Monday, March 31, 2008
Third toxic site found in Brighton, New York
The DEC recently announced that 235 Metro Park — which is sandwiched between East and West Henrietta roads and Brighton-Henrietta Town Line Road to the south —tested positive for traces of tetrachloroethene (PCE) and trichloroethene (TCE).
The state’s biggest concern at the site is soil vapor intrusion, which happens when a toxin moves from the soil to the indoor air of buildings. Air quality equipment has been installed at the other two toxic sites to address the same problem.
More . . .
Virginia landfill added to EPA Superfund list
Carcinogen trichloroethylene was discovered in wells surrounding the Hidden Lane landfill in 1988. Hidden Lane, an unlined landfill, was closed by the county in 1984. Testing in the Broad Run Farms community north of Rt. 7, which borders the landfill first began five years after the closing when local residents complained about the site. By 2005, 67 wells had been tested and 25 that tested positive for contamination had water filtration systems installed with help from the Virginia Department of Environmental Quality.
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Toxic discovery at Tacoma, Washington home
John and Heather Jones, who were renting the home, were prepared to move out the minute they were told the property was contaminated. They could never have been prepared what happened next: Their children were diagnosed with lead poisoning.
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Philadelphia site added to Superfund list
The EPA announced Wednesday that the former electroplating facility and metal processing plant was added to the list of places nationwide where conditions could pose a threat to the environment or public health.
Adding Chem-Fab to the list clears up uncertainty about who pays for the cleanup. Though the federal agency now plans to oversee the process, the people deemed responsible for the contamination are expected to foot the bill, said EPA spokesman Roy Seneca. If that doesn’t pan out, the EPA covers the cost.
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Wednesday, March 26, 2008
Meth Lab Residue in Homes Triggers Litigation
First it was toxic mold. Now it's meth residue.
Property owners are battling a new breed of lawsuits, in which people who unwittingly bought homes that were once methamphetamine labs are suing over contaminated houses that are making them sick.
The lawsuits are fallout from the massive federal crackdown on meth labs during the past decade, which saw more than 100,000 labs busted, leaving behind thousands of polluted homes and apartments for unsuspecting residents to fill.
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Monday, March 24, 2008
U.S. EPA issues Order to investigate chromium contamination in Glendale, California
The Wilson Avenue property is part of the former Drilube Company site, located within the San Fernando Valley Area 2 Superfund Site. Between 1945 – 2004, the Drilube Company operated an aerospace and aircraft plating, painting and metal finishing operation which used hazardous substances including chromic acid, muriatic acid, nickel compounds, sodium hydroxide, ammonium hydroxide, caustic potash, and sulfuric acid.
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Queens, New York Residents Protest Toxic Schools
School sites leased by the City do not require the same type of community, political and environmental review processes as schools owned by the City. This loophole allows for schools to be located on contaminated sites posing health threats to children, according to the organization.
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Friday, March 21, 2008
North Carolina: A right to know, a responsibility to act
The Observer’s recent series on well contamination is perhaps the most comprehensive picture of the vulnerability of one county’s well users ever drawn out of agency files and into the public eye. From the failure to disclose contamination, to letting polluters off the hook for cleanups, to underfunded staff and programs for testing and monitoring, the experience of each impacted neighborhood shows how little protection current laws provide.
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Cancer survey slated for Ohio neighborhood
Mark Case, director of environmental health for the agency, said Monday, March 10, that the survey could take up to a year and is being conducted with the Ohio Department of Health.
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Costly taxpayer-financed plans to address toxic-chemical contamination in residential pockets of northeast Rochester and central Brighton, NY
The DEC first learned in 2000 that Preferred Electric Motors had spilled solvents and other potentially harmful materials in the course of its work refurbishing electric motors. Trichloroethene (TCE), tetrachloroethene (PCE) and other solvents are contaminating groundwater near the former business, prompting the state to install ventilation systems in two homes to guard against the build-up of toxic vapors.
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The Link Between Obesity, Cancer, and Toxicity
Other studies of large groups of people have attempted to find lifestyle and demographic factors connecting obesity and toxicity. These studies are called ‘epidemiological’ studies because they look for trends in disease among members of a large population. A major study showed that living near a hazardous waste site increases the risk of being hospitalized for diabetes. The most influential risk factor for diabetes is obesity. As one would expect, diabetics are at increased risk to be obese, especially as teens.
To complete this unholy triad scientifically, several studies have shown that obese people have high levels of toxins stored in their fatty tissue. The theory resulting from this academic work is that the body is using fatty tissue, which has a relatively low level of metabolic activity, as a place to store the toxins away from the body tissues that have high levels of metabolic activity, such as blood, organs, and muscle. In effect, body fat becomes a storehouse of toxins in an attempt to “firewall” the body from toxicity.
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A task force for pollution plume in Victor, New York
About 55 homes are located in a mile-long “plume” of contamination from south of Dryer Road to Modock Road springs. About 200 people live in or next to the area.
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Sunday, March 16, 2008
Homeowners and buyers increasingly consider environmental contamination
- You can check the public databases yourself, for free, although it may take a little time.
- You can hire a home inspector, with variable costs, or a company like Environmental Data Resources Inc. can do the research, for about $100 to $150.
- Or you can cross your fingers, figure the odds are in your favor, and forget the whole thing.It's your risk, and your call.
Friday, March 7, 2008
Connecticut Legislature Introduces Bill Requiring Disclosure of Environmental Hazards in all Residential Real Estate Transactions
To require a written disclosure of proximity to an environmentally hazardous site prior to the sale of residential property and to give the potential purchaser of such property the right to terminate his or her obligation to purchase the property based upon such disclosure.
Read the full text of the bill here.
This is an important Bill that should be supported by anybody who believes that homebuyers have a right to know about environmental contamination on or near properties they are considering purchasing. Just spend a little time reading the stories on this blog and think about how many families could have been spared hardship and health risks if such a law existed in all states.
Disclosure: The company I work for - Environmental Data Resources - is a strong supporter of this bill.
If you would like to support HB 5874, send a letter indicating your support to:
The Honorable Richard Roy
Chair, Environment Committee
Connecticut House of Representatives
Legislative Office Building, Room 3201Hartford, CT 06106-1591
The Honorable Edward Meyer
Deputy Majority Whip
Chair, Environmental Committee
Connecticut State Senate
Legislative Office BuildingRoom 3200Hartford, CT 06106-1591
Thursday, March 6, 2008
Refinery neighbors have toxic legacy in Muskegon, Michigan
They expected to live there the rest of their lives.
They knew the neighborhood's groundwater was contaminated by petroleum products from Marathon's long-closed oil refinery site a short distance to the northeast. Marathon had test wells all over the place, including several on the Carrolls' land. They knew Marathon had bought other nearby homes and torn them down.
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Wednesday, March 5, 2008
South Dakotans have no clear legal protection against the unwitting purchase of homes once used as methamphetamine labs
An Argus Leader investigation shows that people in Sioux Falls have unknowingly bought homes that once were meth labs. And with no standards for cleanup, those people might not know whether they have been exposed to meth residue or toxic chemicals used to make the drug.
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Carcinogenic benzene contamination covers 16-acre area within California neighborhood
That smaller area is where an investigation has detected levels of carcinogenic benzene vapors at levels of up to 20,000 parts per billion, say officials from the ExxonMobil Torrance Refinery.
The state mandates remedial action - in this case testing and monitoring - when benzene levels in residential areas exceed 10 parts per billion.
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Tuesday, March 4, 2008
Residents of Liberty Hill, New Hampshire are outraged
"I don't even care about my property value any more. I have a five-year-old that I want to be able to grow up safely," said Richard Cote.
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Cleaning up the biggest US oil spill you never heard of (it's under a Brooklyn neighborhood)
Brooklyn residents are pushing Big Oil and the government to remove millions of gallons of petroleum from their neighborhood
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Nobody told the people who bought those homes about the contamination . . .
Only nobody told the people who bought those homes about the poultry farm or tested the wells for contamination before the lots were sold.
The residents didn’t find out until 2001, when the state tested their wells and found potentially dangerous levels of nitrates in five of them.
High levels of nitrates can lead to a potentially fatal blood disorder in infants and the unborn called methemoglobinemia, or “blue-baby” syndrome. Chicken manure is a common source of nitrate contamination in groundwater.
More . . .Contaminated water supplies in Cumberland County, North Carolina
Potentially unsafe levels of radium, nitrates and coliform bacteria commonly find their way into public systems.
Schools, churches, subdivisions, convenience stores, day-care centers and other businesses are considered to have public supply systems if they serve more than 25 people. All of them draw their water from wells or buy it from the PWC, which gets most of its water from the Cape Fear River.
Like most public water supplies, the PWC has not been immune to contamination. In 2003, the Environmental Protection Agency cited the PWC for unsafe levels of trihalomethanes, a byproduct of chlorination that is known to cause cancer.
Monday, March 3, 2008
Water contamination in McBee, South Carolina
S.C. Department of Health and Environmental Control officials presented the facts of the situation and ways for the residents of the area to avoid the contaminated water.
The chemicals contaminating the groundwater is Ethylene Dibromide (EDB) and the other is Dibromochloropropane (DBCP). Both chemicals were used as farming pesticides. DBCP was discontinued in 1979 and, according to DHEC, most use of EDB was discontinued in 1984.Prolonged ingestion of the contaminated water might lead to problems with the liver, the stomach, the kidneys and reproductive systems. The chemicals also might increase the risk of developing cancer in some people.
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EPA to spend $21 million on cleanup of Superfund site that spans entire Indiana neighborhood
Under the plan, the EPA will remove tainted soil from several hundred residential yards and commercial properties in the 141-acre Jacobsville Neighborhood Superfund site and replace it with clean soil. The tainted soil will be disposed of at a regulated landfill.
The EPA placed the site on its Superfund priority list in July 2004. Since then, the agency has conducted six rounds of soil testing.
It's not known how many people may have been affected by the contaminated soil, but EPA officials have said the risk of exposure is high.
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Fayetteville, North Carolina: People drinking well water vulnerable to contaminants
But people whose homes are supplied by wells often don’t know what’s in the water they are drinking. Private wells, in most cases, are not tested or monitored by state or local officials.
The cause for most of the state’s groundwater contamination is leaking underground storage tanks, hundreds of which are ignored in violation of federal regulatory standards.
State officials know of more than 30,600 underground storage tanks. About 1,200 new leaks are reported every year. But it takes about 15 inspectors between four and five years to visit every site in the state. Nine more inspectors would be needed to meet a federally recommended two-year inspection cycle to catch more leaks and hasten the cleanup .
More . . .
Sunday, March 2, 2008
North Carolina doesn't mandate contamination disclosures in property sales
Hayter paid about $9,500 to have a deep new well drilled in his front yard before putting the property up for sale. Most wells in the county are less than 30 feet deep. Hayter drilled his well to 480 feet.
Danny Soles, a supervisor who has worked with the Health Department for 41 years, said that, in hindsight, the new well probably should not have been drilled because it could pull contaminants into the deeper aquifer.
Kevin Edwards, who bought the house from Hayter as a rental investment last year, said he knew about the new well, but nobody ever told him about the contamination in the old one. Under state law, people selling their homes do not have to disclose such information.
“I just thought it was time for the well to be done,” Edwards said.
He said he would never have bought the property had he known about the contamination.
Delaware residents alarmed by contaminated wells
"We haven't had our well tested in a while, and I am concerned," said Donovan, who sells animal feed and raises goats. "I haven't heard anything for a long time about the problems they have over there, and I want to know more about it."
David Small, deputy secretary of the state Department of Natural Resources and Environmental Control, said his office is evaluating whether enough is being done to inform residents about pollution in the area.
More . . .Lack of notice about contaminated water angers North Carolina family
Until this month, Tony and Kim Voelker and their three young children drank well water contaminated with nitrates.
The state discovered the nitrates in the Voelkers’ well and three others on Trimble Lane and Ellenbrook Drive in 2006. The dead-end streets are on a former farm field near Stedman.
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Cancer-causing chemicals taint Delaware wells
Officials had assured area residents for more than two decades that pollution from the site of the old Stauffer Chemical Co. toxic-waste landfills to the north was under control. That they were wrong underscores how little is known about how toxic chemicals make their way through complex geological formations into drinking-water supplies.
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Congressional committee probes killing of Great Lakes cancer report
In 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.
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Residents of Ft. Lauderdale neighborhood advised to avoid all contact with dirt and dust
Read the post here.
High concentrations of a chemical solvent found in East Hampton, New York tap water
Ensuing tests by the Suffolk County Health Department identified a contaminant rarely found in groundwater, propionaldehyde, which belongs to a class of chemicals for which state guidelines set a limit of 50 parts per billion. At Mr. Morsch’s house in Springs it was found in a concentration as high as 6,500 parts per billion.
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New Hampshire Department of Environmental Services visits contaminated neighborhood
Responding to complaints from town officials about a perceived lack of action on the part of the state, Burack and his DES team made the journey to Gilford in order to get a better handle on the toxic waste resting under the Liberty Hill Road neighborhood.
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Dioxin contamination in soil of Ft Lauderdale neighborhood
Durrs is the kind of neighborhood where a child scribbles her name in the soil, too young to understand that tests have turned up so many toxins and chemicals in ground beneath the Fort Lauderdale neighborhood, that the State recommends avoiding any contact with dirt or dust there.
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Small Colorado community wages war against uranium mine
A Canadian company’s plans to establish a uranium mine just across the two-lane county road from Hediger’s farm has triggered a bitter tug-of-war with residents of this fast-growing region about 70 miles north of Denver who fear the risk of contaminated water and other health problems.
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The water that flows from the taps of hundreds of homes in Cumberland County North Carolina is dangerous
And while families are drinking bottled water or using expensive filtration systems, the state is doing little or nothing to clean up contamination. Health officials say these people should be on public water, but the Fayetteville Public Works Commission — the county’s designated water utility — generally won’t extend lines unless the people who need it pay full cost.
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