ENVR EPA Samples Outside West Lake, MO Landfill Radioactive But Safe

2Trish

Veteran Member
With EPA's record I wouldn't believe any time they say it's safe.

http://hisz.rsoe.hu/alertmap/database/index.php?pageid=event_desc&edis_id=ED-20160527-53481-USA


Event details
Environment Pollution in USA on May 27 2016 03:24 AM (UTC).
Federal officials confirm radioactive waste was found outside of the West Lake Landfill. After heavy rains in 2016, EPA officials took five samples of the runoff from the landfill in Bridgeton, Missouri. One of the samples tested positive for radioactive material. Russ Knocke, a spokesperson for Republic Services said, "EPA found no health threats." The EPA plans to continue testing soil outside of the West Lake Landfill.

The below article is a couple of months old but shows somewhat of what's going on.

https://www.washingtonpost.com/news...superfund-site-the-epa-says-theres-no-danger/


An underground fire is burning near a nuclear waste dump, and officials say EPA has been too slow to react
By Darryl Fears February 16



Trevor Beckermann, 6, who has the autoimmune disease alopecia areata, plays the board game Life with his mother Meagan Beckermann, 34, at home in Bridgeton, Mo. His condition results in extreme hair loss. The family lives about a mile from two massive landfills, one filled with radioactive waste. (Sid Hastings for The Washington Post)

Her first clue that something was wrong came as she ran her hands through her baby boy’s hair. “My child was losing his hair in clumps,” Meagan Beckermann recalls. A doctor traced the problem to alopecia areata, an autoimmune disease that can be triggered by environmental factors.

A frantic search for a likely source ended when neighbors advised Beckermann to follow her nose. That’s when she learned that the charms of her St. Louis suburb of Bridgeton — with its green parks and quality schools — masked two massive landfills, one filled with radioactive waste, about a mile from her home. No one had mentioned them when she’d bought her house, she says.

Four years later, she and other residents now describe the situation as only more extreme. Rapidly decomposing waste 60 feet to 200 feet down is smoldering beneath one of the landfills in what scientists call a sub-surface burning event. The underground burn is only a few thousand feet from a Superfund site filled with waste from the World War II-era Manhattan Project, the federal government’s ultimately successful effort to build an atomic bomb.

The Superfund site is managed by the Environmental Protection Agency, which neighbors and state officials say has done little to stop the burn from reaching the radioactive waste.

“Every day, I live with anxiety. I live in fear,” said Beckermann, a 34-year-old mother of two.

Before the agency was forced to defend itself against critics in Flint, Mich., who say it bears some of the responsibility for that city’s lead-contaminated drinking water, EPA was on the defensive in north St. Louis County. Members of Missouri’s congressional delegation have authored two bills that would strip EPA of its oversight of the 200-acre Superfund site, which is known as the West Lake Landfill. The legislation would give the Army Corps of Engineers authority over the clean-up and removal of up to 48,000 tons of nuclear waste.

[It’s not just Flint: Poor communities across the U.S. live with extreme polluters]

One bill, sponsored by Republican Sen. Roy Blunt, passed that chamber earlier this month, while the House bill, sponsored by Democratic Rep. William Clay, is working its way through a committee. Missouri’s attorney general is urging Clay to press on.

“A burning radioactive waste dump requires the government to act with urgency, but EPA seems unable to move forward with a meaningful solution,” State Attorney General Chris Koster wrote last week in an angry letter to members of the delegation, in which he called for the Army corps’ intervention.

The federal Superfund program addresses large and highly toxic hazardous waste sites. Although no credible link has been established between air quality near the landfills and prevalence of disease, residents are concerned about adverse health impacts. Mothers such as Beckermann, whose 6-year-old son Trevor now has no hair on his entire body, worry about the possible effects of the West Lake site’s contaminants on their children. Some people have been diagnosed with thyroid cancer.

The burn at the closed Bridgetown Landfill has increased the stench, some say. “It makes you gag,” resident Robbin Dailey said. Families within a mile of both properties are demanding that the EPA relocate them, a move that would cost a half-billion dollars, according to some estimates. A group of mothers from the area traveled to Washington last week to press for action. While on Capitol Hill, they told lawmakers that their requests to speak with EPA Administrator Gina McCarthy had been ignored.

At the EPA’s regional headquarters in Kansas City, Administrator Mark Hague counters that officials are acting as quickly as possible. “There was a lot of critical investigative work that went on for a period of time,” stressed Hague, who said he has met “several times” with the mothers and has relayed their concerns to McCarthy.

Scientists contracted by the EPA have determined exactly where the underground burn is located, and in late December the agency ordered the Bridgeton Landfill’s owner, Republic Services, to construct a barrier to isolate the burn from the other site. Hague said that barrier will take a year to build. A Republic Services spokesman said in an email that the company would be responsible for costs up to $30 million unless the project is transferred to the Army corps.

“It’s my job to get this done,” Hague said.

The scientists’ investigation showed that the burn is not moving toward the Superfund’s radioactive material, but the barrier was ordered as a protective measure along with equipment to cool what’s smoldering underground, Hague said. Air-quality monitoring to date shows readings in keeping with a metropolitan area, he added.

But Bridgeton residents and state officials have little trust in the agency’s actions and assurances. They say radioactive waste has been found beyond the area that EPA originally identified. The attorney general called for more extensive testing, and he and the Missouri Department of Natural Resources sued Republic Services for environmental violations at the Bridgeton Landfill. The company has denied the claim, and the litigation is pending.

“There’s been a lot of misunderstanding and misinformation out there, but the science is clear,” Russ Knocke, the company’s vice president of communications and public affairs, said in a statement Tuesday. “The landfill is in a managed state.”

The West Lake Landfill is surrounded with a fence and notices identifying it as a Superfund site, but there’s no other warning in the community. An EPA website allows Americans to “Search for Superfund Sites Where You Live,” and the agency also puts notices in newspapers — although an EPA spokesman for the region acknowledged that local residents can miss seeing those.

Dawn Chapman, who lives nearby, said she’s furious that federal government, state, county and local authorities didn’t notify residents who purchased property in the area that a Superfund site had been designated there in 1989.

Chapman discovered she was pregnant with her first child a few months after buying a house 11 years ago. Each of her three children have developmental problems that require special care. “I didn’t know a landfill was there, and I definitely didn’t know a Superfund site was there,” she explained while in Washington.

“Everybody has responsibility,” Chapman said. “If you knew about this, you have responsibility. The failure to notify residents, the failure to advocate, falls on every elected official that covers the district. This is no place to raise a family.”

As the one landfill smoldered and word about it spread, Chapman and two other women co-founded a protest group. They called it Just Moms because whenever they contacted elected officials to help them, they’d be asked if they were advocates. “No,” the women responded, “we’re just moms.”

The St. Louis County health department soon will survey residents living within a two-mile radius of the Bridgeton site to determine if they have a higher rate of certain health problems compared to populations elsewhere in the county or state. Its director said the study will focus on asthma, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease and allergy-type symptoms.

Beckermann said she worries constantly. In October, a letter from her children’s school district scared her further. “Since the eastern part of our school district is only a few miles away from the West Lake Landfill,” Superintendent Jeff Marion wrote, “please know that I will be working with the city and county emergency management officials to ensure we are prepared to respond in the event of an environmental accident.”

“It was terrifying as a parent to read that letter,” she said. “It’s terrifying every morning when you drop your kids somewhere knowing you might not be able to pick them up.”

One elementary school also sent a letter home advising parents to ask their children’s doctors about medications they might need in case they are detained at the school during an emergency. Parents should consider leaving the medicine at school, the letter suggested.

Both Beckermann and Chapman were women on edge as they made the rounds on Capitol Hill last week. “I don’t want to be here,” Chapman said. “I just want to be home with my kids.”
 

Blacknarwhal

Let's Go Brandon!
With EPA's record I wouldn't believe any time they say it's safe.

A belief going back to the early 1980s.

612a4f505dc5012ee3bf00163e41dd5b
 

Dennis Olson

Chief Curmudgeon
_______________
Can we all try to tighten up thread title and give more info in them if possible? I edited this one, but have noticed many others lately are getting pretty sloppy in that regard.

Just sayin...
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
Update....

Posted for fair use.....

EPA: Radioactive contamination at West Lake landfill is more widespread
  • By Allison Kite • The Missouri Independent
  • 59 min ago

Federal environmental officials said the contamination at the site covers more ground than they knew before. And there is material outside the boundaries of the landfill

BRIDGETON — Radioactive waste has migrated outside the boundaries of the West Lake landfill and contaminated soil and water on the edge of the St. Louis County site, federal environmental officials said Monday night.

And the contaminated area onsite is far larger than previously thought.


Yet still, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency couldn’t assure the community when the site — contaminated 50 years ago — would be cleaned up.

“I don’t know that they’ve botched another site the way they are this one,” said Dawn Chapman, co-founder of Just Moms STL, an organization that sprung up out of activism by local parents around the West Lake landfill.

Chapman said the agency has made progress. She said EPA officials at Monday night’s meeting, which drew about 70 residents to a union hall in Bridgeton, were the most upfront she had seen. But she said there was no reason for the waste to sit as long as it has.

The EPA is charged with managing the cleanup of the West Lake landfill, which has held nuclear waste from the development of the atomic bomb for half a century.

St. Louis was pivotal to the development of nuclear weapons during World War II. Waste from uranium processing in downtown St. Louis — part of the Manhattan Project — contaminated Coldwater Creek, exposing generations of children who played in the creek and most recently forcing the shutdown of an area elementary school.

In 1973, the Cotter Corp., which obtained massive amounts of waste from the Manhattan Project, dumped it illegally at the West Lake Landfill, where it remains today. The site is part of the EPA’s Superfund program.

Another part of the site is suffering an underground “fire” that residents fear could exacerbate the health concerns brought on by the nuclear waste.

As the beginning of the cleanup effort nears, EPA required additional sampling by the parties responsible for the site. And they found what local activists feared: The radiological contamination is far more widespread than they knew.

That means the parties responsible for the site — the U.S. Department of Energy, Cotter and the landfill’s owner, Republic Services — must have parts of the site excavated and place an even larger cover over what remains.

“Since almost all of this (material) is in the subsurface and there’s no way for anyone to come into contact with it, the risks remain the same today as what we estimated,” said Tom Mahler, EPA’s remedial project manager for the site.

Mahler said testing showed radiological contamination in a drainage ditch at the edge of the West Lake site.

The agency found some evidence of contamination nearby in 2016, but didn’t test the surface water along the north edge of the site until more recently. Then, he said, it found radioactive waste.

“Why didn’t you get it in 2016?” Chapman asked. “Because it moved under your nose.”

The investigation also found contamination throughout portions of the landfill far from the bulk of the waste mass.

Mahler said some of the contamination is 30 or 50 feet deep because regular trash was added on top of the radioactive waste for years after it was dumped. In other locations, radioactive waste was found near the surface of the landfill.

And still, more than 30 years after the EPA added the site to the National Priorities List, it’s not clear when it will get cleaned up.

Parties responsible for the site have to keep investigating and designing a cleanup strategy on a schedule established with the EPA. But there’s no date certain for the cleanup.

“ …there is not a final end date because there are a lot of variables,” said Chris Jump, EPA’s lead remedial project manager.

Activists had braced for the news after EPA previewed the findings last month. They have said they pushed the EPA to do additional testing for years only to be ignored.

Karen Nickel, a co-founder of Just Moms STL, said it was “hurtful” to find out about the additional contamination.

“That’s probably the most frustrating part — other than having an entire community year after year getting sick, our children getting sick — that nobody cared enough about us to do the obvious,” Nickel said.
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
Radioactive but safe...

What?

Yeah. There is a level that is deemed "safe" based on a lot of factors including the natural background, but this situation with the "waste" being in such a landfill to use such buzz words isn't something to give any comfort considering the past performance of the Government.

In the SF Bay Area there's a similar situation that's been kept on the "down low" concerning the old Hunter's Point Shipyard and the rad waste there as they're "redeveloping" the site.
 

Southside

Has No Life - Lives on TB
I know EXACTLY where that site is. The DW & I would go by there every time we visited her dad when he went to the St. Louis Mo gambling casino's. Rough location is Rt 70 & 170. Right off the exit.
 

brokenwings

Veteran Member
I used to live across the river from the landfill about 2 miles for 20 years. I know that's where I got my autoimmune disease. I moved from there 16 years ago so I didn't know anything about it then. Sad how many people have gotten cancer and died from that mess. They will never do anything about it. It would cost too much money and they don't know what to do.
 

brokenwings

Veteran Member
I used to live across the river from the landfill about 2 miles for 20 years. I know that's where I got my autoimmune disease. I moved from there 16 years ago so I didn't know anything about it then. It wasn't common knowledge until the past several years. Sad how many people have gotten cancer and died from that mess. They will never do anything about it. It would cost too much money and they don't know what to do.
 

mistaken1

Has No Life - Lives on TB
“A burning radioactive waste dump requires the government to act with urgency, but EPA seems unable to move forward with a meaningful solution,” State Attorney General Chris Koster wrote last week in an angry letter to members of the delegation, in which he called for the Army corps’ intervention.

A burning radioactive waste dump in a red state ..... the democarps are at war. The democarps will fight tooth and nail to the keep the epa in charge so they can continue to uhhh study and develop plans, yah that's it, develop plans.
 
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