The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Sterilizat­ion plant agrees to suspend activity for a week

State, BD agree to deal over toxic emissions at its Covington plant.

- By Meris Lutz mlutz@ajc.com

State officials have reached an agreement with a sterilizat­ion plant in Covington that requires the facility to temporaril­y suspen do perations.

The voluntary consent order was approved by a judge Monday. It precluded more forceful action by the state, which had sought a restrainin­g orde ra fter air testing over seven days last month showed elevated levels of the carcinogen­ic gas ethylene oxide around the plant.

The air testing coincided with an ethylene oxide leak at the plant, which state regulators have said owner Becton Dickinson did not reportpr operly.

BD is one of several sterilizer­s across the state permitted to use ethylene oxide, which has come under scrutiny since it was reclassifi­ed as a carcinogen by the federal Environmen­tal Protection Agency in 2016.

The company has said it reported the leak despite not being required to do so, because the amount of gas released never surpassed the 10-pound daily threshold that requires notificati­on to state regulators.

The agreement struck Monday contains 20 terms of compliance, including a requiremen­t that BD cease all sterilizat­ion from Oct. 30 to Nov. 7.

A spokesman for the Geor- gia Environmen­tal Protec- tion Division said the state will continue air monitoring around the Covington facil- ity during the shutdown and when the plant’s operations resume. He also said the frequency of monitoring and number of sampling locations will increase and will continue for several months.

The agreement also says the company must report all unpermitte­d releases of ethylene oxide, regardless of quantity. BD must also reduce emissions by extending the aeration process for sterilized products and limit- ing the total amount of prod- uct sterilized each month.

Cindy Jordan, a member of the Say No to EtO grass- roots group, said the agreement was a “step in the right direction” but she worried the company was still “self regulating.”

The state relies on com- panies like BD, and Sterigenic­s in Cobb County, to track and report their emissions to regulators.

The agreement also addresses “fugitive emis- sions,” gas that doesn’t pass through the plant’s pollution controls. BD can emit no more than 30 pounds of fugitive ethylene oxide per month, based on a rolling 90-day average.

The company will submit a new permit applicatio­n to the state for the installa- tion of additional emission controls.

“We want ethylene oxide to not be emitted anymore,” Jordan said. “Who’s going to be checking what their fugitive emissions are?”

In a statement, BD said it was operating safely “in full compliance with its permits, has proactivel­y adopted the most advanced and best available technology and is emitting a fraction of its allowable limit.”

Covington Mayor Ronnie Johnston welcomed the agreement. When it comes to additional regulation on ethylene oxide, or even a ban, Johnston said he still had a lot to learn about the chemical.

“Between the EPD, EPA, the governor’s office and the state of Georgia, we are going to figure it out,” Johnston said. “People just got to be patient. This is an issue that has been here for a long time but now it’s on the top of the list and we’re going to continue to work on it.”

Gov. Brian Kemp applauded the agreement in a statement.

“A s gove r n o r, I have pledged to always put Georgia families first and ensure their safety,” he said.

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Source: maps4news.com/©HERE STAFF

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