Showing posts with label chlorinated solvents. Show all posts
Showing posts with label chlorinated solvents. Show all posts

Friday, November 18, 2011

Former Textile Plant Reveals Deeper Little Secret

By: Duane Craig

Groundwater contamination at an old Texfi Industries plant in Fayetteville, North Carolina, is now deeper than anyone thought, according to this report at WTVD-TV in Raleigh-Durham, North Carolina. At 30 feet, it's in line to potentially contaminate city water supplies that come from the nearby Cape Fear River. The contaminants are chlorinated solvents such as tetrachlorothylene.

Groundwater contamination threatens treated city water

Besides the river, another route of contamination could follow a path into a 14-million gallon tank that stores treated water for the city. So the plan is to dig a trench that would corral the toxic chemicals before they reach the tank. The city was briefed on this solution in April, but so far (as of August 6) there hasn't been a decision to begin the work, no doubt because of money. There is little left in a fund designated to deal with the Texfi contamination problem.

Texfi made millions on the polyester craze of the late 60s and early 70s. From leisure suits to mini skirts, polyester was humanity's answer to wrinkles. Problem was it was made from oil and tended to hamper the skin's ability to breathe. By the mid 70s people had moved back to natural fibers, or were beginning to try hybrids that blended polyester or rayon with natural fibers. Texfi didn't get it and continued to churn out polyester, loosing millions from 1974 through 1984, according to this background report in Entrepreneur.

During the heady years of profits there were 200 people working at Texfi's headquarters in Greensboro and the company had a weekend retreat complete with a half million dollar Tudor mansion and golf course where textile-weary executives could unwind. Then too, there was the expansion that allowed Texfi to circumvent suppliers like Celanese. The company built polymer plants in Asheboro and New Bern and then went public. Over the years it had operations at 13 plants, but by 1982 only eight were left and the company was bleeding red ink. A new CEO took over, slashed costs and continued the company's transition to blended fibers. Then it got into underwear, socks and even medical bandages.

The plant at Fayetteville was on Hoffer Drive and the operations there included dyeing textiles and finishing them. The chemicals were released from the plant operations, from tanks and from drains taking them into soil and groundwater. In a Texfi fact sheet from the North Carolina Division of Waste Management, the facility is listed as closed in 1999. Nearby are residential properties and the Fayetteville Public Works Commission’s P.O. Hoffer Water Treatment plant, sometimes called clear well. That facility is the one with the water tank awaiting a trench. In a recent news story officials have said there is no danger to the public water supply and that the possibility the chemicals might reach the river is "remote."

Texfi finally did go bankrupt in 1999 and the bankruptcy court set aside $942,000 for cleaning up this Texfi site. Today there is $173,000 of that money left.

Tuesday, September 21, 2010

City, CVS Sparring With State Over Bozeman, MT Superfund Site

September 14, 2010 - Twenty-one years after perchloroethene, a dry-cleaning fluid and suspected carcinogen, was discovered under the Hastings Shopping Center, there still isn't a plan to clean it up.

The city of Bozeman and CVS Pharmacy are responsible for cleaning up the Superfund site, dubbed the Bozeman Solvent Site. But the two say a state regulatory agency overseeing the remediation is dragging its heels. And they're prepared to take the state to court if the process doesn't speed up.

"The city and CVS will no longer accept management behavior from the (Montana Department of Environmental Quality,) which does nothing more than provide lengthy delays and abusive, arbitrary demands, while imposing unreasonable costs upon the taxpayers of the city of Bozeman and CVS," states an Aug. 31 letter to MDEQ from attorneys representing the city and CVS.

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Monday, August 2, 2010

Industrial Chemicals Found in Clover, SC Area Well Water

August 1, 2010 - The 75 acres at the edge of Clover where the Miller family has lived since the 1700s has seen nothing but sweet potato and alfalfa crops and a few houses surrounded by woods.

Being so isolated, Judy Miller and her husband Ralph never suspected the chemical smell in their well water came from high concentrations of toxic, industrial chemicals.

In June, the S.C. Department of Health and Environmental Control tested their well water, finding ten chlorinated solvents commonly used in dry cleaning, degreasers and other industrial cleaners. Four of the solvents exceeded the Environmental Protection Agency's standards for maximum contaminant levels in drinking water and one, tetrachloroethylene, or PCE, was found in concentrations more than 6,000 times what is considered safe for drinking water.

"I guess I was so naive to think that someone would dump something so terrible," Judy Miller said.

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Tuesday, July 13, 2010

IN Family Blames Toxic Site for Illness

July 11, 2010 - Kathryn Mbwelera stands in her front yard, despite the blazing heat, pointing across the street to where the ground is filled with poison.

"Nobody’s going to make me believe I’m not at risk and that I haven’t been at risk," Mbwelera says. “The health risks these chemicals pose – we’ve experienced them all."

The chemicals are chlorinated solvents that are in the soil and groundwater beneath the former Wayne Metal Protection plant, a defunct metal plating company at 1511 Wabash Ave. on the east side of the city near Memorial Park.

The contamination has spread northeast from the shuttered plant, toward Memorial Park Middle School; Mbwelera’s house is immediately north of the plant.

The chemicals move easily in groundwater, and their vapors can move upward through soil into homes and buildings.

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