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Lone
Tree Council P.O. 1251, Bay City,
Michigan 48706 (Fighting for environmental justice since
1978) IMMEDIATE RELEASE
CONTACT: Pat Bradt 989-753-6036
May 1,
2008
Michelle Hurd Riddick (989) 799-3313
Terry Miller (989) 686-6386
DECISION ON
SLURRY PIT COULD THREATEN MAJOR GREAT LAKES WATERSHED Lt. Governor Cherry’s slurry pit decision in conflict with MDEQ technical staff and CDC Today Lieutenant Governor John Cherry intervened in a
regulatory process, overriding regulations and the advice of his department, the
MDEQ, to allow the continued construction of a slurry pit to house dioxin-laden
sediments, without providing for adequate controls. The decision comes on the heels of a Centers for Disease Control (CDC)
announcement yesterday that it intends to investigate the impact of toxic
chemicals like dioxin on the health of people living in the Saginaw Bay
watershed and other Great Lakes’ regions. A preliminary report from the CDC
found that health could be at risk.( see link below) The Lt. Governor’s intervention comes after a three-year
process of review and construction in which the MDEQ carefully evaluated the
facility and made the case for a slurry wall (a protective barrier to prevent
dioxin-laden waste from entering the environment) and a groundwater permit in
order to improve the facility and protect the resources of the state. The facility will house highly
contaminated dioxin-laden sediments as a result of Dow Chemical Company’s
operations over the last century. Two weeks ago the director of the MDEQ,
Stephen Chester, was resolved to require both the slurry wall and groundwater
permit before the site operated.
Then the Lt. Governor was asked to become involved. “This is clearly and wrongly political intervention at
its worse in the regulatory process,” said Lone Tree Council’s Michelle
Hurd Riddick. “Why do we have regulations, permits, laws, and research if
elected officials can just step in for political expediency. " How does this
ailing Saginaw Bay Watershed, recover when such foolish
and irresponsible decisions continue to made". Instead of heeding the advice of his own DEQ’s research
documenting the need for a slurry wall, the Lt. Governor chose to rely on a
study paid by for by the Dow Chemical Company and done by a Dow contractor
without peer-review, DEQ, or public comment. It is the position of residents and
environmentalists that Dow will insist they be held to no more
stringent standards should they construct a site on the Tittabawassee
River. The precedent is huge. It was also decided that ground water permits would not
be needed, despite concerns by DEQ staff that the unlined structure could
potentially threaten groundwater and the wells of residents dependent upon
them. Also, the threshold for
dioxin to place in the site is 1 million ppt, that is more than 100,000 times
higher than the state’s standard for what is allowed in residential areas in
Michigan. “These are bad decisions that set a worse precedent,”
said Rita Jack of the Sierra Club.
“We could see these unlined, un-permitted, hole-in-the-ground-solutions
threatening our water throughout the Great Lakes – that is unacceptable.” The facility
is strongly opposed by area residents and environmentalists as risky and ill
planned. Located in a floodplain,
on productive farmland, adjacent to the river and the Crow Island State Game
Area, and next to the yards of residents of Frankenlust and Zilwaukee Townships,
the facility still does not have an operation and management plan. Environmentalists have urged the
Governor’s office and area officials to purse other locations and options that
do not threaten the largest watershed in Michigan. Despite the controversy surrounding the facility, and
letters from the Zilwaukee Township clerk, Frankenlust Township supervisor, and
Dr. Neil Varner, Medical Director
of Saginaw County Department of Health, requesting a transparent and open
discussion, decisions were limited to the Army Corps of Engineers, DEQ, and Lt.
Governor. The Lt. Governor all but ignored a request to meet with twp officials
where the site is located. “The Lt. Governor has known from the outset that this was
a highly controversial facility,” said Pat Bradt, Zilwaukee Township clerk. “He could have shown leadership by
pursuing real alternatives that don’t jeopardize the health of residents or the
watershed. Instead he is pursuing a
disastrous plan that will continue to haunt this community for decades.” Wondering what's for Dinner Tonight? Get new twists on family favorites at AOL Food. |