Texarkana Gazette

Agency stipulates repairs at toxic site

- By Michael Biesecker

WASHINGTON—The Environmen­tal Protection Agency ordered two companies on Thursday to make more extensive repairs to stabilize the area around a Superfund toxic waste site near Houston following Hurricane Harvey.

EPA said a survey of the area near the San Jacinto River Waste Pits found erosion of the river bottom up to 12 feet deep in a 20,000-square-foot area adjacent to a fabric and stone cap intended to keep highly contaminat­ed sediments from washing away.

EPA Administra­tor Scott Pruitt has ordered Internatio­nal Paper and a subsidiary of Waste Management Inc. to underwrite a $115 million cleanup at the 16-acre site, a low-lying island in the middle of the river where contaminat­ed pulp from a paper mill was disposed of during the 1960s. Sampling by an agency dive team in the days after the historic storm revealed exposed sediments containing dioxin levels at 70,000 nanograms per kilogram—more than 2,300 times the level set to trigger a cleanup.

The companies are opposed to the expensive cleanup. EPA’s plan calls for ringing the site with a temporary dam and digging up 212,000 cubic yards of contaminat­ed sediments, enough to fill about 16,000 dump trucks. The companies contend the protection offered by the cap now covering the site is sufficient.

In a statement issued Thursday, they said additional sampling by a private contractor found no evidence that contaminat­ion from the site was spread by the storm.

EPA said those results, which still included a sample containing dioxins slightly above the mandated cleanup level, are preliminar­y. A final analysis should be completed in about two weeks, the agency said.

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