Developing an effective and cost-efficient dust control program means accurately identifying and accounting for the true costs and savings of any new alternative. Many sites that implement constant watering practices believe that they have no cost associated to their program.
For unpaved roads, the costs can be grouped into the categories listed below:
Road Improvement Costs

Drainage improvements, geometric improvements, repairing of failed areas, excavation and removal of substandard material, and addition of surface material. (Note: These costs are not part of dust suppression program costs if they would be required anyway, without dust suppression.)

Surface Preparation Costs

Addition of select material (fines or coarse material), breaking up and loosening the road surface (scarifying), watering, shaping, and compacting.

Product Supply and Application Costs

Material cost, transportation cost, application cost, and contract supervisor cost

Miscellaneous Costs

Traffic control, detour, inspection, crew supervision, material storage (if inventory is maintained) and liability costs.
Dust program savings or benefits can be grouped as follows:Road Improvement Costs Avoided; these costs are avoided or reduced over time due to greater road stability and durability resulting from chemical treatment.
Road Maintenance and Repair Savings; these savings are due to less frequent regrading and less frequent need to add supplementary road materials. They accumulate due to reduced loss of gravel and fines, along with greater durability of the road surface.
Savings from Non-road and Off-site Benefits; these are the savings that accrue from the many dust control program benefits not specifically related to the road itself, i.e., human health, vehicle-related, and environmental.
Recommendations
Approach your dust control problem systematically, looking first at prevention options. Evaluate the cost of current practices and the potential cost of ignoring the issue.
Prepare a Dust Control Plan
Identify of all fugitive dust sources.

Identify all state, local, and federal regulations that may be applicable.

A description of the dust control method(s) to be used for each source.

A schedule, rate of application, calculation or some other means of identifying how often,
.....how much or when the control method is to be used.

Provisions for monitoring and record-keeping.

A backup plan in case the first control plan does not work or is in sufficient.

The name and phone number of the person responsible for making sure the plan is implemented
..... and who can be contacted in the event of a dust complaint.