The Signal

Air near toxic site OK to breathe

Officials cleaning up at SCV location say soil’s still contaminat­ed

- By Jim Holt Signal Senior Staff Writer

The latest test results of the air wafting over the site at the former Keysor Century Corporatio­n reveal good news and bad news.

The good news is that the air at the site is clean and of no risk at all.

The bad news is more than half a dozen nasty, cancer-causing chemicals including Tetrachlor­oethene a chemical commonly used in dry cleaning - remain in the soil at the site and contribute to detectable amounts of volatile organic compounds trapped in the soil.

The VOCs are treated in specialize­d containers at the site which act, at their most fundamenta­l level, as filters.

Jose Diaz, California Department of Toxic Substances Control’s project manager assigned to the cleanup of the soil at the former Keysor site on Springbroo­k Avenue, said the collected VOCs are treated according to the strict protocol laid out by state officials.

The on-site containers include: three vessels, each four feet wide by eight feet tall, which contain “vapor-phase granular activated carbon” used to treat the VOCs and two vessels containing materials – potassium permangana­te impregnate­d zeolite - which act as sieves.

The bottom line, Diaz said Wednesday, is that the treated air is cleaned and safe to breathe.

“The contaminat­ion is in the ground,” he explained to The Signal.

“Once the vapors are extracted, they are put in canisters and clean air is released,” he said.

Every three months, Diaz and the Toxic Substances Department receives a quarterly report from engineers working with the Santa Barbara-based firm Aecom. The reports are called Soil Vapor Extraction Quarterly Monitoring Reports.

On April 17, they notified Diaz of their most recent tests.

The soil vapor extraction tests are carried out according to the protocol set out by South Coast Air Quality Management District, a group mandated to monitor air quality.

The former Keysor Century Corp site is 32 acres in the shadow of Whittaker-Bermite where a company called the Keysor-Century Corporatio­n once made PVC tubing.

The property is west of Whittaker-Bermite and east of Railroad Avenue. If you were to continue driving east on Magic Mountain Parkway, through the T-intersecti­on, across the railroad tracks you would end up on the former Keysor property.

According to DTSC, from 1958 to 2003, Keysor, operated a PVC manufactur­ing facility on Springbroo­k Avenue, off of Railroad Avenue, where records were pressed, packaged and shipped.

Prior to the constructi­on of the sewer system in 1963, waste from the PVC manufactur­ing and record-making was exclusivel­y disposed of into an unlined pond on the east side of its operation.

In January 1974, Keysor was ordered to stop dumping its wastewater into that pond.

According to the Environmen­tal Protection Agency, Volatile Organic Chemicals that have a high vapor pressure at ordinary, room-temperatur­e conditions are believed by many to be carcinogen­ic.

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