YNN Has a video of some of Waste Bed 13, and comments from Ken Lynch of the DEC and Camillus Ward Councilor Bill Davern.
What will Wastebed 13 look like?
After attending the EPA meeting explaining the HHRA.
Approximately 100 people attended the EPA meeting at the fairgrounds on 7/8/2010. There were several members of the DEC, EPA, and Honeywell on hand to answer direct questions about every conceivable topic, some highly technical and some not, but all relative to the to the recent EPA human health study of the Waste bed 13 sediment disposal system.
The meeting was very informative and provided a unique ability to directly question the engineers of the system and the people who wrote the HHRA. Some have more than 20 years or experience working with and designing systems exactly like the one proposed for the Onondaga Lake Project. The power point presentation may be made available to the public soon but there were a couple points of note that seemed interesting enough to pass along, even without the presentation to reference.
The most interesting is that the main determining reason for removing the sediment from the lake is not because of a direct human contact risk, but rather because chemicals like mercury and PCB’s “bio-accumulate” in the food chain. This means the higher up the food chain one goes, the higher the concentration would be (i.e. if guppies eat some mercury and can’t rid it, a larger fish eats 100 of those guppies and their mercury content, and then that fish is consumed by an even bigger fish which is then consumed by a human, the human eats the cumulative mercury content of all those fish). Therefore, you have to remove the PCB’s, mercury, etc, from the food chain in order to mitigate that ultimate risk to humans. The actual concentration numbers of toxins in the sediment is surprisingly low, but it’s the potential for accumulation in the food chain that is dangerous. For example, the levels of PCB’s in the lake are about 0.53 parts per million, compared to the 1.00 part per million considered acceptable for residential soil or the roughly the same odds as being struck by lightning.
If you were to breathe in everything at the waste bed for 350 days AND come in contact with the sediment for 45 days straight, the odds go up to about 7 in one million; roughly equivalent to being killed in a dog attack or asteroid impact.
The actual risk to individuals in the area is exponentially less as neighborhoods and parks were farther away from the testing boundaries. This led the EPA to decide that NO adverse effects would be expected from the entombment of sediment at the Waste Bed 13 location.
To put it in perspective your children are and water are almost 100% likely to have chemicals from fertilizer and pesticides in their systems from lawn applications. The danger of exposure from waste bed 13 borders on zero. Now that is something to get concerened about.
(“By-products of the insecticide chlorpyrifos were found in 93 percent of urine samples taken from children ages three to 13” – “Studies of major rivers and streams have documented that 100 percent of all surface water samples contained one or more pesticides at detectable levels.” ) reference
The DEC representatives did say that they are currently in negotiation to close the additional waste bed sites in Camillus and that they had no plans to bring any other sediment to the area from the lake or otherwise, except some being considered from the Willis Avenue area. This sediment would only come if the Waste Bed 13 project was still pumping sediment at the time they are ready to move the sediment from the Willis Avenue area and there is no further information available on that as the project is in it’s early stages.
Monitoring of the waste bed system will be nearly live, internet based, and accessible to the public.
They also indicated that because of the previous 40 years of waste in the area, building residences/schools on the site will never happen however, once the waste beds are capped the repurposing of the land as ball fields, hiking trails, a bird sanctuary, or other type of recreation area is likely and encouraged.
For more information please see:
New York State DEC/Department of Health Freqently asked questions regarding wastebed 13.
Human Health Risk Assessment
Town Engineers response to the HHRA.
Lake stinks less at Nyco’s blog.
Saw a post at Nyco’s blog, a CNY Blog in the Fairmount area.
I do have to agree with Jim Walsh’s concerns about the towns around the lake — Camillus, Geddes and Salina — needing to be involved as well in some way. Some people in Camillus, who live around the portentiously named Wastebed 13, still think everything stinks.
It is hard not to agree that bringing the Onondaga Nation to the table is a good thing, yet leaving the towns that have to deal with the problem out of the decision making process is a questionable idea, at best.
EPA and DEC Open House.
The EPA and the State DEC will hold an open house regarding the recent EPA Human Health Risk Assessment July 8 from 6:30pm to 8:30pm in the Martha Eddy Room at the New York State Fair Grounds.
Members of both agencies will answer questions from the public. To submit your questions in advance, write Robert Nunes nunes.robert@epa.gov .
Onondaga Lake Restoration Act Info.
Recently Dan Maffei’s has introduced legislation:
Maffei’s “Onondaga Lake Restoration Act” would shift oversight and most federal funding of the lake cleanup from the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, which has guided the cleanup since 1999, to the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency.
“It’s about bringing voices onto the lake that have been shut out too long, like the Onondaga Nation, local scientists and other experts that we have right here in our back yard,” said Mike Whyland, Maffei’s chief of staff
However according to Jim Walsh:
….. he also believes that towns along the lakeshore — including Camillus, where Honeywell wants to bury dredge spoils from the lake — should have a voting spot on the council. For now, Syracuse would be the only local municipality with a vote.
This smells of something worse than the lake.
Progress Continues on Onondaga Lake Restoration
Found a good post over at Onondaga-Lake-Initiatives.com (One of Honeywell’s websites) that has some updates regarding the Onondaga Lake Clean up as well as future Wastebed 13 plans. Besides information, the post has some excellent photos that give an overview of the site, pipeline plans, the wall construction, Wastebed 13 geotube / liner / monitoring and containment.
The plan is to start prepping the site and build the water treatment plant this summer.
The New York State Department of Environmental Conservation (DEC) today released an updated design for the restoration of Onondaga Lake. The lake remediation plan, issued by the DEC and the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, calls for a combination of dredging and capping—environmental cleanup methods that will remediate the contamination in sediments and water.
The updated design describes how material will be pumped from the lake and managed within a containment area, as well as how the water that drains from the material will be collected and sent to a new water treatment plant.
Comprehensive efforts to protect the public’s health and safety are an important part of the work to restore the lake. Health and safety plans are reviewed by DEC and the New York State Department of Health and are incorporated into every stage of the restoration. On June 18, DEC released the Health and Safety plan for the construction of the containment area to hold materials removed from the lake, as well as the initial work for the water treatment plant. Community health and safety plans for operational activities will be available for public review and comment in the summer of 2011.
Honeywell has made great progress on the cleanup of Onondaga Lake. Two phases of the underground barrier wall are complete. The wall, located along portions of I-690 in Geddes, prevents contaminated groundwater from reaching the lake. Work will continue throughout the summer.
Environmental Protection Agency Human Health Risk Assessment for Wastebed 13 Released.
The EPA released the Human Health Risk Assessment that evalutes the public safety of moving and disposing of sediment from Onondaga Lake to Wastebed 13. The assessment found no significant health risks to local residents.
The document is over 30 pages with some rather technical details, but here are some highlights.
In response to a recent request from the community and elected officials, EPA has prepared this supplemental HHRA to identify any potential risks posed by sediment management and dewatering activities which will take place at the SCA. This assessment incorporated numerous conservative assumptions, and indicates all potential risks are within levels identified by EPA asacceptable.
….future scenarios were intended to represent the reasonable maximum exposure potential and both assume individuals of all ages could be exposed. As such, these risk estimatesare likely higher than risks that would likely be experienced by most receptors.
All resulting risk estimates and hazard indices were within levels identified by EPA as acceptable.The finding of acceptable risk estimates through application of these health protective assumptions, indicates that the plans for the SCA will not result in unacceptable risks for the surrounding community.
Read the entire Human Health Risk Assessment for Wastebed 13 here.
Draft Onondaga Lake Capping and Dredge Area and Depth Initial Design Submittal
The draft Onondaga Lake Capping and Dredge Area Initial Design (dated December 2009) has been submitted by Honeywell and reviewed by the New York State Department of Environmental Conservation (NYSDEC) and the United States Environmental Protection Agency (EPA). This document provides initial design information on the capping and dredging components of the Onondaga Lake remedy. The design document and NYSDEC’s comment letter associated with the document (dated April 25, 2010) are available for review. DEC
The entire PDF Document is 5 MB but worth a look. You can get it here.
It shows some detail on where the lake will be dredged and capped as long as an overview of the capping procedure for Wastebed 13. There is also some information regarding the retaining walls being placed along 690. The dreding project is intended to begin in May 2012.
They are looking for participation in community health and safety plans relevant to capping and dredging activities will include:
• Site Security & Community Health and Safety Plan
• Traffic Management Plan
• Navigational Protection
• Noise Abatement Plan.
Camillus Bans Hydrofracking to Drill for Natural Gas
The town board passed a local law that bans drilling for natural gas using the horizontal hydraulic fracturing technique. The action does not affect vertical drilling, town Supervisor Mary Ann Coogan said.
Camillus man says trio plays politics with sediment issue.
Rick Hevier, of Camillus, is tired of hearing people say his town is about to become a toxic waste, and tonight he accused town Councilors David Phlippone, Mark Kolinski and Richard Griffo of using the controversy over where to bury contaminated sediment from Onondaga Lake for political gain.
“If what was being prepared was Love Canal or a toxic dump we’d be standing right along side these gentlemen,” Hevier said. “But instead, these gentlemen … are taking Camillus on a kamikaze mission to serve their political grandstanding.