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HomeMy WebLinkAboutNCD980602163_19820915_Warren County PCB Landfill_SERB C_Crime Control & Public Safety letter to Residents of Warren County re removal of contaminated soil-OCRJames B. Hunt, Jr., Governor North Carolina Department of Crime Control .I~ & Public Safety_ PO. Box 27687 512 N. Salisbury Street Raleigh 27611 (919) 733-2126 Heman R. Clark, Secretary September 15, 1982 Dear Residents of Warren County: As the state begins to move the PCB contaminated soil off our roadsides to a specially designed landfill in Warren County, I know that many of you are very concerned about the effects the landfill will have on the county and its residents , Many of your concerns, I believe, are based on incomplete, misinformed or misinterpreted information about the landfill. I would like to try to respond to several specific questions that have been raised time and time again by the citizens of Warren County. 1. WILL THE PCB LANDFILL NOW UNDER CONSTRUCTION IN WARREN COUNTY BE USED FOR THE STORAGE OF OTHER HAZARDOUS WASTES NOW OR AT A LATER DATE? The answer is no, absolutely not. The PCB landfill, with a maximum capacity of 40,000 cubic yards, is designed to handle only the PCB contaminated soil in 14 North Carolina counties. This soil was contaminated with PCB laced transformer oil illegally dumped along more than 200 miles of rural roads during the summer of 1978. More than 20 miles of these roads are located in Warren County. Once the contaminated soil is put into the landfill, the facility will be capped with artificial and clay liners, and monitored regularly to guarantee that the facility poses no threat to any of the citizens of Warren County. It should be emphasized that only the PCB laced soil from the 1978 spill will go into the landfill. Removal of the cap once it is in place so that additional soil or other materials can be placed into the landfill is explicity prohibited by federal law. 2. WHO WILL MAINTAIN CONTROL OF THE LANDFILL AND SURROUNDING PROPERTY AFTER THE PCB PROJECT IS COMPLETED? The state of North Carolina will maintain control of the five-acre landfill and about 15 acres that surround the facility which contai n several monitoring wells. The remaining 120 acres of land1 which make up a buffer zone around the site)have been deeded by the state to Warren County to guarantee to the people of the county that the acreage will not be used for any other type waste facility. It should be pointed out that, in deeding the property to the county, the state · placed several restrictions in the deed to prohibit the buffer zone from being used by the county for almost any purpose that would involve human activity (the construction of schools or recreation facilities, for instance). Plainly speaking, the county owns the buffer zone and can prohibit the state from building anything on the 120-acre plot. The state, on the other hand, can be assured that the county will not use the property -2- for any prupose that would be incompatible with a buffer zone. Let me stress again that federal and state regulations, and the deed itself, prohibit the 20 acres under state control from being used for anything other than the disposal of the PCB contaminated soil resulting from the 1978 spill, 3. WILL THE LOCATION OF THE PCB LANDFILL IN WARREN COUNTY OPEN THE DOOR TO OTHER LANDFILLS? WILL WARREN COUNTY BECOME A DUMPING GROUND FOR HAZARDOUS WASTES FROM NORTH CAROLINA AND OTHER STATES? > ' Any proposals for future hazardous waste facilities in North Carolina will have to be approved by the state's Solid and Hazardous Waste Management Branch, with the guidance of the Environmental Protection Agency, based on very stringent federal and state regulations. It would be impossible for me to guarantee that private enterprise would never look for areas in Warren County, or any other county, to locate waste management facilities. But our current approval from EPA and our current agreement with the county preclude the use of the Afton site for anything other than the PCB landfill. 4. WHAT HAPPENED TO THE PARTIES RESPONSIBLE FOR THE ILLEGAL DUMPING OF THE PCB ALONG NORTH CAROLINA'S ROADSIDE? Not long after the PCB was illegally dumped along North Carolina, Robert J. Burns and his two sons, Timothy and Randy, were charged with performing the actual dumping by driving a tanker truck loaded with PCB contaminated transformer oil into sparsely settled North Carolina areas spraying the oil along the roadsides. On April 23, 1982, Robert J. Burns was sentenced by North Carolina Superior Court Judge Donald L. Smith of Raleigh to a 3-5 year prison term for his connection with this infamous act. Burns also received an 18-month sentence on federal charges. Burns is now in a state prison unit. Timothy and Randy Burns were sentenced by Judge Smith to a prison term of 18 months to three years, The active sentence was suspended and Timothy and Randy Burns were placedon probation for four years, fined $500 and ordered not to return to North Carolina except to visit his father. They are also on five years probation stemming from the federal charges against them. The Burns's testified in the federal trial that the PCB-laced oil came from Ward's Transformer Company in Raleigh, one of the largest transformer repair companies in the nation. Robert E. Ward, Jr., of Ward Transformer Company, was acquitted of state charges in connection with the PCB contamination of the state roadsides, but he was convicted of violating the federal Toxic Substances Control Act, sentenced to 18 months in prison and fined $200,000 on that charge. He currently is appealing that conviction. North Carolina has sued ward and the Burnses for $2.5 million in actual damages and $10 million in punitive damages, The case is on the trial calendar in Wake County Superior Court for late this fall. -3- s. WHAT ABOUT STATE ROAD 1604? TRUC~ BRINGING MATERIAL INTO THE Ll\NDFILL WILL TEAR IT UP, WILL IT BE RESTORED? WHO WILL PAY FOR THE RESTORATION? State Road 1604 will be restored to its previous condition after the landfill is closed. Several thousand truckloads of material will be hauled over this road during the building of the landfill and it will be impossible to maintain it while this is going on. However when the landfill is capped, the road will be restored to its previous condition. 6. WHY SITE THE LANDFILL IN WARREN COUNTY? THE COUNTY DOESN'T GENERATE HAZARDOUS WASTE AND DOESN'T WANT IT. WHY DOES WARREN COUNTY GET STUCK WITH IT? No one in North Carolina wants this waste. We have it because it was illegally dumped and we are obliged to deal with the situation. Alternatives to landfilling have been considered and rejected because they are not feasible under Superfund. The decision to site the landfill was made strictly on the basis of technical criteria for sound waste management. The site is designed and engineered to protect the health and safety of citizens who live in the area and will be carefully protected and monitored to guarantee the integrity of the site, All of us associated with this project know that the concerns of Warren County citizens are sincere. We have made a good faith effort to address those concerns and to dispell the rumors and misinformation about the project. I appreciate the courtesy you have shown us and hope the people of Warren County will accept in good faith our efforts to protect the safety and well-being of all North Carolinians affected by the dumping of PCB on our roadsides. Sincerely, ri,,... 4. A-,~ Hema~ R. Clark, Secretary N. C, Department of Crime Control and Bublic Safety