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Wilson Research released a poll on Texans' response to radioactive waste dumped in Andrews County, Texas, and its possible affect on the Ogallala Aquifer.

The poll shows that there is strong non partisan opposition (63%) to disposing the waste in Andrews County as well as strong opposition against any legislator (63%) that supports the dumping of toxic waste that threatens the Aquifer.

Read the Full Memo Here

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National Blogs

Climate Progress - Dr. Joseph Romm is the editor, he wrote for NY times, and has a phd in physics from MIT.  Very green blog, endorsed by Tomas Friedman

Huffington post

Daily kos

Treehugger.com - Founder is graham hill, run a lot of posts about nuclear waste

Gregornot - Gregor Gable a blogger devoted only to nuclear waste issues.

Nytimes 

Washington post

Latimes

Cleft Palates Near PCB Dump

Posted by: Adam Greenwood in MyBlog

Tagged in: Texas

See the story here

 WCS is also storing PCBs at their site on the TX-NM border.  The town of Eunice, NM, is nearby.


Texas Senator Shapleigh's crusade continues.

Minority shareholders in a Simmons' corporate entity sued Simmons and Bill Lindquist and others for conspiring to deprive them of millions of dollars that rightfully belonged to them.  Bill Lindquist is the CEO of WCS.  The jury found that Simmons and Lindquist and the others had indeed done it and awarded a verdict of millions of dollars.

NUKES Mess with Texas

Posted by: Adam Greenwood in MyBlog

Tagged in: Texas

Carl Pope, the executive director of the Sierra Club, is telling a national audience what a lot of us out here have known for awhile: WCS and Harold Simmons are trying to turn the Texas-New Mexico border into the nation's nuke dump and they don't seem to care if they risk contaminating groundwater and if they have to makes lots of campaign contributions and manipulate the political process to do it.

WCS LIED?

Posted by: Adam Greenwood in MyBlog

Tagged in: Texas

Did you know that WCS originally promised the people in Andrews County that they would not bring in any radioactive waste?  Yeah, funny how that worked out. 

 But I'm sure we can trust all the promises WCS is making today about contamination and risk.  WCS may not have kept its old promise, but this time its different.


Stand Strong Against WCS

Posted by: Adam Greenwood in MyBlog

Tagged in: Texas

I'm hearing that WCS is bringing lots of pressure on the DOE to approve their federal radioactive waste facility in the next two weeks.  We need to STOP the rush.  DOE should take public comment and conduct its own INDEPENDENT environmental and transportation study before turning the Texas-New Mexico border into a federal nuke dump.
 
Contact information for the Secretary of Energy is as follows:

The.Secretary@hq.doe.gov
or
1-800-342-5363
or
202-586-4403 (fax)
 
WCS' state license is disappointing, but its not the end of the fight.

Last Chance to be Heard on TOXIC MERCURY

Posted by: Adam Greenwood in MyBlog

Tagged in: Texas

This is your last chance to make your voice heard in opposition to TOXIC MERCURY.  Tuesday's too late!  WCS wants to dispose of elemental mercury on the Texas-New Mexico border.  But they can only do it if the federal Department of Energy approves.  The DOE is going to study the issue and you have until Monday to tell the DOE what kinds of things you think they should study.  You can do it online with just one click.  The DOE has  a website you can get informed at too.


The Right Way to Protect Interstate Aquifers

Posted by: Adam Greenwood in MyBlog

Tagged in: Texas

Utah and Nevada just agreed to create a joint commission to protect the Snake Valley Aquifer.  What a concept!   That's exactly what the Ogallala Aquifer needs.   The Ogallala Aquifer covers 8 states but none of these states are cooperating with each other to protect it.  What's the result?  The Ogallala is being pumped dry.  And WCS can put its waste dump right on the New Mexico border without any input from concerned New Mexicans, and without any scrutiny from New Mexico environmental protection authorities.  The Ogallala Aquifer needs its own commission, just like the Snake Valley Aquifer, so companies like WCS can't outsource contamination risks to a state next door.  Drinking water and environmntal protection is everybody's business and everybody should cooperate to do it. 

Source: Environment News Source 

FORT EDWARD, New York, May 19, 2009 (ENS) - The long awaited dredging of the Upper Hudson River to remove sediment contaminated by PCBs from a General Electric factory began Friday near Roger’s Island in Fort Edward.

 

The six-year dredging project will be conducted by General Electric under the terms of a November 2006 consent decree. The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency will oversee all aspects of the work; dredging will continue through October 2009, weather permitting.

This first phase of the dredging project will be conducted 24 hours a day, six days a week and aims to remove 265,000 cubic yards of sediment and 20,300 kilograms of PCBs from a six-mile stretch of the river between Roger’s Island and Thompson Island.

PCBs leaked from the GE Hudson Falls Plant site into the Hudson River (Photo courtesy U.S. EPA)  

The entire project will remove an estimated 1.8 million cubic yards of sediment and 113,000 kg of PCBs.

Sediment removed from the river will be carried by barge to a dewatering facility located on the Champlain Canal in Fort Edward. There water will be squeezed from the sediment and treated to drinking water standards before being returned to the canal.

The remaining PCB-laden dirt will be loaded onto railcars for disposal at a permitted landfill facility in Andrews County, Texas.

The 1,338 acre treatment, storage and disposal facility operated by Waste Control Specialists in Andrews County is licensed for the processing, storage and disposal of a broad range of hazardous and toxic waste as well as low-level and mixed low-level radioactive waste.

But environmentalists in Texas are demanding an Environmental Impact Statement, saying that disposing of the PCBs at the Waste Control Specialists site could the poison the Ogallala aquifer. The vast underground water table underlies parts of eight states, including Texas, acting as a natural groundwater storage reservoir.

Dr. Neil Carman, a chemist with the Lone Star Chapter of the Sierra Club said Saturday, "This is like a shell game, moving hazardous toxic PCBs from one sensitive location to another."

"The Waste Control Specialist dump site is already controversial because it is located over vulnerable aquifers," Carman said. "We are concerned about contamination of the Ogallala Aquifers and other aquifers in this dry region of Texas that needs to protect and conserve water for drinking and agricultural uses."

But Rod Baltzer, president of Waste Control Specialists, says the WCS site is several miles away from and downgradient from the southern edge of the Ogallala Aquifer, and poses "absolutely no threat" to any drinking water supply.

He says Dr. Carman's conclusions likely are based on outdated state aquifer maps published by the Texas Water Development Board that were intended only as general depictions of the boundaries of the aquifers.

"Prior to 2007, the statewide maps showed the southern boundary of the Ogallala Aquifer possibly encroaching on WCS’ property, most likely due to the lack of detailed data from the region," Baltzer told ENS. "In the last 18 years, WCS, local water well drillers and oil and gas producers have drilled hundreds of wells and spent tens of millions of dollars to verify the subsurface properties of western Andrews County and, as a result, have further delineated the boundaries of the Ogallala Aquifer."

"As a result of the data developed from these efforts, the Texas Water Development Board re-mapped the Ogallala Aquifer in late 2006 to definitively show that the boundary does not extend to WCS' property," Baltzer said. "The current State of Texas aquifer maps show a more accurate depiction of the proper location of the aquifer."

Dr. Carman says the Sierra Club is also concerned both about public health and environmental disasters along the train route from New York to Texas.

"GE plans to ship 81 carloads in a mile long train every four to five days for six months beginning around July 1st. The train cars will have plastic covers that would do nothing to hold the toxic waste in the event of a derailment," said Carman. "These train cars should be properly capped with a steel cover that would contain and minimize any spill of PCBs."

"Communities along the route must be informed and first responders warned so they can be prepared to handle a potential disaster," Carman demanded.

From approximately 1947 to 1977, the General Electric Company discharged as much as 1.3 million pounds of polychlorinated biphenyls, PCBs, from its capacitor manufacturing plants at the Hudson Falls and Fort Edward facilities into the Hudson River.

PCBs are a mixture of individual chemicals which are no longer produced in the United States, but are still found in the environment. Health effects include acne-like skin conditions in adults and neurobehavioral and immunological changes in children. PCBs are known to cause cancer in animals.

The primary health risk associated with the Hudson River site is the accumulation of PCBs in the human body through eating contaminated fish from the river, according to the EPA.

"The start of Hudson River dredging is a symbol of victory for the environment and for its river communities," said George Pavlou, acting EPA regional administrator. "Dredging will help restore the health of the river, and will one day allow people to eat fish that are caught between Fort Edward and Albany. This is an historic day for an historic river."

"This is another chapter in the story of a river coming back from the brink," Governor David Paterson said. "Forty years ago, the Hudson River was a poster child for pollution, mocked as an open sewer. But through the Clean Water Act, the upgrade of wastewater treatment plants and increased public vigilance fostered by the growing public interest in environmental protection, the Hudson has steadily improved and it is cleaner than it has been in decades.

At the conclusion of this first phase of the dredging project, an independent panel of experts will review the results of the dredging and may make recommendations for changes that may be incorporated throughout the remainder of the dredging, which is targeted for completion in 2015.

Copyright Environment News Service (ENS) 2009. All rights reserved.


Source: ISS - the Institute for Southern Studies 

 In a bit of good news for the environment, work got underway this week to clean up hazardous PCB pollution that General Electric dumped into New York's Upper Hudson River

But there's also some bad news -- which is that the toxic waste is being sent to a landfill that sits atop the Ogallala Aquifer, a key drinking-water source for West Texas.

"This is like a shell game, moving hazardous toxic PCBs from one sensitive location to another," said Dr. Neil Carman, a chemist with Sierra Club's Lone Star chapter. "We are concerned about contamination of the Ogallala Aquifer and other aquifers in this dry region of Texas that needs to protect and conserve water for drinking and agricultural uses."

The company that operates the landfill also recently won approval to dump radioactive waste there, intensifying the controversy surrounding the facility.

The $750 million Hudson River dredging project aims to scrape up almost 250,000 pounds of polychlorinated biphenyls or PCBs, chemicals once used in electrical equipment that are known to build up in the body and cause cancer, damage the immune system and lead to reproductive disorders. The cleanup is being overseen by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency.

"The start of Hudson River dredging is a symbol of victory for the environment and for its river communities," said acting EPA Regional Administrator George Pavlou. "Dredging will help restore the health of the river, and will one day allow people to eat fish that are caught between Fort Edward and Albany. This is an historic day for an historic river."

The sediment scraped up from the bottom of the Hudson will be carried by barge to a facility in Fort Edward, N.Y., where the water will be removed and treated. The contaminated soil will then be loaded onto a train and shipped some 2,000 miles to the Waste Control Specialists (WCS) landfill in Andrews County, along the Texas border with New Mexico.

While WCS officials have insisted that the landfill does not sit atop the Ogallala Aquifer, an investigation by TV news station KCBD confirmed that it actually does. Also known as the High Plains Aquifer, the Ogallala is one of the largest aquifers in the world, underlying about 174,000 square miles of land in eight states. It provides drinking water for many communities in West Texas, including the city of Lubbock.

The placement of the WCS dump on the Andrews County site has proven controversial. In fact, Glen Lewis -- a longtime official with the Texas Commission on Environmental Quality who was involved in the investigation for the WCS facility -- was one of at least three TCEQ employees who quit their jobs after the agency granted the company permits to dump low-level radioactive waste there earlier this year, KCBD reports:

 

Speaking earlier this year at a press conference in Andrews County organized by environmental groups, Nuclear Information and Resource Service chemist Diane D'Arrigo warned of the dump's long-term risks to the community.

"Texas' waste dump in Andrews County calls for a private company to manage a low-level dump, but the company would only be licensed to operate it for 15 years," she said. "They could then renew their license or decide to close the dump and walk away, leaving a toxic mess to the state of Texas. This could also happen if the company just folds up and vanishes into the night."

And Valhi has been having its share of financial troubles lately. Earlier this year, for example, Standard & Poor's lowered its corporate credit ratings on the company from a B to a B- and placed the ratings on CreditWatch with negative implications.

Valhi recently reported a net loss of $20 million for the first quarter of 2009 along with a drop in sales for its waste management division. But it pointed to the approval of the radioactive waste dump in Andrews County as one way it hopes to cut the division's operating losses.

(Shot of WCS sign is a still from a promotional video on the front page of the company's website)

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One of the largest aquifers in the country is now threatened. The Ogallala Aquifer sits directly underneath the radioactive waste dump in Andrews County, Texas. This puts the primary source of drinking and agricultural water for eight states at significant risk. 

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