HomeMy WebLinkAboutDEQ-CFW_00083585From: jamie.kritzer@nodenrgovUumie.krbzer@ncdencgov
Sent: 9/5/20177:01:05PyW
To: Smith, Ruth Ravitz[rsnith@nhcXovcom]
Subject: Re: State orders Chemours to stop chemical releases, begins legal action and steps to suspend permit
Sure, Ruth.
Sent from ooyiPhone
Thanks Jamie.
Ruth Smith |Chief Communications Officer
County Manager - Office ofCommunioat|onsand Outreach
N ew H a n ove r C o u nty
230GovsmmsntCenter Drive, Suite 193
V0lminQton'NC28402
(9101798-7177 p ! (9101798-7277f
wvv�v,�.nnoOov,00m
Roy Cooper, Governor
RLcicuac:
Dote: Sept.5, 2017
�
�� ta�
,"o��1. tvje
Contact: Jamie Kritzer
Phnnc:9l9-7U7-8d02
Michael S. Regan, Secretary
State orders Chernours to stop chemical releases, begins legal action and steps to suspend permit
DEQ,D0start civil court action against Ghemours,CEQooufies conipan�ymastematerperin//to be suspended
RAL0GH—State officials ordered Chmnourson Tuesday to stop releasing all fluorinated compounds into the Cape Fear
River and began legal action against the company and the process io suspend its perinitfor discharging wastewater into the
On Tuesday, the state o[North Carolina initiated alawsuit against Chemours iuBkxionCounty Superior Court hvfiling u
um-ons- with the court. Acting on behalf of the N.CQepartment ofEnvironmental Quality, attorneys with N.C.Department
of Justice will seek a court order against Chemours, the state said in a letter with the summons.
In also sent Tuesday, D80notified [honxn/mthat the state has begun the process ho suspend the company's
wastewater permit for failure tuadequately disclose the release uI[}cn}{into the river. The porni(governs Chonxour'discharge
of wastewater from its Fayetteville facility and without it, the company cannot release any wastewater into the Cape Fear River.
Under the law,. DEQ must give the company a 60-day notice before suspending the permit.
"Protecting people's drinking water is our top priority, and we've put Chemours on notice that it must stop discharging these
chemicals into the Cape Fear River immediately," said Michael Regan, secretary of the N.C. Department of Environmental
Quality. "Chemours must stop releasing all fluorinated compounds and fully disclose all chemicals in its waste stream, and
we're taking action to make sure that happens."
In June, DEQ and the N.C. Department of Health and Human Services began investigating the presence of GenX, a chemical
made at Chemours' Fayetteville Works facility, in the Cape Fear River. As part of its investigation, the state continues to test
water at multiple locations in the Lower Cape Fear and in groundwater on the facility's property in Bladen County for the
presence of GenX and other fluorinated compounds.
The state's investigation and pressure from citizens and local officials prompted Chemours to stop discharging GenX into the
Cape Fear in June. Since the GenX discharge stopped, concentrations of GenX have dropped below the health goal of 140 parts
per trillion. Last week, DEQ also demanded that Chemours stop the release of additional chemical compounds including the
Nation byproducts, one day after the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency informed the state that those compounds had also
been detected in the facility's waste stream. Little information is known about the potential human health effects of GenX and
less is known about the Nafion byproducts.
Tuesday's civil court summons and letter from the North Carolina Attorney General's Office reiterate DEQ's demands that
Chemours stop its discharge of all fluorinated compounds and disclose all compounds in its waste stream. In the letter, state
attorneys wrote: "DEQ has reasonable cause to believe that Chemours has violated or is threatening to violate provisions" of
state law and "[flherefore, has directed the Attorney General's Office to institute a civil action for injunctive relief to restrain the
violation or threatened violation of the law."
Injunctive relief could include an order issued by a judge requiring the company to cease the discharge for the time being or
take other steps to protect public health and safety.
Tuesday's letter from DEQ puts Chemours on notice that the agency intends to suspend the company's National Pollutant
Discharge Elimination System, or NPDES, permit, which allows the company to discharge wastewater into the Cape Fear
River.
In its letter to the company, DEQ writes, "There is sufficient cause to suspend the permit under the provisions cited in this letter.
We have found no evidence in the permit file indicating that Chemours or DuPont (Chemours' predecessor) disclosed the
discharge to surface water of GenX compounds at the Fayetteville Works. In particular, the NPDES permit renewal applications
submitted to DVVR (Division of Water Resources) contain no reference to "GenX" or to any chemical name, formula, or CAS
number that would idcntify any GenX compounds in the discharge."
DuPont ran the Fayetteville Works facility that produces GenX until 2015 when Chemours was created as a spin-off company.
The letter also calls on the company to meet several earlier demands, including stopping the discharge of any chemicals related
to GenX, including the Nafion byproducts, by Sept. 8 and stopping the discharge of any other perfluorinated or polyfluorinated
compounds by Oct. 20. In addition, the letter demands that Chemours provide complete information about all chemicals
included in the Fayetteville facility's waste stream, according to a schedule previously set by DEQ.
Additional legal steps are expected soon.
Website: 11 tq.-�;Z
Facebook:
Twitter:
RSS Feed: htt.
1601 Mail Service Center., Raleigh-, NC 27699-1601
DEQ-CFW-00083586
If you would rather not receive future communications from North Carolina Dept. of Environment and Natural
Resources, let us know by clicking here.
North Carolina Dept. of Environment and Natural Resources, 217 W. Jones St., Raleigh, North Carolina 27699
United States
DEQ-CFW-00083587