EPA ORDERS BARRIER TO KEEP UNDERGROUND FIRE AWAY FROM REACHING NUCLEAR WASTE NEAR ST. LOUIS
An EPA Superfund site, the West Lake Landfill has housed nuclear waste since the 1970s
The Associated Press
Thursday, December 31, 2015, 11:14 PM
ST. LOUIS — The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency is ordering installation of an isolation barrier to make sure an underground fire does not reach buried nuclear waste at a suburban St. Louis landfill site.
Mark Hague, EPA regional administrator, said the plan for West Lake Landfill in Bridgeton also calls for additional engineering steps such as cooling loops. The barrier will consist of an underground wall.
Nuclear waste dating to the Manhattan Project was dumped at West Lake in 1973. An underground fire has been smoldering for years and is now within 1,200 feet.
The work will be paid for by Republic Services, owner of both landfills. A spokesman for Republic Services said the company is ready to proceed with installation of the barrier.
The company insists there is no risk the fire will reach the nuclear material, but environmentalists disagree.
Ed Smith of the Missouri Coalition for the Environment said the barrier is not enough.
"The only way to ensure a smoldering or surface fire doesn't impact the radioactive wastes is to remove them," Smith said.
The cause of the underground fire is unknown. Fumes from the fire prompted Missouri Attorney General Chris Koster to sue Republic Services in 2013. The case is scheduled for trial in March.
West Lake was declared a Superfund site in 1990. In 2008, the EPA announced a remediation plan to cap the nuclear waste with rock, clay and soil. The plan drew enough opposition that the EPA decided to reconsider.
The agency has not yet announced a new plan despite criticism from some lawmakers and residents who feel the agency is moving too slowly.
Mark Hague, EPA regional administrator, said the plan for West Lake Landfill in Bridgeton also calls for additional engineering steps such as cooling loops. The barrier will consist of an underground wall.
Nuclear waste dating to the Manhattan Project was dumped at West Lake in 1973. An underground fire has been smoldering for years and is now within 1,200 feet.
The work will be paid for by Republic Services, owner of both landfills. A spokesman for Republic Services said the company is ready to proceed with installation of the barrier.
The company insists there is no risk the fire will reach the nuclear material, but environmentalists disagree.
Ed Smith of the Missouri Coalition for the Environment said the barrier is not enough.
"The only way to ensure a smoldering or surface fire doesn't impact the radioactive wastes is to remove them," Smith said.
The cause of the underground fire is unknown. Fumes from the fire prompted Missouri Attorney General Chris Koster to sue Republic Services in 2013. The case is scheduled for trial in March.
West Lake was declared a Superfund site in 1990. In 2008, the EPA announced a remediation plan to cap the nuclear waste with rock, clay and soil. The plan drew enough opposition that the EPA decided to reconsider.
The agency has not yet announced a new plan despite criticism from some lawmakers and residents who feel the agency is moving too slowly.
http://www.nydailynews.com/news/national/nuclear-waste-threatened-underground-fire-st-louis-article-1.2482333
1 comment:
'WAR' needs to be waged against the EPA
and any and all that do their bidding.
They are literally destroying this country from
the inside out.
I am experiencing my third 'water' related hardship
as a result of their planned destruction of us.
'Heaven' help them, because I will 'bad mouth'
them from the rooftop at every opportunity!!
Chloramines and copper piping ???
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