The Maui News

Fuel tanks, aging DOT baseyard to get upgrades

Storage tanks not passing inspection and ‘need to be replaced as soon as possible’

- By DAKOTA GROSSMAN Staff Writer

Facility and infrastruc­ture upgrades are being proposed to a decades-old baseyard in Central Maui in order to accommodat­e the state Department of Transporta­tion’s operationa­l needs.

The DOT is proposing to make various permanent site improvemen­ts at its 5.2-acre Kahului Baseyard, which was constructe­d about 40 years ago and sits on a 22-acre parcel of state-owned land.

The facilities at the baseyard are nearing the “end of their useful life” and in need of refurbishm­ent, according to a final environmen­tal assessment that was posted Thursday in the state Office of Planning and Sustainabl­e Developmen­t’s “Environmen­tal Notice.”

According to the report, the baseyard has developed “structural deficienci­es,” such as physical wear and corrosion of the electrical systems and fueling station as well as the outdated water, electrical and telecommun­ication systems.

Additional­ly, the existing storage tanks are no longer passing the inspection for the U.S. Environmen­tal Protection Agency’s Spill Prevention, Control and Countermea­sure Regulation and “need to be replaced as soon as possible,” the report said.

The baseyard is located at 650 Palapala Dr. near the Kahului Airport and is bordered by Haleakala Highway and parcels of undevelope­d land.

Site improvemen­ts will include several upgrades to the existing fuel station, including the replacemen­t of two existing 2,000-gallon above-ground fuel tanks with one new 5,000-gallon and one new 2,000-gallon above-ground fuel tanks, according to the report.

One of the new tanks will be for gasoline and the other tank will be for diesel fuel. The new tanks will be placed on relatively the same footprint as the originals, with secondary containmen­t systems in place to provide protection in case of any fuel spills.

The electrical system in portions of the baseyard will also be upgraded, along with associated equipment, concrete pavement and traffic bollards.

Some of the proposed improvemen­ts will be completed as part of the Maui District Municipal Separate Storm Sewer System Program to upgrade the facility and minimize the discharge of pollutants in stormwater runoff from the site, the report said.

Replacemen­t of the aging fuel station canopy and vehicle wash rack, and the installati­on of photovol

taic systems may occur in future phases of the project.

State lands and funds will be utilized for the project, which could begin by the end of the year. The estimated cost for the initial phase of the project is $1.9 million.

Completion of the project would allow DOT to accommodat­e present and future operationa­l needs by improving baseyard facilities and on-site infrastruc­ture.

The operationa­l costs for the Kahului Baseyard would be reduced, too, through sustainabl­e design concepts incorporat­ed as part of the proposed project.

The Kahului Baseyard would retain all of the functions that currently occur at the transporta­tion operations baseyard.

 ?? Photo courtesy DOT ?? The fueling station is seen at the state Department of Transporta­tion’s Kahului Baseyard. Proposed upgrades at the baseyard include replacing two aging fuel tanks with new ones. There will also be secondary containmen­t systems in place to provide protection in case of any fuel spills.
Photo courtesy DOT The fueling station is seen at the state Department of Transporta­tion’s Kahului Baseyard. Proposed upgrades at the baseyard include replacing two aging fuel tanks with new ones. There will also be secondary containmen­t systems in place to provide protection in case of any fuel spills.
 ?? ?? A map shows the layout of the state Department of Transporta­tion’s Kahului Baseyard near the Kahului Airport.
A map shows the layout of the state Department of Transporta­tion’s Kahului Baseyard near the Kahului Airport.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States