About To Hurt Us By Authorizing Road Dumping Of Oil & Gas Wastewater? - By Siri Lawson [PaEN]
-- Op-Ed: Will Our Dirt Roads Again Be Used As Dumping Sites For Oil & Gas Well Wastewater - By Siri Lawson [PaEN]
-- Op-Ed: The Story Behind Stopping Conventional Oil & Gas Brine Spreading On Dirt Roads - By Siri Lawson [PaEN]
-- Environmental Health Project - Part 1: Personal Narrative Of Environmental, Health Impacts From Oil & Gas Drilling On Siri Lawson, Warren County [PaEN]
-- Environmental Health Project - Part II: Personal Narrative Of Environmental, Health Impacts From Oil & Gas Drilling On Siri Lawson, Warren County [PaEN]
PA Oil & Gas Industry Public Notice Dashboards:
-- DEP Investigates Conventional Oil Well Wastewater Leak As Possible Source Of Village Of Reno Water Supply Contamination In Venango County; Customers Under Do Not Consume Advisory For 2 Weeks+ [PaEN]
-- Pennsylvania Oil & Gas Weekly Compliance Dashboard - July 29 to August 4; More Abandoned, Leaking Wells, Reno Water Supply Contamination; Rager Mtn. Natural Gas Storage Area Spills [PaEN]
-- PA Oil & Gas Industrial Facilities: Permit Notices/Opportunities To Comment - August 5 [PaEN]
-- DEP Posts 75 Pages Of Permit-Related Notices In August 5 PA Bulletin [PaEN]
NewsClips This Week:
-- TribLive: Olympus Energy Submits Application To DEP For 5th Shale Gas Well Pad In Upper Burrell Twp
-- Post-Gazette - Anya Litvak: PUC Approves $990,000 Penalty Settlement With Columbia Gas Over 2019 House Explosion In Washington County
-- Post-Gazette - Anya Litvak: Negotiating Community Benefits, Like Those With Shell Petrochemical Plant Penalty Fund In Beaver County, Takes A Village; So Does Mitigating Harm
-- Pittsburgh Business Times: Equitrans Gets FERC Approval For New Ohio Valley Connector Expansion Pipeline Project To Gulf Coast And Midwest
-- The Center Square: 14 State Attorneys General [Including PA] Want Action On ‘Plastic Pollution Crisis’
Related Articles This Week:
-- New Penn State Study: Brine Water Pumped From Played-Out Conventional Oil & Gas Wells And Used As Dust Suppressants, Winter Road Treatments Exceed Environmental, Health Standards, Just Like Conventional Oil & Gas Brine Water [PaEN]
-- Guest Essay: Take A Deep Breath! Now Think What You Just Inhaled. If You Live Along A Dirt Road You Could Be Inhaling Oil & Gas Wastewater - By Siri Lawson, Warren County [PaEN]
-- DEP Publishes Final Chapter 105 Environmental Assessment Alternatives Analysis Technical Guidance [PaEN]
-- DEP Sets Sept. 19 Meeting/Hearing On Air Permit For Expansion Of Marcus Hook Terminal’s Ethane Chilling Capacity In Delaware County [PaEN]
-- DEP Invites Comments On Section 401 Water Quality Certification For Equitrans To Replace Abandoned Natural Gas Storage Wells In Greene County Due To Coal Mining [PaEN]
-- Environmental Health Project: Shale Gas Development And Cancer Fact Sheet
-- Eureka Resources Extracted 97% Pure Lithium Carbonate Used In Making Lithium-ion Batteries From Oil & Gas Wastewater [PaEN]
-- PA Attorney General Henry Joins Coalition Calling For Stronger Federal Strategy To Fight Plastic Pollution Crisis [PaEN]
[Posted: August 2, 2023] PA Environment Digest
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