'Hot spot' toxics don't belong in shipping channel spoils
dump
Bay City Times Editorial
Friday, October 06, 2006
Dow Chemical Co.'s interest in a dump on the Saginaw-Bay county line for
Saginaw River dredgings spoils threatens to blow the whole project apart.
The Lone Tree Council is trumpeting memos from the U.S. Environmental Protection
Agency that the local activists claim is proof that Dow has considered the
dredgings dump as a place to put hazardous chemicals if the company is forced to
dredge contaminated ''hot spots'' in the river.
True, Dow officials say. In fact, they're making no secret of their interest in
the dump.
Dow even gave the Saginaw River Alliance between $300,000 and $500,000. The
river-shippers' group gave more than $1.5 million toward the $5 million river
dump project.
Yet, in order to intentionally put waste from toxic hot spots in the dump, the
whole project would need a different federal permit, and upgrades.
This dump should not be revised.
The chronically controversial project took a quarter century or more to get to
this point. It is expected to be ready for river dredgings in a year.
Repeated delays in finding a place to put dredgings from the upper Saginaw River
have allowed the shipping channel to gradually silt in.
This year, several lakers got stuck in the river. The U.S. Army Corps of
Engineers approved a little emergency dredging to keep the ships coming.
Without this dump for a complete cleaning of the shipping channel, commerce on
the Saginaw River will end soon.
Dow's pondering of possibly putting hot spot spoils in the dump should not be
allowed to delay this project.
This dump is for shipping channel dredgings, some of them probably contaminated.
Yes, it's splitting hairs, but this dump is not for spoils that are known to be
extremely ''hot'' toxics from any river bottom cleanup.
That stuff should go somewhere else.
Keep the dump project on the same track it has followed for decades.
As something that will help keep the river open to ships.
For additional articles like this one, go to the Tittabawassee River Watch web site www.trwnews.net for complete coverage of the Tittabawassee River Dow Chemical dioxin contamination saga. . The Newspaper / Media page of our site contains an extensive archive of media articles dating back to January 2002. The source organization's web site link is listed to the right of the article, visit often for other news in our area. The Newspaper / Media page may be accessed by scrolling down to the bottom of the CONTENTS section and clicking on the Newspaper/Media link.