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Is public water on the way to Scott Township? (PA)

The Times-Tribune (Scranton, PA) reports:


Sandvik Inc. agreed in February to pay to connect homes within 300 feet of existing public waterlines to the water system. Engineers are in the process of verifying which buildings qualify; then the property owners will be notified before the second week of April, Sandvik attorney John McAleese said.

[...]

Some homeowners, including Scott Township resident Harry Bower, are increasingly frustrated. “I’m completely stressed out,” the former township supervisor said. “It’s been over two years now. It’s a major problem in Scott Township.”

Read the full story here.

TCE impacts water supply (and maybe the air?) in Quincy Township (PA)

The Record Herald (Waynesborough, PA) reports:


Public water may be on the horizon for some Quincy Township residents.

Quincy Township Supervisor Chairman Bob Gunder contacted the Washington Township Municipal Authority earlier this month to ask whether WTMA is able to provide public water to “a maximum of 200 homes in the Tomstown area.”

Some Quincy residents have long condemned the prospect of public water, alleging it will only lead to unrestrained residential and commercial growth.

But the Tomstown area is at the center of a Pennsylvania Department of Environmental Protection investigation into well water contamination, and DEP may ultimately determine public water is the best solution to the problem.

DEP has been looking into trichloroethylene contamination in Quincy Township since last fall.

TCE, once used as an industrial degreaser and dry-cleaning chemical, is a suspected carcinogen, and the contaminant was discovered in Tomstown after water testing was conducted for the proposed Mentzer Meadows development.

“We’re still trying to delineate how far the contamination goes,” Sandra Roderick, a spokeswoman with DEP’s south-central region, said Friday.

Read more here. Or check out this related report in The Herald-Mail (Hagerstown, MD).

Note: There is no discussion in either article of the dangers of (nor consideration of) vapor intrusion. In the second article linked above, a representative of the PA Department of Environmental Protection conveniently ignores and dismisses this well-known risk: “The numbers [representing increased risk of disease from TCE exposure] are very small. It (seems) very small unless you’re drinking the water.” Or unless you are breathing the air…

Wright Township homeowners get no straight answers (PA)

Coulter Jones (billed by the paper as Community Watchdog) writes this report in this week’s The Citizens’ Voice (PA):


Church Road residents want help

When Dan Madl moved to his Wright Township home in 1996, he knew little about Foster Wheeler, its plant in the Crestwood Industrial Park or the trichloroethylene contamination that would pollute dozens of homeowners’ wells along Church Road.

During the next several years, Madl and the other 37 homeowners on Church Road learned a lot about Foster Wheeler and the chemical, TCE, which was used as a de-greaser and cleaning solvent and has been linked to cancer as well as kidney, liver and nerve damage.

“We have TCE in the ground and it’s apparently going to be there forever,” homeowner Bill Heverly said during a Thursday meeting of the homeowners at St. Jude Elementary School.

They 37 homeowners filed a class-action lawsuit against Foster Wheeler for damages, but also are seeking tax refunds from their local taxing bodies from 2004 through 2006. The TCE contamination was confirmed by the federal Environmental Protection Agency. The homeowners say from that point their property values were greatly reduced, but they continued to pay taxes for the same value.

“I couldn’t sell my home now if I wanted to,” Madl said.

Bouncing from the Crestwood School Board to Luzerne County commissioners to Wright Township to get a straight answer, the homeowners are routinely told to go elsewhere, they say.

Read more here.

New Bally well + contamination to be dumped in stream (PA)


Within the year, a new well already drilled north of the borough can come on line providing uncontaminated public water, officials from the Environmental Protection Agency told the more than 60 people gathered in the Bally firehouse Thursday.

Then, the EPA will have to turn its attention to how it removes the chemical contamination from the water pumped from the existing municipal well, which will have to be discharged into a nearby stream.

[...]

The contamination with which the EPA is grappling comes from the former Bally Case and Cooler building in town and contains unsafe levels of several contaminants including trichloroethylene (TCE), 1,1,1 trichloroethane (TCA), 1,1 dichloroethene (DCE) and 1,4 dioxane. All three are considered potential human carcinogens by the EPA.

[...]

Kathy Davies, an EPA hydrogeologist, said the contamination of the Bally water supply is not coming from another nearby Superfund site, the former John Crossley farm in Hereford.

TCE contamination levels in the groundwater at that site, which also came from Bally Case and Cooler drums dumped into a quarry hole in the 1960s, are as high as 700,000 parts per billion. The EPA safety threshold for TCE, called the maximum contaminant level, is 5 parts per billion.

Read the full story in the Pottstown Mercury (PA).

See here for a related story about the Crossley Farm Superfund site: Toxic Legacy at Site of Farm: One Woman Asks to Be Relocated

Park Ten development ‘on hold’ in Sellersville (PA)

According to this follow-up report from the Montgomery News Herald (Ft. Washington, PA):


Contamination on a site to be developed by Park Ten Inc. of Lansdale continues to be a major hurdle for a 34-home development on the site at the intersection of Franklin Way, Twelfth and North Main streets in Sellersville, which is awaiting final land development plan approval.

Park Ten was supposed to appear before the borough Oct. 9 for a public meeting that would welcome comment and concern from area residents – and several residents were present for the meeting and prepared to discuss concerns about contamination from trichloroethylene (TCE) as well as water drainage issues. However, the meeting was postponed until council’s Nov. 13 meeting because Park Ten still has outstanding issues on the contamination, according to Sellersville Borough Solicitor Randal White.

“There are still environmental aspects of this project that cause me concern,” said White to Sellersville Borough Council at its Oct. 9 meeting.

White and Joel Bolstein, an environmental attorney with White’s office, have been in constant contact with Park Ten’s attorney, environmental attorney and environmental consultant.

[...]

Well Number 5 has a device called a “stripper” that is used to treat the water in that well to remove TCE. While there is currently no issue on that well or its treatment, White questions what would happen if the borough would stop use of that well in the future. If that happened, the development would continue to need treated water, and DEP has provided no information in writing as to who would be responsible to treat that water – likely either the developer (Park Ten Inc.) or the development’s Homeowner’s Association. White felt it was important to get this item clarified and in writing before council.

“We feel that it is prudent to have that uncertainty cleared up before final approval is given on this project,” said White.

[...]

The meeting for public comment will be held Nov. 9 at 7:45 p.m. Sellersville Borough Council meets at 7:30 p.m. but will adjourn into a special meeting just to address the development issue and receive comment from the public.

Clearly the focus here is the water supply. As with other reports like these, it is hard to tell if the potential for vapor intrusion has been considered in relation to this housing development. Regardless, appropriate measures should be taken to ensure that the development’s air — and not just its water — will be safe for future residents.

Read the full story here.

PCE contamination and Gilbertsville wells (PA)

According to the Pottstown Mercury (PA):


With its decision to provide public water to homes and businesses where wells have been contaminated with a dangerous chemical, the state must now set a schedule for installing a water line along Route 73.

[...]

Although the source of the contamination in Gilbertsville has not yet been identified, the DEP plans to remove contaminated soil from an area just west of Douglass Street. That site is located south of Route 73, also known as East Philadelphia Avenue, and west of Route 100.

The areas that will receive public water are all east of Route 100, Harney confirmed.

Water lines connected to the Boyertown Water Authority will be run along Route 73 from Route 100 up to, but not including, the Gilbertsville Shopping Center, which already receives public water.

Public water will also be provided down the sections of Sweinhart Road and Rhoads Avenue that are south of Route 73 and east of Route 100, Harney said.

In all, the water will be provided to more than 20 residents and businesses in the area, according to a DEP press release.

That release said the agency “first learned of groundwater contamination in Gilbertsville in July 2004, while investigating another site in nearby Colebrookdale.” Although officials were looking for a different contaminant, trichloroethylene, or TCE, what they found instead in the Gilbertsville wells was tetrachloroethylene, or PCE.

Read more.

Intercourse hearing set for June 14; TCE problems persist (PA)

(By the way, Intercourse is the name of the Pennsylvania town. Swear.)

Lancaster Online (PA) reports:


For the past few years, some Intercourse-area wells have tested positive for unsafe levels of [trichloroethylene]. In that time, the state Department of Environmental Protection has taken steps to make the water supply safe for the households and businesses most seriously affected. And now it has scheduled a hearing for 7 p.m. June 14 at Leacock Township Building, 3545 W. Newport Road, Intercourse, to discuss options for remediating contaminated well water in that area. Anyone concerned about the quality of their water is invited to attend.

[...]

“In the fall of 2004, we did some private well samples and found that the contamination looked widespread,” DEP spokeswoman Sandy Roderick said. By “widespread,” Roderick meant the contamination does not follow a vein or path in the limestone, but seems to have leeched into groundwater in all directions around the site where it first was discovered in the area north and east of Queen Road and East Pequea Lane.

[...]

DEP spokesman Arthur L. Dalla Piazza said bottled water delivery at DEP’s expense already has been offered to several homeowners. For homes where contamination is even higher, unsafe levels of TCE can build up and be inhaled. For those properties, DEP will install water treatment systems.

“We … installed treatment systems at three of the homes so far,” Dalla Piazza said. “Vapors from daily water use can build up in the house. If you exceed a certain contamination level, we’ll put systems on those wells to reduce that inhalation threat.”

[...]

Dalla Piazza said it could take decades for the TCE to be removed from groundwater sources. Residents with questions regarding the situation or the hearing should call Roderick at 705-4931. Those who wish to offer public comment for the record at the hearing should register with Roderick before 4 p.m., June 7.

Funny that DEP intends to address toxic indoor air by treating water supply wells. Have they completely overlooked vapor intrusion from the toxins below these homes, or have they already ruled out this prespect?

Sellersville development lacks environmental clearance (PA)

This report is from the Montgomery News Herald (Ft. Washington, PA):


Park Ten Inc of Lansdale, owners of a 10+-acre property at the intersection of Franklin Way and Twelfth and North Main streets in Sellersville, is coming much closer to realization of a plan for 34 homes on the property.

The group went before the Sellersville Planning Commission in May seeking recommendation for final approval, but did not have the documents needed for the recommendation, according to planning commission Chairman Rachel Swierzewski.

The documents included an Act 2 clearance letter from the state Department of Environmental Protection for the cleanup of trichloroethylene (TCE) found on the property, which was a radium-processing facility from 1914 to 1917 and also served as a landfill in the mid-1900s. TCE is usually linked to previous industrial activity and long-term exposure to vapors from the substance can be a potential threat to human health. DEP began cleanup of the site in 1996 that included the removal of lead-contaminated soils and lower and higher-activity radioactive soils at a cost of nearly $6.2 million, according to DEP’s Web site.

“We’re just waiting for different approvals to come back,” said Edmund Mullin, attorney for Park Ten. “There was pollution in the groundwater so there’s no threat to anyone that lives there, because we use public water now, and in addition, it’s been cleaned up.”

Read the full story here.

Questions/confusion persist in Upper Pottsgrove; Why no toxic vapor investigation? (PA)

The Mercury newspaper in Pottstown, PA reports:


Can I still use my well? What’s my water bill going to be? These and a hundred other questions were the type being asked last week throughout the course of a four-hour open house for those affected by water contamination along Farmington Avenue and Heather Place.

Discovered more than two years ago when a well was tested, the chemical has since been found in more than 100 wells in the region, forcing homeowners to live with bottled water or carbon filtration systems while state and local officials struggled to find a solution.

Last Wednesday night’s meeting marked what many hope is the final chapter in that struggle.

Designed to explain how public water will be brought to those with poisoned wells, the meeting featured experts from the Pennsylvania Department of Environmental Protection, the Montgomery County Health Department, Superior Water and the township.

Dave Rinehart, a systems operator with Superior, said his firm is getting itself up to speed, having only found out the night before that the township commissioners had decided to have the company provide water for the entire project, not just part.

“We didn’t know we’d been picked until we read it in the newspaper,” Rinehart said.

See here for the full story.

Note: We still see no mention of vapor intrusion considerations. Reports we’ve reviewed suggest that TCE has been detected in private residential wells at levels as high as 188 ppb. This is nearly 40X the level that EPA suggests should trigger concerns about toxic indoor air*. So why do we see absolutely no mention of soil gas or indoor air tests associated with this dangerous plume? Is it because vapor intrusion concerns have been explored and ruled out? Is it because the Department of Environmental Protection hasn’t gotten there quite yet? Maybe they just don’t know or care too much about toxic indoor air. Or are officials simply ignoring this widely acknowledged risk and hoping that residents don’t ask too many more questions? As we learn more, we’ll continue to keep you posted.

* EPA’s 2002 Vapor Intrusion Guidance recommends taking action to rule out vapor intrusion when TCE levels in groundwater exceed 5 ppb.

LA Times: TCE, Health, and Community Impact (Part II of II)

Here’s another important piece on TCE From the LA Times (CA) with national scope/importance. This was on Thursday’s front page:


Cancer Stalks a ‘Toxic Triangle’

Scientists disagree about the risks of TCE. But residents near a former air base are dead certain.

By Ralph Vartabedian

Times Staff Writer

March 30, 2006

SAN ANTONIO — On nearly every block surrounding the former Kelly Air Force Base, small purple crosses sprout from front lawns, marking the homes where cancer has struck.

The residents call their neighborhood the “toxic triangle,” alleging that the Air Force poisoned it with an industrial solvent, trichloroethylene, or TCE. It was casually dumped at the base for decades and spread for miles through a shallow aquifer under 22,000 nearby houses.

Texas health authorities have found elevated rates of liver cancer among residents, as well as higher-than-normal rates of birth defects. Though state health officials say it is impossible to prove that TCE causes the sickness here, this blue-collar community has little doubt about the connection.

“We are dying day by day,” said Robert Alvarado Sr., who has lived in a small clapboard home for 36 years that sits about 14 feet over the TCE plume. “I have kidney failure, my wife has thyroid cancer, my neighbor just died of breast cancer.”


Public water in Pottsgrove? Toxic lawns and car washes too? (PA)

Officials in Upper Pottsgrove are weighing the cost of connecting residents to the public water supply based on multi-million dollar estimates from competing bidders and an agreement from the state Department of Environmental Protection to grant $1.95 million to pay for the project. Meanwhile, one factor under consideration is whether to require the capping of private wells in the general contamination area…or to allow them to remain functional for outdoor uses like lawn watering and car washing. One resident remarked, “‘Why in the name of anything that is holy would you want your neighbor to water his yard with contaminated water?’”

This reminds us: A quick search of past reports doesn’t seem to reveal whether exposure to toxic vapors has been considered in this residential area. We’ll look a bit closer and report back if we find anything noteworthy. Meanwhile, it seems officials and residents would be wise to consider ruling out vapor intrusion as an exposure pathway if they have not done so already. If anybody knows more on this topic, please let us know.

EPA: TCE-contaminated study area in Perkasie reduced (PA)

From the Montgomery News-Herald (PA):


As part of an ongoing investigation into possible TCE-contaminated vapor intrusion in Perkasie, the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) held an availability session at the Perkasie Fire Company Hall Sept. 29.

The EPA began investigating Perkasie in September of 2003 for possible TCE vapor intrusion. TCE is usually linked to previous industrial activity and can be a potential threat to human health if vapors are inhaled on a long-term basis. TCE-contaminated groundwater can lead to vapor entering residential homes and causing health problems.

Rich Fetzer, the EPA on-site coordinator for Perkasie, gave a short presentation to update residents on the testing. Through testing, the EPA’s study area has been reduced. The agency is studying the area to find contaminated areas, but also to determine a source of the contamination.

[...]

Five homes in Perkasie have had high enough sub-slab tests (above 41 parts per billion) that indoor air samples were required.

Read more

A second class-action lawsuit filed re: Ivy Industrial Park contamination (PA)


Another class-action lawsuit has surfaced in the wake of well contamination near the Ivy Industrial Park in South Abington Township.

James J. Black, whose address is listed as RR 2, Box 289, Olyphant, filed suit Sept. 2 in Lackawanna County Court, charging Metso Paper USA with negligence and violating the Hazardous Sites Cleanup Act. The company asked the state in January to enter its voluntary land recycling program after identifying elevated levels of two common industrial solvents in on-site groundwater monitoring wells.

Levels of trichloroethylene (TCE) and tetrachloroethylene (PCE) above the federal drinking water standard were subsequently discovered in at least 30 residential wells near the industrial park. State and federal officials continue to try to pinpoint the radius of contamination and the length of exposure for nearby residents.

Mr. Black’s home is less than a mile from the industrial park, according to the lawsuit, which claims the contamination diminishes property values and heaps on costs for environmental testing and monitoring. His well levels were 10.9 parts per billion each of TCE and PCE, both above the 5 parts per billion drinking standard.


Read more
in the Scranton Times-Tribune (PA).

Where to direct questions re: Ivy Industrial Park contamination (PA)

The Scranton Times-Tribune (PA) has published the following list of contacts for those interested in further information:


Federal and state environmental officials are handling the groundwater contamination investigation surrounding the Ivy Industrial Park in South Abington.

More than 170 residential and commercial wells have been tested so far as Environmental Protection Agency and state Department of Environmental Protection officials try to define the affected area.

You can direct questions to:

  • Ann L. Breslin, EPA on-scene coordinator, (800) 352-1973, ext. 4-3311 or breslin.ann@epa.gov

  • Wendy Jastremski, EPA Community Involvement coordinator, (800) 352-1973, ext. 4-5222 or jastremski.wendy@epa.gov

  • DEP Northeast Region office, 826-2511

  • Metso Paper USA, Ivy Industrial Park, 586-6600¦

Class-action lawsuit filed, tests continue near Ivy Industrial park (PA)

The Times-Tribune (Scranton, PA) reports:


Federal environmental officials are expected today to join the sampling effort near the Ivy Industrial Park, where the release of industrial solvents has contaminated at least two dozen private wells in a half-mile radius.

Meanwhile, one homeowner has kicked off what may become a chain reaction of legal activity, filing a class-action suit Tuesday afternoon against three industrial park tenants and one of the their environmental plant managers. The suit filed in Lackawanna County Court claims Metso Paper USA, Sandvik Inc. and Sandvik Extruded Tube, Inc., knowingly contaminated the area with trichloroethylene (TCE) and tetrachloroethylene (PCE), solvents typically used as metal degreasers.

[...]

Carbondale Road homeowner Joseph P. Cummings has turned to the courts, filing suit on behalf of residents within two miles of the industrial park.

The suit claims the three companies released toxic materials in violation of state acts regarding storage tanks and spill prevention and hazardous site cleanup. It also claims Sandvik environmental plant manager Larry Snell hid sources of contamination from regulatory agencies and provided false information relating to spills, leaks and other sources of contamination.

[...]

The lawsuit demands the companies create a court-supervised medical monitoring program “to assure early diagnosis” of diseases resulting from exposure to the two chemicals, which can a host of problems, including nervous system effects, liver and lung damage and possibly death.

Drafted by Scranton firm Wright & Reihner, P.C., the initial suit likely will stand as precursor, with later complaints focusing on claims of diminished property values, negligence and other charges, said attorney David J. Gromelski.

Read the full story here.

Scott Township residents concerned about toxic exposure (PA)

Read the story in the Scranton Times-Tribune (PA).

“Dont` Drink the Water” says state to some Scott Township residents (PA)


Some people in one part of Lackawanna County are being told not to drink. The water of some Scott Township residents may be contaminated. The state`s Department of Environmental Protection is now testing well water to see if it is contaminated. Others are being told not to drink their water and some people say they are upset because they aren`t being told anything at all.

Read more

If your state representative wants to support better protections...

…to keep people safer from TCE, please encourage them to contact:

Jody Milanese (millaneese) in Congresswoman Sue Kelly’s office at 202-225-5441

Public main set for homes with polluted water (PA)

The Times Leader (Wilkes-Barre, PA) confirms that the Foster Wheeler Energy Corporation has agreed to install a public water main in Wright Township.

Public water on the way to Wright Township (PA)

WNEP-TV 16 (Pennsylvania) reports:


Clean water is coming to those who’ve been told don’t drink from the faucet. The decision comes months after they found out their wells are contaminated with a possible cancer causer.

The announcement came late Tuesday afternoon that public water will soon be piped into a neighborhood in Luzerne County. Foster Wheeler Corporation and the federal government have agreed to pipe public water to 37 homes along Church Road. People in that part of Wright Township have been drinking bottled water for eight months.

[...]

Foster Wheeler used to operate a plant near the neighborhood. The ground there was contaminated with trichloroethylene or TCE 20 years ago. It is a chemical linked to cancer in animals and health problems in humans. It’s not clear if that caused the contamination in the wells that was discovered last fall.

Read more.