67 percent reduction in road chlorides on caledon roads acieved in 8 years.

Author(s)
Muntz, H.
Year
Abstract

This submission documents dramatic progress in reducing the use of chlorides as Caledon manages dust and ice on its roads and streets. Caledon is a large rural municipality in Peel Region, within the Greater Toronto Area of Ontario. Beginning in 1996, a series of practices were introduced, primarily to reduce program costs, but also to reduce chlorides introduced to the roadside environment. The performance measure of kilograms of chlorides per capita (kg/cap/yr) is considered a fair measure: recognizing the influence of traffic, population, service expectations, and inflation. By 2002 a 67% overall reduction in road chlorides from the 1995 benchmark was achieved, down from 239 kg/capita/yr to 79. This was a nomination for the Transportation Association of Canada's Envronmental Achievement Award. For the covering abstract of the conference see ITRD number E211395.

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Publication

Library number
C 32398 (In: C 32338 CD-ROM) /15 /62 / ITRD E211391
Source

In: Transportation innovation – accelerating the pace : proceedings of the 2004 annual conference and exhibition of the Transportation Association of Canada TAC, Quebec City, QC, Canada, September 21-24, 2004, 11 p.

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