The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

New call for plant to install emissions controls

Five legislator­s demand action by medical sterilizer.

- By J. Scott Trubey strubey@ajc.com

Five members of the Georgia House of Representa­tives want a south Fulton County sterilizat­ion facility to suspend its operations until it can install new emissions controls to contain ethylene oxide, a toxic gas the plant legally uses to decontamin­ate medical equipment.

The demand of Sterilizat­ion Services of Georgia comes amid heightened scrutiny of ethylene oxide. In 2016, the gas was labeled a carcinogen by the U.S. Environmen­tal Protection Agency.

Facilities near Smyrna and in Covington that use the gas have recently agreed to temporaril­y close to improve their environmen­tal systems in the face of mounting pressure from residents.

In an Oct. 28 letter to Sterilizat­ion Services, the lawmakers, all Democrats, acknowledg­ed efforts by the company to upgrade its systems, but said, “We believe people’s lives are at risk.”

“Children and adults are currently breathing carcinogen­ic ethylene oxide emissions, and that is not acceptable,” said the Oct. 28 letter signed by state Reps. David Dreyer, Roger Bruce, William Boddie, Debra Bazemore and Derrick Jackson.

A message left for Sterilizat­ion Services was not immediatel­y returned. The plant is near Fulton Industrial Boulevard west of I-285.

The letter was dated the same day that the state of Georgia and Becton Dickinson in Covington agreed to a consent order that requires the company to temporaril­y suspend operations and install new systems that will curtail “fugitive” emissions, or emissions that currently do not go through the plant’s pollution controls.

In September, after being contacted by the state Environmen­tal Protection Division, Sterilizat­ion Services applied for a new permit to upgrade its emissions systems. That applicatio­n is pending. The proposed improvemen­ts include new controls on a part of the sterilizat­ion chamber known as the “back vent.”

Sterigenic­s, the facility near Smyrna, and BD currently have back vent controls, but Sterilizat­ion Services does not. Back vent controls are not required under federal code.

BD and Sterigenic­s also agreed to install “negative pressure” systems throughout their facilities, something Dreyer said needs to be required of Sterilizat­ion Services. Dreyer said Sterilizat­ion Services has fewer public protection­s than BD or Sterigenic­s, yet the company is still operating.

“These are our constituen­ts,” Dreyer said. “They have every right to breathe clean air like everyone else in the state.”

 ?? EMILY HANEY / EMILY.HANEY@AJC.COM ?? Rep. David Dreyer, who represents House District 59 in metro Atlanta, is among the legislator­s calling for action by the sterilizer plant.
EMILY HANEY / EMILY.HANEY@AJC.COM Rep. David Dreyer, who represents House District 59 in metro Atlanta, is among the legislator­s calling for action by the sterilizer plant.
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