Salt Lake City airport crews work 24/7 to clear snow from runways


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SALT LAKE CITY — With more snow ahead of another holiday weekend, the Salt Lake City International Airport has more than 100 maintenance and operations crew members working around the clock to ensure planes can land and take off safely.

"We run five different snow crews. We run three on our taxiways and runways taking care of those. We run another crew on our ramp aprons and another crew on our roadways" said David Tingey, airfield maintenance operations support manager at the airport.

Since last Saturday, crews have been working on pretreating and then plowing all the snow that has moved in.

Maintenance typically starts with pretreatment made up of a special chemical approved by the Federal Aviation Administration.

"We can't use salt anywhere that an airplane works or operates," Tingey said. "Our main chemical is going to be a liquid potassium acetate. Then we also use dry chemical, which is either sodium format or sodium acetate mixed in with attraction sand, and that together works fairly well."

When storms move in and snow collects on the ground, drivers managing the snowplows and snowblowers are deployed.

Snowplows move in first, pushing snow off of runways, taxiways and other areas. Plows are made with special rubber and plastic blades to protect lighting that's in the pavement.

A warehouse stores some of the chemicals used to pretreat the runways when winter storms move in at Salt Lake International Airport.
A warehouse stores some of the chemicals used to pretreat the runways when winter storms move in at Salt Lake International Airport. (Photo: Aubrey Shafer, KSL-TV)

Snowblowers then shoot the snow off to open fields and Mother Nature takes over, leaving the snow to melt.

Finally, large trucks carrying steel-bristle brooms and air blowers move in to remove anything that can damage an aircraft.

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When crews aren't moving all that heavy machinery, the equipment is being cleaned or checked for any maintenance issues.

While these crews do much more, those steps are repeated as needed, and even more so as another storm is expected to hit the Wasatch Front.

"The crews here at the airport are very dedicated, very talented, and they really want to do a good job, take a lot of pride in what they do. They want to get you out of here on time, but they want you to be safe, first and foremost. So if you see a delay or you wonder why something isn't happening, it's because safety first," Tingey said.

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Brianna Chavez, KSLBrianna Chavez
Brianna Chavez joined the KSL news team as a reporter in July of 2023. She comes to the Beehive State after working for five years in her hometown of El Paso, Texas.

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