Author Topic: Fed regs keeping much needed rock salt on dock in Jersey.  (Read 283 times)

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Offline powderman

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Fed regs keeping much needed rock salt on dock in Jersey.
« on: February 18, 2014, 01:52:20 AM »
http://www.foxnews.com/politics/2014/02/18/new-jersey-juices-up-as-it-waits-for-federal-waiver-to-jones-act/
 
 New Jersey juices up as it waits for a federal waiver to Jones ActPublished February 18, 2014FoxNews.com            New Jersey Snow                   Jan. 26: A person with an umbrella crosses the street as snow falls in Belleville, N.J.AP New Jersey is in a pickle as a rule of the high seas shuts off the flow of salt to keep roads clear.
State officials are now being forced to turn to a briny pickle juice-like mixture as an alternative to deice the roads while racing to get a federal waiver that is currently holding up a 40,000 ton shipment of rock salt. The salt is sitting at a port in Maine, docked until New Jersey officials obtain a federal waiver. Once that is done, it will take two days to ship the load from Maine to Newark.
The shipment is being denied entry because it’s on a vessel that isn’t flying under a U.S. flag – a violation of the 1920 federal Maritime Act that requires shipments to arrive on a ship with goods traveling between two U.S. ports to be flying the American flag. The Jones Act also requires
 
New Jersey Transportation Commissioner Jim Simpson said during a radio interview that the nearest U.S. flagged vessel would take a month to deliver the shipment of salt.
"We've been going back and forth with the feds," Simpson said during the interview. "This is the kind of stuff we're dealing with. Even government, the federal government, gets in the way."
New Jersey Democratic Sens. Cory Booker and Bob Menendez have reached out to the U.S. Department of Homeland Security and the state Department of Transportation to resolve the matter quickly but have yet to obtain a waiver.
 
The state is slated for another round of icy winter weather today. Many cities and towns in northern New Jersey saw a foot or more of snow from last week’s nor’ester. Sussex County received 22 inches of snow. Many stretches of road remain coated in ice and slush.
For now, the state may be stuck using the pickle juice as it waits for the federal government to cut through the government red tape.
This isn’t the first time New Jersey has turned to the briny pickle juice-like mixture as a quick way to melt snow. In 2011, Bergen County’s 230 plows and salting vehicles were loaded up with juice, which costs about 7 cents a gallon compared to $63 a ton for salt.
 
For its part, the acidic combo may actually be better for the environment as a way to deice the roads. A study by Marquette University shows that while salting snowy roads can cut down on accidents up to 88 percent, sodium chloride stays in the ground, seeping into streams and eating into cars and concrete.
Still, the tangy yellow liquid is not the strangest way some states are dealing with the snow.
Calls to Menendez’s office and the Department of Homeland Security for comment were not immediately returned
Mr. Charles Glenn “Charlie” Nelson, age 73, of Payneville, KY passed away Thursday, October 14, 2021 at his residence. RIP Charlie, we'll will all miss you. GB

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