EPA takes charge of Dow Chemical's river cleanup project
Wednesday, October 24, 2007
By Jeff Kart jkart@bc-times.com | 894-9639
Dow Chemical Co. still has plenty of pollution to address in and along local
rivers - from dioxins and furans that were byproducts of the manufacture of
chlorine-based products decades ago.
The toxics have settled along and in the Tittabawassee River, Saginaw River and
Saginaw Bay, threatening human and ecological health from long-term exposure,
state regulators say.
But how quickly a cleanup will proceed has become less clear now that the U.S.
Environmental Protection Agency has stepped in as the lead agency on the
project.
Dow, based in Midland, has been working since 2001 with the state Department of
Environmental Quality to address historic dioxin contamination in the waterways,
primarily emitted from the 1930s through the 1970s.
In recent months, the EPA office in Chicago has involved itself in the matter,
and now is acting as the lead agency.
In June, the EPA ordered Dow to begin cleaning up three dioxin hot spots on the
Tittabawassee River. Earlier this month, EPA officials gave Dow 60 days to
negotiate a cleanup settlement for the Tittabawassee and Saginaw rivers and
Saginaw Bay.
That involves evaluating the nature and extent of hazardous substances,
pollutants or contaminants, assessing the risk they present to human health and
the environment and developing cleanup options.
Dow already has agreed to negotiate, and has until Dec. 10 to submit a ''good
faith offer'' on how it will proceed.
Dow spokesman John Musser said the EPA's involvement could be positive. The
60-day deadline is a faster timeframe than Dow and the DEQ were operating under.
Dow still is hoping to have the rivers and bay addressed with a cleanup by 2010
that would include money to pay for natural resource improvements, Musser said.
On the other hand, the EPA is invoking the Superfund law in calling for
negotiations, which introduces a whole new set of regulations for the project.
''There's questions here about who we report to,'' Musser said. ''We've got two
people driving the bus.''
EPA officials in Chicago say they weren't satisfied with the pace at which Dow
was moving forward with a cleanup. They declined to give specifics, but said
they believe invoking Superfund will move the process along more quickly, even
though it means transferring authority from the state to the federal government.
The DEQ and EPA still are trying to work out how state and federal cleanup laws
will apply under the EPA's authority.
''We think that we can get it done more effectively and in a more timely way,''
said Ralph Dollhopf, associate director of the EPA Superfund Division in
Chicago.
However, he acknowledged that a timeline for completion hasn't been set.
''That has to be considered during the negotiation process and during the
development of work plans,'' Dollhopf said.
Wendy Carney, remedial branch chief for the EPA in Chicago, said the Superfund
process has been used extensively around the U.S. for cleaning up other large
river systems degraded by historical industrial activities, including the Fox
River in Wisconsin and the Kalamazoo River in Western Michigan.
Robert McCann, a DEQ spokesman in Lansing, said the EPA has been involved with
the Dow cleanup process in recent years, but is now ''taking much more of a lead
role.''
''We're OK with that,'' McCann said.
''We're going to remain a partner in this and ensure that whatever plans or
steps forward are taken that we're comfortable with them from the state level
and that they comply with state law.''
The state is operating under a residential cleanup level of 90 parts per
trillion, and that number won't change with the EPA's involvement, McCann said.
Still, final cleanup levels are subject to negotiation, and based on different
exposure pathways, McCann and EPA officials said. Previous government testing
has found dioxins levels above 90 ppt in river sediments in the Bay City area
and concentrations above 1,000 ppt at the river mouth and in the bay.
McCann said six years of effort by the DEQ have moved the cleanup process
forward. Dow and the DEQ have had their disagreements, but have been able to set
aside certain issues while pushing ahead on others, he said.
''A lot of the work that has been done over the last couple of years has gotten
us to this point,'' McCann said.
''Without the extensive sampling we've done, you wouldn't know what we're
dealing with.''
The plan being developed for the Dec. 10 deadline could involve everything from
removal of river sediment or river bank material to capping areas with clean
fill or clay and armoring river banks, Musser said.
©2007 Bay City Times
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.