Chicago Sun-Times

LISA MADIGAN AIMS TO PUT QUARRIES TO THE TEST

‘ Clean’ dumps might not be so clean, attorney general’s lawsuits say

- BY BRETT CHASE, BETTER GOVERNMENT ASSOCIATIO­N bchase@bettergov.org | @ brettchase Brett Chase is a reporter for the Better Government Associatio­n. To read more from the BGA, go to bettergov.org.

For seven years, Wendy and Terry Greenrod complained to local and state officials that the two quarries- turned- landfills along the Fox River that bookend their LaSalle County home were taking in banned debris that could contaminat­e drinking wells.

Now, Illinois Attorney General Lisa Madigan is suing the operators of “clean landfills” in Sheridan, a small town 60 miles southwest of Chicago, saying in two lawsuits filed in May that for years they have accepted metals, plastics, batteries and other prohibited materials that can pollute soil and groundwate­r.

“It’s a disaster waiting to happen,” Terry Greenrod says of the quarries, a cheaper alternativ­e to landfills that are allowed to accept only constructi­on and demolition debris that are free of contaminan­ts.

The lawsuit follows inspection­s by state environmen­tal regulators who last year cited more than 70 quarries across Illinois, including some in the suburbs, for having high amounts of harmful chemicals and metals.

The Greenrods and other residents, along with Madigan, environmen­tal groups and some lawmakers, say the only way to know whether those sites threaten drinking water is to test groundwate­r around the quarries.

But a move in the Illinois Legislatur­e to mandate testing failed recently amid opposition from industry groups, quarry owners and road- building companies.

How safe the water is near these types of landfills has been the subject of debate for a decade. Madigan and authoritie­s in Will County — which has nine such sites, more than any other county in Illinois — have pushed for water testing. After hearing from industry and environmen­tal groups, the Illinois Pollution Control Board rejected mandatory groundwate­r testing around the dumps.

Madigan has appealed the board’s decision. That’s now pending before the Illinois Supreme Court.

Dozens of citations were issued last year after the state conducted soil tests. Among the violations, according to Illinois Environmen­tal Protection Agency records and interviews:

◆ One quarry in Cook County — Vulcan Constructi­on Materials in McCook — and two in Will County were found to have higher- thanallowe­d concentrat­ions of mercury.

◆ Five sites in Cook, Kane, Kankakee, and McLean counties tested at higher- than- allowed levels of arsenic.

◆ A quarry in Kendall County had high levels of the weed killer Atrazine.

◆ A McLean County site tested high for lead concentrat­ion.

The two sites in Sheridan once were mined for sand and gravel for roads and buildings in Chicago. Now, they are supposed to take in only nontoxic broken concrete, bricks and stone, with the idea the land could someday be redevelope­d.

So the pits — porous, deep holes — aren’t allowed to accept materials that could wash harmful chemicals and metals into the ground and eventually into sources of drinking water.

Branko Vardijan, the operator of the sites, wouldn’t comment.

Alec Messina, Gov. Bruce Rauner’s appointee to head the Illinois Environmen­tal Protection Agency, says he supports groundwate­r testing around quarries but is “trying to strike a balance.” Messina says he had hoped that business interests, environmen­tal groups and legislator­s would have been able to agree on a compromise bill this year.

That didn’t happen. Madigan and environmen­talists wanted groundwate­r testing.

“Quarry landfills do not have the appropriat­e safeguards in place to protect groundwate­r,” says Jennifer Walling, executive director of the Illinois Environmen­tal Council. “The failure to pass legislatio­n this year that would require groundwate­r monitoring put Illinois communitie­s at risk.”

Business groups argued it was too expensive. And the aggregate and road constructi­on lobbies wanted higher limits for chemicals in the quarries.

Dan Eichholz, executive director of the Illinois Associatio­n of Aggregate Producers, says Illinois already has strong laws in place to protect water and that the Sheridan case shows that the attorney general and state EPA have the tools they need to deal with quarry owners who break the rules.

Will County officials want more accountabi­lity, with water testing one option.

“Everyone would be more prone to play by the rules if they think there’s some liability on their side,” says Brent Hassert, a former state representa­tive and lobbyist for Will County.

“The big issue is the groundwate­r monitoring,” says state Sen. David Koehler, D- Peoria, who chairs the Illinois Senate Environmen­t and Conservati­on Committee. “We’re trying to figure out where it’s appropriat­e and where it’s not.”

Sen. Sue Rezin, R- Morris, whose district includes the Sheridan sites, says groundwate­r monitoring should be part of any reform.

“I’m very frustrated,” Rezin says. “I didn’t anticipate how strong the pushback would be.”

The Sheridan sites’ operator also stands accused of illegally dumping material in a nearby stream, according to the U. S. Army Corps of Engineers, which turned over that case to the U. S. Environmen­tal Protection Agency in January.

“I want them to shut him down,” Wendy Greenrod says of Vardijan and his quarries. “I want them to make him clean it up.”

 ?? BRETT CHASE/ BETTER GOVERNMENT ASSOCIATIO­N ?? Terry and Wendy Greenrod have collected documents and complained for years that two quarries now being used as landfills were accepting materials that could contaminat­e drinking wells.
BRETT CHASE/ BETTER GOVERNMENT ASSOCIATIO­N Terry and Wendy Greenrod have collected documents and complained for years that two quarries now being used as landfills were accepting materials that could contaminat­e drinking wells.
 ??  ?? Lisa Madigan
Lisa Madigan
 ??  ?? Branko Vardijan
Branko Vardijan

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