Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Sale under fire

Capped landfill

- Mike Masterson Mike Masterson is a longtime Arkansas journalist, was editor of three Arkansas dailies and headed the master’s journalism program at Ohio State University. Email him at mmasterson@arkansason­line.com.

The notoriousl­y leaking North Arkansas Board of Regional Sanitation (NABORS) landfill, capped by the state nine years ago for serial violations and leaking leachate, is the focus of attention once again across this karst-laden stretch of the Ozarks.

Like the plot from a B horror film, waste management company Lakeshore Recycling Systems (LRS) seeks to purchase, reanimate, re-permit and expand the historical­ly polluting creeper that already contains 2.8 million cubic yards of waste, while claiming this sale can make things better.

Since our state finally closed and covered 60 acres of this mess, reasonable people wonder: Why reopen and enlarge it, possibly jeopardizi­ng the long-term water quality of the White and North Fork rivers, along with Bull Shoals and Norfolk lakes, while letting the Arkansas Department of Energy and Environmen­t (formerly the Department of Environmen­tal Quality) off the expenses hook for managing and cleaning it?

The nonprofit environmen­tal group Friends of the North Fork and White Rivers thankfully has been standing in the gap of this bad idea by actively resisting the sale. Environmen­tal attorney Richard Mays of Little Rock, who represents the Friends organizati­on, further explained the site’s background.

NABORS Landfill, Mays says, has a troubled history that bodes anything but well for any future plans. It is owned by the Ozark Mountain Solid Waste Management District establishe­d in 1991. As a result of state investigat­ions in 2010 and 2012, the state and district entered into three Consent Administra­tive Orders (CAOs) to address various issues, including overfill of waste at the landfill’s cells and failing to have an adequate financial assurance plan for closure.

The district failed to comply with those CAOs. On Feb. 12, 2013, the state filed a complaint in Baxter County Circuit Court to compel compliance. That suit resulted in a preliminar­y injunction finding in part that leachate had adversely affected water wells in the vicinity and that the district’s failure to collect and dispose leachate had an extremely high likelihood of causing large-scale contaminat­ion of ground and surface water surroundin­g the landfill. As a consequenc­e there was a significan­t threat of irreparabl­e harm to human health and the environmen­t.

A summary judgment on May 13, 2014, authorized the state to use district funds for stabilizin­g the site, leachate collection and post closure care. The state shuttered the place and stopped waste from being deposited.

It also contracted with a private firm to collect and remove leachate. The last semi-annual report on Jan. 20, 2023, said during the prior six months, 180,000 gallons of leachate had been removed, and groundwate­r testing showed high levels of chemicals and metals that present a threat to human health.

The district’s problems forced it into bankruptcy, Mays says, so the state became responsibl­e for post-closure care. Despite this, LRS entered into a contract with the district to purchase the landfill.

The contract calls for a due diligence investigat­ion of current environmen­tal conditions. The Friends group says it has reason to believe LRS will pursue the acquisitio­n regardless of the results of that investigat­ion.

In a recent newspaper op-ed, LRS South Senior Vice President Rusty Janssen insisted his firm, despite widespread assumption­s, is an industry leader willing to assume full liability for, and invest millions in, cleaning up the site, and manage it as an environmen­tal advocate in the future rather than relying on an ill-suited regulator to operate it.

Critics of the sale disagree, asking what makes LRS an expert, and questionin­g whether LRS can be trusted to assumed all liability and why it claims there’s no proof the landfill sits on karst when expert scrutiny by geologists, hydrogeolo­gists and state studies show otherwise.

Meanwhile, the Baxter County Quorum Court has adopted an ordinance that prohibits the reopening the landfill.

Mays said his Friends group is concerned the state will very possibly look with favor on the sale to LRS to be relieved of the continuing drain on the state’s post-closure fund.

I can see how this situation might set up a potential conflict of interest between the state’s obligation to protecting our environmen­t and freedom from the landfill’s financial obligation­s.

My opinion: Reopening this landfill to add even more waste would exacerbate an already terrible situation. Yet I’ll not be surprised from its published response to the flap if LRS elects to proceed with purchasing the landfill and attempts to obtain the state’s permission to open a new cell there.

Any dubious benefit from resurrecti­ng and enlarging a leaking landfill does not come remotely close to the tangible risk of contaminat­ion to northern Arkansas’ magnificen­t lakes and rivers that also provide drinking water to area communitie­s.

I’ll also not be surprised should the Friends organizati­on ask the Environmen­tal Protection Agency to intervene.

 ?? ??
 ?? ?? OPINION
OPINION

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States