Department of Water Resources
A daily compilation for DWR personnel of significant news articles and comment
October 10, 2008
1. Top Items -
Water agency kept uranium contamination at desert site secret
Metropolitan water district knew of radioactive contamination at Hayfield site for eight years. Agency says the problem is not a "show-stopper."
Orange County Register – 10/10/08
By Brian Joseph
Documents and interviews show that the Metropolitan Water District of Southern California, which provides water to 18 million people, knew in 2000 about a "major stumbling block" with the proposed Hayfield Groundwater Storage Program.
Water tests found that uranium contamination at Hayfield averaged roughly 16 picocuries per liter, with a high of 35 picocuries per liter, documents from 2000 show. The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency's limit for uranium in drinking water is 20 picocuries per liter.
Water from the
Since those 2000 tests, water planners have touted the Hayfield project in front of Congress and, earlier this year, at a water conference in San Diego.
In July, agency staff cited Hayfield as a resource available if drought conditions persist in
The top official at the water district says the contamination is isolated and the water can be diluted with clean
"It was never communicated as a show stopper because we didn't believe it was," General Manager Jeff Kightlinger said.
But environmentalists and state water officials were surprised when the Register showed them documents detailing the uranium contamination.
"I would expect a higher level of truth," said Elden Hughes of the Sierra Club, a Joshua Tree activist who once urged the district to pursue the Hayfield project. "They should have been more forthright."
Water experts said that Metropolitan's plan to dilute the water to lower the concentrations is a common and generally accepted solution.
Well tests from this year, provided by the district, show uranium levels ranging from 2.3 to 17 picocuries per liter, with an average of 5.87. Those numbers are different than the earlier numbers, in part, because the 2000 numbers reflect multiple tests on eight wells. The new numbers represent one test for each of 13 wells.
District officials also said that all water tested at Hayfield represents "raw," untreated water. Before any of that water is delivered to residents it would be treated, which would further lower the level of contaminants.
For the amounts typically found in water, uranium is dangerous not for its radioactivity but for its properties as a heavy metal. Uranium is toxic to kidneys and in high enough doses can kill tissues surrounding the organs.
As with many contaminants in water, there is disagreement among scientists about exactly how much uranium is too much. Although the EPA says 20 picocuries per liter is safe, the state Office of Environmental Health Hazard Assessment has set a goal of no more than 0.43 picocuries of uranium per liter in drinking water.
"How safe is safe?" asked UC Riverside soil chemistry professor Christopher Amrhein.
Science, he said, may suggest that the level be extremely low for health reasons, but federal officials also consider what's practical. "Science can only go so far in what these standards should be," he said, adding, "It's considered safe at" the federal limit.
But experts said the agency may face a public relations problem when the public learns about the uranium in the water, and some of Metropolitan's own member agencies may refuse to take it.
"A lot of people in
The Hayfield saga reflects a long history of controversy at the 80-year-old water agency. Metropolitan currently faces two lawsuits that allege it is poorly managed and suggest it makes decisions based on politics instead of the public interest.
"There isn't a thing they do that doesn't have a political part to it," said Art Aguilar, general manager of the Central Basin Water District, which is suing the agency over its drought plan. "You protect your kingdom and the only way to protect your kingdom is to be politically astute."
Board president Timothy Brick, of
"We operate in a political context. Sometimes we make a good target," he says. But Brick argued that Met is accountable to the public and provides good service.
At least 10 water districts statewide have rationed water this year in response to a statewide drought, and some land development projects in
With an annual budget of well over $1 billion and a service area of 5,200 square-miles, Met is so important to the region that any solution to the water crisis will require its cooperation.
A project of "great potential"
The
When the aqueduct, which diverts river water to
The agency largely ignored the site, which it owns, until the late 1990s, when the federal government demanded that
That's when Met turned to Hayfield. District officials thought it would make a good place to store excess
Around the same time, Met also considered a second project roughly 60 miles north in the Cadiz Valley of San Bernardino County, where private interests also believed a huge supply of water pooled below the surface.
But critics raised concerns about the project's impact on the
"A coalition of public interest groups and Sen. Dianne Feinstein (D-Calif.) are demanding to know why this project has been fast-tracked while others – such as the Hayfield Valley Project – that keep water rights within the control of public utilities and use existing sites – basically have been ignored," wrote Jane Kelly, of the watchdog group Public Citizen, in a 2002 op-ed for the Los Angeles Times.
In October 2002, the Met board voted to abandon
But The Register could find no evidence that district staff ever told the public, the state or even its own board members that the water at Hayfield was contaminated with uranium.
Six current and former board members contacted by the Register, including chairman Brick and former chairman Wes Bannister, of
Kightlinger, the general manager, insists that they were.
"Maybe they don't remember," he said. James Rez,who has represented the city of
Public relations and radioactive waste
By the time the board voted to drop the
Internal district correspondence obtained by The Register show that the staff discussed problems with bromide in the water in 2000. Bromide is a problem in drinking water because, under certain conditions, it can form carcinogenic compounds.
The water also contained nitrate, the memo says. Nitrate can cause the life-threatening "blue baby syndrome" in infants.
However, "Uranium is the biggest problem," says the May 11, 2000, memo. "Uranium can be removed with ion exchange, but it will create a hazardous waste problem."
The contamination stems from naturally occurring uranium in the soil, district officials said.
The document is marked with a room number but contains the name of neither the author nor its recipient. Agency officials said they couldn't determine who occupied that room in 2000, but they did not dispute that the document is genuine.
The memo concludes: "Economics would have to be worked out for treatment issues but uranium removal (and consequent radioactive waste) looks like a major stumbling block."
In an interview in September, Kightlinger said the uranium wasn't a problem because subsequent tests revealed the contamination was limited to just part of the basin.
He said the water is safe so long as the district only draws from uncontaminated wells. Furthermore, the district planned to dilute the Hayfield water in large amounts of clean
The district thus far has not provided documents detailing how it knows the contamination is isolated, but it has shared 24 pages of summary test results that show uranium at safe, low levels in 2008.
Those results show 13 Hayfield wells with uranium levels below the Environmental Protection Agency maximum of 20 picocuries per liter. (A picocurie is one-trillionth of a Curie, a measurement of radioactivity.) The 2008 test results conclude that "Uranium is not expected to be a problem."
But independent experts consulted by the Register said the district's plan to pump water only out of wells that have tested low for uranium could be problematic.
Such aquifers are not a single underground pool, scientists say. Rather they're like big sponges that hold water. As such, the water sits in various sections of the basin and water drawn out of one area may test differently than water from another portion of the site.
Experts warned that a good well could easily become infiltrated with water from a more heavily contaminated portion of the site.
"It is possible that another well … could draw in some of the water you're worried about," said Robert Bowman, professor of hydrology at the New Mexico Institute of Mining and Technology. "There's certainly a cause for concern."
After learning of the contamination, the agency negotiated a deal to receive up to $35 million in reimbursement for Hayfield expenses from the state Department of Water Resources, which wanted to encourage efforts to reduce the state's dependence on Colorado River water.
Only about $4 million in state funds were spent on preliminary studies of the site, and that money was later paid back.
But state water resources' Interstate Resources Manager Jeanine Jones, who testified before Congress about Hayfield in 2001, said she did not know about the uranium contamination when she spoke before the House Resources Subcommittee on Water and Power.
State officials say they may have acted differently had they known of the contamination.
"Depending on the severity of the problem," Department spokesman Ted Thomas said in an e-mail, "DWR might not have started payment of funds for Hayfield Project until [Metropolitan]committed to a solution or proved that the problem was not significant."
Kightlinger confirmed the state was not informed of the uranium, but said there was no need to disclose that because the agency wasn't seeking state permits.
Still on the list
An extended drought along the
But in August, agency staff mentioned Hayfield when it updated board members on water supplies available for 2009.
The Aug. 18 report said staff is "currently in the preliminary design phase" for Hayfield and that "Final design and a request for funding for the Hayfield project will be the subject of an upcoming board letter in the near future."
The board will consider that request Tuesday.
Staff has indicated that if it were approved, Hayfield could start providing water by next year.#
http://www.ocregister.com/articles/water-uranium-hayfield-2185785-district-agency
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