Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Remediatio­n next for dump-fire site

Plan for Bella Vista land is required

- MIKE JONES

BELLA VISTA — Officials are preparing to move into the remediatio­n phase now that an undergroun­d fire that had blazed since late last summer has been extinguish­ed.

Today marked the deadline for an undergroun­d fire to be extinguish­ed, but contractor­s beat that deadline by more than a week. Three contractor­s started work May 18 after the Bella Vista Property Owners associatio­n took the job of extinguish­ing the fire and cleaning the site from the Arkansas Department of Environmen­tal Quality on May 3.

City firefighte­rs discovered the fire at the old stump dump on Trafalgar Road on July 29.

The associatio­n is required to submit its phase two plan to the Department of Environmen­tal Quality for review within 60 days after completion of phase one, department spokesman Donnally Davis said previously. The state will review the plan and offer comments to the associatio­n.

Tom Judson, the property owners associatio­n’s chief operating officer, gave an idea as to what the site might

look like after remediatio­n in a May 6 video that was posted to the associatio­n website.

“So, let’s think about it a year from now, so we’ll have to have a cap over it,” he said. “We will grow vegetation. We have to try to return it to a by-and-large natural environmen­t — trees growing down the road and so forth. So, our hope is that a year, two years, five years from now when people drive by that site they go, ‘Wow, that’s kind of a nice area.’ And maybe someone goes ‘And that’s where the fire was!’ and they go ‘Really there was a fire there? It looks pretty nice now.’

“I don’t want to think about just short term, I want to think about long term. Once the fire is out, then what’s the next step and the step after that and how do we make this better.”

Project manager ERM announced the fire was out June 4 in a post to the associatio­n website. A drone flight that day confirmed no hot spots. ERM works in environmen­tal planning and compliance, according to the associatio­n.

The plan was to extinguish the fire within 30 days at a cost of about $4 million, Judson, said. The associatio­n has not publicly said how much it spent putting the fire out.

Contractor­s logged 12-hour shifts and were dogged by rain and lightning, but still had the fire out well before the deadline.

Work continues at the site. A status report from ERM on Tuesday noted no hazardous substances or hazardous waste had been identified. About 13 tires, a mattress, and trace amounts of metal banding and rebar have been discovered in the debris in addition to concrete, the report stated.

“I’m pleased that significan­t progress has been made, and that the Bella Vista POA was recently able to report that the Trafalgar Road Fire has been extinguish­ed,” U.S. Rep. Steve Womack, R-Ark., said Thursday. “I sympathize with families in the area, many of whom I spoke with during this situation, who have endured so much. I look forward to the completion of the remediatio­n work being conducted by the POA with ADEQ’s continued oversight.”

E3 Environmen­tal from Clinton, Miss., was hired to put out the fire, and Little Rockbased CTEH monitored the air quality during excavation of the site, Judson said.

The associatio­n operated the dump on leased land from December 2003 to Dec. 31, 2016, when it was covered with soil, Judson said. No one monitored the site the past few years it was open, but staff members would remove trash when possible, he said.

The property is now owned by Brown’s Tree Care.

 ?? NWA Democrat-Gazette/SPENCER TIREY ?? A worker piles stumps Thursday for burning later as a crew cleans up the stump dump in Bella Vista.
NWA Democrat-Gazette/SPENCER TIREY A worker piles stumps Thursday for burning later as a crew cleans up the stump dump in Bella Vista.

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