Showing posts with label vt. Show all posts
Showing posts with label vt. Show all posts

Monday, December 12, 2011

Whoops, TCE and PCE on the Move Again at Bennington Superfund Site

By: Duane Craig

A very deep trench is proposed to subvert the movement of contamination from a former landfill in Bennington, Vermont, according to this article in the VTDigger.org. The landfill is also a formerly active Superfund site with remediation completed in 1999, according to the Environmental Protection Agency.

Groundwater contamination found in Barney Brook

Trichloroethylene, or TCE, and tetrachloroethylene, or PCE, have escaped from the landfill which was previously capped and adorned with a soil vapor extraction system. Apparently the groundwater flow changed and some contamination has been found in a tributary to Barney Brook. For six years in the late 1960s and early 1970s, the landfill was a dumping place for industrial wastes from local companies. Those wastes included polychlorinated biphenyls, or PCBs, organic solvents and lead. These wastes were dumped into a lagoon that was not lined to prevent absorption into the soil.

In 1976, a system was installed to lower the groundwater beneath the landfill by carrying it away to an unlined, pond area. Ten years later PCBs, lead, arsenic, benzene and ethylbenzene were flowing into the pond, according to this EPA report.

The new trench will be 25 feet deep and 200 feet long. Because it goes down to impervious soil it is expected to catch the contaminants. The bottom of the trench will be filled with sand and iron shavings to break down the contaminants and stop their movement.

Friday, November 2, 2007

No tax break for Vermont residents who own property contaminated by nearby Energize plant

November 2, 2007 - BENNINGTON — What happens to the property values of homes affected by the leaking of carcinogens at the Energizer plant will be dictated by the market, according to a town official.

"That's going to be a question that ultimately the listers will have to answer and the market will dictate," said Bennington Town Manager Stuart Hurd.

The town has no intention of offering breaks on appraisals, Hurd said. The area around the Energizer plant was reappraised earlier this year as part of the rolling reappraisal system used by the town.

"It will be taken as a case by case basis," Hurd said. "As far as the listers going out and saying, 'OK, you're all going to be getting a reduction,' that is not going to happen."
State officials presented a plan to about a dozen neighbors Tuesday designed to remediate tetrachloroethene, or PCE, and trichloroethene, or TCE, contamination at the Energizer plant.

More . . .

Thursday, November 1, 2007

Vermont homeowners concerned about factory contamination and impact on property values

October 31, 2007 - State officials presented a plan to remediate chemical contamination at the Energizer plant Tuesday night, saying the aggressive method chosen should capture enough of the contamination to meet state standards.

About a dozen residents who live near the plant were on hand to hear from Michael B. Smith, a geologist with the state Agency of Natural Resources waste management division, present the two-step plan.

Homeowners did not question the plan but we're concerned about what the contamination would do to the value of their property. Furthermore, several expressed concern that no one representing the town of Bennington was present to answer questions.

More . . .

Saturday, May 19, 2007

Vermont Supreme Court: Homebuyers Who Weren't Told About Contamination Were Defrauded

May 19, 2007 - The Vermont Supreme Court has ruled that the owners of a Killington home were consumer fraud victims in 2000 when a real estate company failed to inform them that the property they were buying had a water supply tainted by a gasoline spill.

The home was one of 36 in the area with water supplies contaminated by MTBE or other contaminants. MTBE is a chemical compound once widely used as a fuel additive, according to an environmental report supplied by the state.

The compound reached the supplies following a 1993 gasoline leak from a 275-gallon underground storage tank at the Summit Lodge on Killington Road, according to Bob Haslam, a senior envirionmental analyst in the firm's Hazardous Waste Division.

More . . .