Arab Times

Cleanup launched at arsenic site

32 years after poisoning, EPA takes action

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KENT, NY, Aug 6, (AP): In the weeks after they moved from New York City to their dream home in the leafy countrysid­e, Norman and Alicia Berns grew ill with nausea, numbness and crushing fatigue.

She tried to restore her health by drinking plenty of water, but that turned out to be the worst thing she could do.

“We were just getting progressiv­ely sicker, and the doctors couldn’t figure out why,” said Norman Berns.

Tests eventually revealed the Bernses had arsenic poisoning. They were hospitaliz­ed and endured weeks of therapy to purge the toxic metal from their bodies. County and state health investigat­ors found arsenic had leached into their well from a longabando­ned mountainsi­de mine, and the Environmen­tal Protection Agency installed a tank for trucked-in water at their home.

That was in 1987. This spring, the federal Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease Registry warned that arsenic in the soil surroundin­g 10 homes in the neighborho­od where the Bernses once lived poses a “significan­t threat to human health.”

Hazmat-suited crews from the EPA blanketed yards with wood chips and gravel to prevent contact with the toxic soil. The state posted warning signs for hikers and mountain bikers in adjacent parkland.

Some residents are surprised to see such urgent action three decades after the Bernses were sickened.

“They’re doing now what should

Drought reveals lost temple:

Thousands are flocking to see a Buddhist temple in central Thailand exposed after drought drove water levels to record lows in a dam reservoir where it had been submerged. As the reservoir reaches less than 3% of capacity, the remains of Wat Nong Bua Yai, a modern temple submerged during constructi­on of the dam 20 years ago, have became visible in the middle of dry ground.

Some Buddhist monks were among the hundreds of people who walked through broken temple structures on cracked earth have been done 32 years ago,” said Eric Luther, who lives with his husband in a modest ranch house in woods near the Bernses’ former home. “We’re glad it’s being fast-tracked now, but it’s scary. We went from living normal, happy lives to having the federal government telling us we’re in a toxic environmen­t.”

The EPA has proposed adding the arsenic mine site to the Superfund National Priorities List, which includes more than 1,300 sites in urgent need of cleanup. In July, the site was added to the EPA’s Emphasis List of 17 Superfund sites targeted for “immediate, intense action.”

The 12-acre site in Kent, 50 miles (80 kilometers) north of New York City, is near where a 19th-century mine on Ninham Mountain once produced arsenic ore used for manufactur­ing pesticides, paint and wood preservati­ves. Mine tailings – waste rocks separated from ore – were discarded around the area, spreading arsenic contaminat­ion.

The agency first became aware of high levels of arsenic in the area when the Bernses were poisoned. Back then, the state health department and Department of Environmen­tal Conservati­on asked the EPA to investigat­e arsenic in the Bernses’ well, which had been drilled through mine tailings.

The EPA installed the water tank at their house. At several other homes, filters were installed to remove lower levels of arsenic.

Prayut

Investigat­es

Trump

The EPA and the county health department did limited soil testing near the mine and at several residentia­l properties in the 1980s, but it took no further action because of naturally high arsenic levels in soil in the region, according to an EPA fact sheet.

Some residents are asking why the EPA is proposing a Superfund soil cleanup only now.

“At the time, we were asked to investigat­e the potable water supply and make sure the water supply was protected,” EPA Region 2 Administra­tor Pete Lopez said in an interview. “That was the limit of our engagement.”

A more extensive investigat­ion was launched in 2017 after the current residents of the Bernses’ house suspected a leak in the water tank. In the course of investigat­ing, the EPA discovered the system contained arsenic-contaminat­ed sediment.

“From there, we thought we need to step back and think how we can be more protective here,” Lopez said.

Soil sampling of private properties near the old mine entrance revealed arsenic levels as high as 1,600 times the EPA screening level. The health advisory issued in April 2019 said long-term exposure to arsenic in soil on the properties “poses a significan­tly elevated risk for cancer health effects.”

“Mike and I were never informed about arsenic problems” before buying the house in 2007, Luther said. “We heard it from neighbors after we moved in, that someone had their well poisoned from an old arsenic mine up the hill.”

littered with dead fish last week to pay respects to a headless 4-metre (13-feet) -tall Buddha statue, adorning it with flowers. Thailand’s Prime Minister is Prayut Chan-o-cha.

“The temple is normally covered by water. In the rainy season you don’t see anything,” said one of the visitors, Somchai Ornchawian­g, a 67-year-old retired teacher.

He regretted the temple flooding but is now worried about the damage the drought is causing to farmland, he added. (RTRS)

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