Mercury Landfill Approved Despite Overwhelming Opposition:
Local Fundraising for Independent Scientific Review
Begins
CSWAB
Citizens for Safe Water Around Badger
E12629 Weigand’s Bay South Merrimac, WI
53561
Phone (608) 643-3124 Fax (608) 643-0005
April 12, 2001
PRESS RELEASE
For immediate release
FOR MORE INFORMATION:
Contact: Laura Olah, Executive Director (608) 643-3124
Mercury Landfill Approved Despite Overwhelming Opposition:
Local Fundraising for Independent Scientific Review Begins
MERRIMAC -- Despite more than 300 letters and postcards and
standing-room-only attendance at the WDNR’s January 23 public meeting,
the burial of mercury-laced sediments at Badger Army Ammunition
Plant
has been approved. The 8-acre landfill will be located inside
Badger in
the Township of Sumpter.
CSWAB received word this week that the WDNR has approved the Army’s
requested low hazard exemption. The April 6 letter exempts
the Army
from meeting even minimum design and construction criteria normally
required for hazardous waste landfills.
Unlike other hazardous waste landfills, the new landfill will have
a
permeable soil cover instead of an engineered cap. The WDNR
maintains
that the amount of settling expected as the sediment dewaters and
decomposes would cause a problem with a cap. However, without
an
engineered cap, rainwater and melting snow will continue to migrate
through the buried sediments, carrying low levels of contaminants
away
from the site.
As a result, conditions of the WDNR approval stipulate that if future
monitoring shows that an environmental problem exists at the site
or
adjacent wetlands, the Department will require remediation and or
removal of the entire landfill to a monitored landfill elsewhere
on the
Badger property. CSWAB maintains the mercury-contaminated
sediments
should be placed in a fully regulated landfill now rather than risk
a
failure in the future when it may be impractical or cost-prohibitive
to
move the materials.
In anticipation of the Department’s decision, CSWAB’s board has approved
hiring a soil scientist to review the Army’s conclusions about the
long-term integrity of the burial site. Although CSWAB supports
the
dredging of the bay itself, the community-led board has serious
concerns
about the potential future impact 30,000 cubic yards of buried
mercury-contaminated sediments may have on the environment.
In order to minimize potential risks, the WDNR approval relies heavily
on deed and future use restrictions. Future cultivation or
excavation
of the site will be prohibited. If animal damage, vandalism,
or other
activities disturb soil cover or vegetation, the Army may be required
to
fence the entire site.
The contaminated sediments containing high levels of mercury,
lead,
copper, zinc, and nitrogen were generated mainly during World
War II
and the Korean conflict as a by-product of ammunition manufacture
at
Badger Army Ammunition Plant. During active production years,
industrial wastewater was discharged from Badger through a series
of
settling ponds inside the plant and ultimately to Gruber’s Grove
Bay, an
embayment of Lake Wisconsin north of Prairie du Sac. The dredging
project is scheduled to begin later this month.
“We need the community’s help to keep the pressure on,” said CSWAB’s
Executive Director Laura Olah. “Funding will help us push for a
better
solution and better long term protection of the environment.”
CSWAB was first organized by neighbors of the Badger plant in 1990.
This small group of dedicated community members now has more than
600
supporters statewide and is working to get Badger cleaned up and
preserved for ecological restoration and sustainable agriculture.
Donations to support this campaign are tax-deductible and may be
sent to
CSWAB, E12629 Weigand’s Bay South, Merrimac, WI 53561.
Citizens for Safe Water Around Badger
E12629 Weigand’s Bay South
Merrimac, WI 53561
(608) 643-3124 phone
(608) 643-0005 fax
info@cswab.org
www.cswab.org
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