Friday, April 25, 2008
Wisconsin neighborhood protests dumping of contaminated soil
Trucks have been hauling soil from the construction site on 16th Street to a vacant lot in the industrial park next to Classic Coatings Inc.
"There's going to be runoff, there's going to be saturation into the soil," said Jaimie Salta, who lives 1/8-mile north of the site.
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Riverside, California cement plant's neighbors react to news about toxic carcinogen in the air
The dust was annoying, and people in the neighborhood assumed it wasn't good for them. But despite complaints over the years, they said, no one ever cleaned it up completely.
On Tuesday, residents of "the Hill" learned that the South Coast Air Quality Management District had found high levels of hexavalent chromium, a toxic carcinogen, in dust blowing from the outdoor "clinker piles" of the century-old plant in the Rubidoux area. And to add insult to injury, no officials had notified them.
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Wednesday, April 23, 2008
Carcinogen Found In Franklin Tennessee Groundwater
Sixteen months after discovering chemical leaks in a Franklin creek, another chemical has been found under some homes.
When crews dug a well to sample ground water to determine how far tolulene and acetone contamination from the plant had spread, they didn’t find either one, but they found benzene.
Benzene is a carcinogen that can cause dizziness, vomiting and even blood disease under long-term exposure.
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Florida Contamination Spurs Class-Action Against Raytheon
Saunders said he wants Raytheon to pay for medical screening of people in the neighborhood and that the stigma of contamination already has diminished property values.
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Contamination rousts a family, may cost town in Manchester MA
"We'd like to see some assessment on neighboring properties, as well," said Ed Coletta, a spokesman for the state agency. He added that both the town and the house's previous owner were sent letters this month indicating that they may be responsible for the contaminated land. "Eventually, they're going to have do some cleanup work there."
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Tuesday, April 22, 2008
Azalea, Florida Neighborhood Residents Discuss Toxic Underground Plume
The residents want to know whether the contamination poses a threat to their health or the value of their homes.
Chris Nidel, an environmental lawyer and chemical engineer from Washington, D.C., told them both outcomes are possible.
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Couple sues Chevron over property oil contamination in San Luis Obispo California
The suit alleges that Voisinet’s two lots on the northeastern end of San Luis Drive were tainted more than 25 years ago when a construction worker broke a Union Oil Co. of California pipeline.
According to the lawsuit, the company never adequately cleaned up the pollution and then allowed the lots to be sold for residential development without disclosing that the land was still contaminated.
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Study: Strong evidence that exposure to pesticides significantly increases the risk of Parkinson's disease
Experts said it was now highly likely pesticides played a key role - albeit in combination with other factors.
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Sunday, April 20, 2008
"Fly ash" may be contaminating residents' water in Chesapeake Virginia
The 217-acre course is made with more than 1.5-million tons of "fly ash" which is the by-product left behind when coal is burned to make electricity. It contains heavy metals like arsenic, lead and uranium.
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Soil, oil spell trouble for home sellers
Still, the proximity to a potentially major environmental problem was enough to further dissuade already jittery lenders and would-be buyers from consummating any deal for the property in a declining market.
"I've had seven offers in the past three months and they've fallen out of escrow because of this one thing," said Cynthia Kortcamp, the Re/Max Beach Cities agent with the listing.
"This property should have been sold, but it's not sold because of the issues, so poor Julie reduces, reduces, reduces," she added. "We're down to $386,000. - You cannot buy a property on a lot anywhere in Torrance for this price. It's just frustrating. I told Julie I want to take my (for sale) sign off (the property). There's pretty much nothing I can do."
"This is a nightmare," she said. "It's a tragedy for everybody on that street. I'm lucky. I have another place to live. Those people don't."
Saturday, April 12, 2008
Landfill contamination lawsuits continue in Campbell County Virginia
After three years of discussions with the county, the Royals filed several lawsuits in 2005 and 2006 charging that the county operated the landfill in a manner that caused a plume of toxic chemicals to pollute their water and land.
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EPA tests residential soil for dioxin along Tittabawassee River in Michigan
Both their properties have undergone various tests by several agencies over the years. Scientists, government agencies and corporations alike have prodded their land.
The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency is the latest to enter the fray.
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Thursday, April 10, 2008
Discovery of contaminants delays Connecticut park project
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Minnesota homes to be tested for toxic vapors
The neighborhood has been under investigation since 2005, when the city purchased the former Hmong American Shopping Center site and discovered groundwater contaminated with chemicals from a former dry-cleaning business.
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Thursday, April 3, 2008
Niagara Falls, NY Mayor takes brownfields plea to state capitol
“The devastation that environmental contamination has wrought in many industrial communities across New York state has had an impact just as great as any natural disaster could have on the economic and social wellbeing of our people,” Dyster told state lawmakers. “Perhaps because it occurred gradually over a period of decades instead of suddenly overnight, people have difficulty grasping how serious our situation really is. Make no mistake: brownfield remediation is an issue that has reached crisis stage in Niagara Falls and many other communities and we are here today to insist that it be given the serious attention it deserves.”
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Wednesday, April 2, 2008
Drinking water for tens of thousands of people near three active Superfund sites in Utah at risk or already polluted
The pollution is so bad that the federal government decided to join state regulators in directing long-term cleanup efforts of those sites.
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Virginia golf course built on fly ash
Gas contamination below ruins lives above in Utah
She moved out - her 7-year-old daughter, the iguana, the dogs and some clothes. Her job taking reservations for Marriott Hotels is on hold. She shuttles between hotels, her parents' house in Lehi and a friend's place in Aurora.
Kuhni is one of dozens of Gunnison residents and business owners who filed suit against Wind River Petroleum and Top Stop gas stations earlier this month.
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Tuesday, April 1, 2008
Contaminated homes in New Orleans denied funds
In the past two weeks, state officials informed homeowners such as Leatrice Roberts who lived atop the old Agriculture Street landfill before Hurricane Katrina hit that their Road Home applications had been placed on hold indefinitely because they live on a Superfund cleanup site. The EPA in 1994 added the 9th Ward enclave to its Superfund list, but said the area could be made safe with mitigation steps such as the replacement of topsoil.
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Neglected Toxic Waste Plume Worries Neighborhood
There are hundreds of private irrigation wells within the area of possible contamination. However, neither the state Department of Environmental Protection nor Raytheon Network Centric Systems has alerted homeowners to the south, even though they have known for three years that the plume is migrating toward that neighborhood.
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No new conclusions in Liberty Hill, New Hampshire cancer report
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South Carolina State Regulators to investigate pollution concerns near north Columbia neighborhood
Residents of the Northwood Hills community say they’ve been trying for two years to get answers from the S.C. Department of Health and Environmental Control, the city of Columbia and Richland County.
“When I’m outside working, it burns,’’ said Ulysses Green, a resident of Staffordshire Road, referring to air pollution he believes comes from nearby.
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New report details health risks from contamination in Tallevast, Florida
In 2004 when the Manatee County Health Department tested those wells and found toxic chemicals in most of them, the wells were closed. Everybody here's been on public water ever since.
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