To spread on icy highways, no less.  And then 
where does it go? 
 
As the slogan says, "Don't Frack With Our 
Water"!
 
See below.
 
----- Original Message ----- 
Sent: Sunday, August 15, 2010 9:26 AM
Subject: Insane !
This 
is insane ! DOH to spread fluid laced with know cancer causing agents on roads 
to deice in Winter! Spreading the toxins across the landscape to enter our 
rivers and water supply ..... This stuff is what killed all in Dunkard Creek 
months back ......  This only aides the gas drillers .  in trying to 
solve the problem of where to Fracking fluid will go . Now we know.. THere is 
only one official Fracking water treatment plant in the state and thats in the 
Northern panhandle!    Joes a  gas man .....
August 13, 2010 
 
State to use gas-well brine on winter 
roads 
 
By The Associated Press 
 
CHARLESTON, W.Va. -- Salty wastewater from natural-gas 
wells may end up on West Virginia 
roads this winter under a new agreement between the state 
departments of Environmental 
Protection and Transportation. 
 
The agreement to let highway crews use the brine to treat 
snow- and ice-coated roads establishes 
new limits for pH, iron, barium, lead, oil and grease, 
benzene and ethylbenzene. 
DOT spokesman Brent Walker said the brine can also be 
mixed with rock salt to prevent clumping 
or sprayed on roads before 
precipitation. 
 
The Division of Highways will take bids for brine 
supply and is hoping to pay about 5 cents a 
gallon, Walker said. It plans to distribute about 
1.2 million gallons to 123 sites around the state to 
start the season. 
 
Highway crews had been relying on brine made with rock 
salt mined from the Great Lakes region. 
"That ended up containing a fair amount of soil, and with 
that you get iron and other metals," said 
Scott Mandirola, head of the DEP's Division of Water and 
Waste Management. "It was going 
relatively unchecked. We sat down and looked at some specs 
and came up with some limits that 
were better than the quality of what was currently being 
used." 
 
Mandirola said some of the brine could run off into state 
waterways -- but that's always happened, 
and deicing is necessary for public 
safety. 
 
"What we came up with here is equal to or better than 
what's been happening," he said. 
 
The brine will come from producing wells, Mandirola said, 
not from the hydraulic fracturing of 
Marcellus Shale wells. That fluid, used 
in unconventional horizontal drilling, contains additives 
that make it thicker and slicker. 
 
That fracking water also could contain naturally occurring 
radioactive material, which Mandirola 
said has been found in some spots in 
Pennsylvania.