Friday, February 29, 2008
Town Bank, New Jersey Residents Concerned with Well Contamination
“For too many years the people of Town Bank have been pleading for good water,” said resident Bea Cassario.
She said Lower Township Municipal Utilities Authority (MUA) has been aware of water quality problems for years but failed to address the issue.
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California family sues Union Pacific rail yard for pollution impact
Plaintiffs Malia Benson, 29, and her husband Michael, 30, also allege airborne toxics stemming from the Roseville rail yard have substantially devalued their Fourth Street home, making it virtually impossible to sell.
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Tuesday, February 26, 2008
EPA to fund buyout of residents near Tar Creek Superfund site in Oklahoma
"This announcement marks landmark progress for the people living in the area of the Tar Creek Superfund site," Inhofe said.
"The EPA's latest remediation plan not only addresses necessary cleanup of soil and water contamination from chat piles and wastes at the site, it also announces the completion of voluntary relocation assistance for the residents living in the Tar Creek communities."
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American Environmental Group Offers Health Reports for Your Home
Developed by Environmental Data Resources, Inc. (EDR), the leading provider of environmental risk information, the comprehensive and easy to read reports are being offered to meet the growing demand for pre-purchase due diligence. The reports are generated from the largest collection of environmental records in the U.S. and provide important information on known and potential contamination that exists on or in the vicinity of a property.
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Tale of two toxic schools in New Jersey
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Volatile Solvent Found At Alarming Levels In Hamptons, New York Well
Robert and Irene Morsch live in a scenic nook of East Hampton along Kings Point Road, with Hog Creek running through their backyard, which is a stone’s throw from Gardiner’s Bay. About two months ago, Robert Morsch and his family began to detect the scent of acetone in the steam of their shower. Morsch promptly called the Health Department, and following chemical tests of the well water, found the volatile organic chemical one-propanol in the water at fifty times the safety level designated by the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA).
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Burst pipeline spills 80,000 gallons of heating oil in South Baltimore
The previously unreported oil spill came to light after Linda Stewart, proprietor of the Gaslight Tavern, started asking why local manholes were left uncovered.
Stewart says she is concerned about chemical contamination of the ground around her home and business and whether contaminated soils could cause her drinking water to become contaminated. "Both me and my husband have experienced burning eyes after getting out of the shower," she says.
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Tainted groundwater discovered in Torrance, California
Meanwhile, officials with the Los Angeles County Regional Water Quality Control Board have expanded the scope of an investigation, seeking evidence of possible chemical vapor intrusion to 10 homes in the area.
Those officials said the substances found are carcinogenic, but they do not yet know whether they exist in levels or in places that pose a threat to human health.
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Study links water pollution to cancer in Macomb County Michigan
The 400-page document prepared for the Centers for Disease Control studied 26 pollution hot spots across the Great Lakes and compared the prevalence of chemical contaminants in the waterways with an array of health problems: infant mortality, coronary heart disease, low birth weight babies and several types of cancer.
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Wednesday, February 20, 2008
California State law burdens unsuspecting residents with $250,000 cost to clean dump that was closed in 1953
State law requires the homeowners to pay for cleaning up the 2-acre site, even though the dump ceased operations in 1953 -- 30 years before their subdivision was built. The law holds only current owners responsible for cleaning up toxic sites to avoid costly investigations to determine who owned them and who contaminated them.
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Monday, February 18, 2008
Water beneath Watertown, Massachusetts preschool is contaminated
The Union Street property has recently been classified as a Tier II contaminate site after an environmental agency discovered dry cleaning solvent in the property’s groundwater.
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Nearby contamination has Indiana has residents concerned about their water
“It scares me because I’ve got my grandchildren living here. Nobody mentioned anything to us. You really don’t know what you’re drinking,” said Hendrix, who lives on North Fruitridge Avenue. “I just want to make sure everything is OK with our water and that it’s safe.”
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Green group spotlights toxic sites in Newark, New Jersey
But what might not occur to them and others, according to environmental officials, is that chemicals remain on the site, seeping into the soil or perhaps buried in it, and that asbestos may drift into the air every time a block of concrete is broken off and tossed in a pile of rubble.
Yesterday, a group of about 150 spent the morning touring some of the most environmentally blighted spots in Newark, and learning just how toxic they are.
Neighbors sue over rail yard pollution in Montana
The lawsuit, filed Jan. 24 in Lewis and Clark County District Court, alleges that BNSF is responsible for contaminating their yards and homes with diesel fuel, lead and other toxic substances by failing to contain and control hazardous materials at the Helena fueling station.
Many of the plaintiffs live or own property within a few hundred yards of the BNSF fueling station where, the suit alleges, the company dumped thousands of gallons of hazardous contaminants onto the ground. Those contaminants then migrated onto and under the plaintiffs' property, placing their "health, welfare and property values," in "serious jeopardy," according to the suit.
Saturday, February 16, 2008
Congressional committee probes killing of Great Lakes cancer report
n 2001, the International Joint Commission, a U.S.-Canadian organization that manages shared waterways and monitors pollution, requested a report that would look at the potential human health impact of environmental contamination in 26 "Areas of Concern" across the Great Lakes.
The Centers for Disease Control's Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease Registry began work on the study in 2002. The report concentrated on 11 pollutants known to damage human health and was intended to serve as a guide for further epidemiological study.
The committee charges that the report, "Public Health Implications of Hazardous Substances in the Twenty-Six U.S. Great Lakes Areas of Concern," had been peer-reviewed and was ready for release in July 2007 when the CDC abruptly canceled its publication.More . . .
Connecticut forum looks for contaminated sites
Armed with $400,000 in federal Environmental Protection Agency grants to assess different properties, Moore and environmental scientist Amy Czerwonka held a public information forum yesterday at police headquarters.
"There are tons of properties that were once gas stations, auto repair places and dry cleaners," Czerwonka said. "It doesn't mean that these properties have contamination but that they're potential brownfields due to their historic land use.
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Thursday, February 14, 2008
Hearing on TCE contaminated drinking water in Arizona
Commissioner Bill Mundell called for the fact-finding meeting following an incident in mid January, in which Arizona American imposed a three-day ban telling its customers not to use their tap water for drinking and preparing food.
The ban was in response to an incident in which concentrations of TCE, or trichloroethylene, exceeded federal standards by four times.
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Doubts persist about safety of Superfund site in Wildwood Missouri
A groundswell of opposition, however, persuaded the city to temporarily halt the project in December and to re-evaluate whether the land poses any danger.
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Tuesday, February 12, 2008
Residents of formerly contaminated area in New Jersey still waiting for DEP clearance to sell their homes
Their neighborhood became a touchstone of controversy a decade ago when it was discovered that contamination from the old plant had reached neighboring properties.
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Toxic cleanup fund empty; Michigan DEQ may seek statewide bond
Thousands of contaminated sites in the Saginaw Bay area and elsewhere will sit unaddressed until a new funding source is found, said DEQ Director Steven E. Chester.
"That's not good for public health and the environment and municipalities that want to reinvigorate contaminated areas in their community," Chester said.
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Center for Public Integrity posts portions disturbing—and purportedly suppressed—government report about environmental contamination
The scientific evidence supporting those links is only circumstantial—the report describes geographic patterns of contamination and disease but explicitly makes no claims about causes or effects. Nevertheless, the number of people who might be at risk is staggering: The 54 affected counties have more than 9 million residents, including 230,000 whom the report deems particularly "vulnerable."
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18 years later cleanup planned for Texas Superfund site
One of just a few Superfund sites in the Texas Panhandle and South Plains region, the Hockley County groundwater plume captured the attention of federal officials due to the severity of the contamination and proximity to public water sources.
"In this case, you have a pretty widespread effect on the Ogallala Aquifer," said Vince Malott, a remedial project manager with the EPA who is overseeing the site.
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Monday, February 11, 2008
Heating oil tanks endanger drinking water in Maine
Among contaminants likely to cause problems, the most prevalent is home heating fuel oil leaks from above ground storage tanks (AST) -- an average of 1.4 spills per day.
There are 27 public drinking water supplies with at least one AST oil facility (not including home heating oil tanks) within the so-called public wellhead protection area. Another 157 supplies have ASTs within 1,000 feet of a public well. Many more ASTs are located in close proximity to private wells.
The risks to drinking water are as staggering as the costs for remediation are high.
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New York State Assemblywoman Catherine Nolan Wants State to Make Info on Toxic Sites Available to Residents
Nolan said the state's Department of Environmental Conservation typically issues fact sheets about the investigation and clean-up of toxic sites in Queens but was concerned that most borough residents were not aware of their existence.
"The bottom line is, if I were living in or near a building where toxic waste was found, I would want to know immediately what the consequences were for my family and what the state planned to do to protect me," she said. "It is imperative that we go beyond fact sheets and really publicize this information in a responsible manner."
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Friday, February 8, 2008
Tainted wells have Indiana residents concerned
She stopped serving children well water as soon as she learned about an issue with groundwater contamination, and on Wednesday, she had her well privately tested.
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Neighbors of contaminated industrial site in York South Carolina worried about the safety of their well water and families' health
Both deep and shallow groundwater have been contaminated, as well as soil under the building, DHEC project manager Angie Jones said.
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Thursday, February 7, 2008
More New York property owners join contamination lawsuit against IBM
The 82-page document representing 151 property owners and residents was filed electronically late Friday afternoon by Philip Johnson, an attorney with the Vestal law firm of Levene Gouldin & Thompson. Johnson is part of a team of seven law firms representing more than 1,000 clients in the massive toxic tort case against IBM seeking more than $100 million in damages for a range of hardships related to the pollution. They include cancer and other illnesses, property devaluation, loss of business, medical expenses and related monitoring, and hassles of dealing with the pollution.
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Ongoing oil release in Shenandoah Pennsylvania
“This has been going on for several years and DEP requested an off-site well,” Olives said. “Levels were found to be slightly elevated and we are taking a look at the problem to ensure it is not coming from our site.”
“We believe there are underground storage tanks on the property and we are working to determine if there could be a potential problem,” Mark Carmon, DEP community relations spokesman, said. “There is no cause for concern that we are aware of at this point.”
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Real Estate Agents to learn about contamination issues as part of Certified Neighborhood Specialist designation
RealtyU(R) offers educational services to an estimated one-in-five realestate professionals every year. In 2007 the Certified NeighborhoodSpecialist (CNS) program was created to help real estate agents across theU.S. become experts of their chosen areas to better serve homebuyers andsellers with community specific issues, local builder information,demographics, and future building projects, among other topics.
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Contaminated wells lead Indiana city to hire attorney
So far, seven residences with wells have tested high for perchloroethylene, an industrial cleaning solvent. That includes two new sites, based on recent water sampling. Also, several of those that tested high previously now show even higher levels of PCE.
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Tuesday, February 5, 2008
Contamination forces New Jersey couple from home
They said they were forced to leave their dream home because the land is contaminated with heating oil.
The family said fumes are making them sick at their home on North Carolina Trail in Pemberton. And the well water has been deemed unsafe to drink.
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Monday, February 4, 2008
Group concerned with heightened cancer and chronic illness in two Texas communities looking closely at groundwater contamination
After water quality is examined, the group known as Concerned Citizens of Zavalla intends to look at potential air pollution and soil contamination. The group agreed water quality was the easiest place to start.
While state and city officials oversee testing, the group is focused on compiling a local database of all cancer cases known in the area based on surveys they have disseminated to the public.
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Montana residents take power companies to court over well contamination and other issues
More than one Colstrip resident used those words to describe well water in their hometown. And they point their fingers at the Colstrip Steam Electric Station, alleging that the plant's discharge ponds are the source of the contamination.
The lawsuit, filed in 2003, was driven by two key complaints. Plaintiffs claim the plant's freshwater source, Castle Rock Lake, has leaked so much that it raised the water level under the town, leading to uneven settling and structural damage.
They also claim that the plant's discharge ponds have also leaked, sending a plume of contamination north of town into the nearby B&R Subdivision, down to the golf course and even into Armell Creek, which drains into the Yellowstone River, 30 miles distant.
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Pollution notification bill to get another chance in Albany, New York
The latest incarnation of the bill, sponsored by Assemblywoman Donna Lupardo, D-Endwell, is being drafted with help from the office of Gov. Eliot Spitzer, Lupardo said Friday. Spitzer supports the intention of the bill but vetoed it last August, saying it was not comprehensive enough and in some instances too vague.
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2.7 million gallons of sewage spill into Richardson Bay in Marin California
The sewage, enough to fill 100 backyard swimming pools, was partially treated, having been filtered of most solids. But it was not disinfected with chlorine, allowing bacteria to float into the bay.
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Friday, February 1, 2008
Minnesota homes to be screened for vapor intrusion
The study area includes approximately 300 properties near the intersection of Highway 7 and Wooddale Avenue.
The study was prompted by the discovery of vapors from volatile organic compounds, or VOCs, in area ground water samples. The VOCs have not affected local drinking water supplies but vapors could potentially rise through soil into buildings through basements and foundation cracks. EPA is working in partnership with St. Louis Park, Hennepin County, Minnesota Pollution Control Agency and Minnesota Department of Health. The purpose of the study is to thoroughly investigate the situation and confirm that there is no immediate health concern.
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FDA study finds that three quarters of nearly 300 commonly consumed foods and beverages are contaminated with perchlorate
According to FDA's analysis of 285 foods, every day, the average two-year-old will be exposed to more than half of the EPA's safe dose of perchlorate from food alone. Children are also exposed to perchlorate in contaminated tap water, in at least 28 states.
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