Department of Water Resources
A daily compilation of significant news articles and comment
April 23, 2009
4. Water Quality –
Valley to clean up after dry cleaners
The Fresno Bee – 4/21/09
By Lewis Griswold
Cities around the Valley are wrestling with a legacy of environmental contamination: a chemical used for decades by dry cleaners.
Now suspected of causing cancer, the chemical has permeated underground water and soil. Cleanup is necessary, but expensive, and there's no easy way to pay for it.
In
Results are due this summer, but it's a foregone conclusion that any PCE found will be blamed on dry cleaners. A 1992 state study found that virtually all contaminated drinking water wells in the Valley had been fouled by dry cleaning fluid, including three in
Visalia officials are watching with concern, fearing the city will get snared in a blame game and then be forced to launch expensive lawsuits against property owners, dry-cleaning businesses and others to collect money for cleanups -- also known as remediation.
"Cities are always worried about this," said Mike Olmos,
"We're concerned about state agencies trying to force us to clean up because they look for whatever deep pockets they can find," Stevens said.
Lodi residents -- including those who might never have had an article of clothing dry cleaned in their lives -- are helping pay for cleanup in that city through an $11-a-month charge on their local water bills.
The cost to clean up can be huge.
After a 10 year-battle, the city won a $178 million judgment in 2007 against manufacturers and distributors of dry-cleaning equipment and a chemical company; the judgment was later reduced to $12.7 million, but the city has yet to collect because it's still tied up in court. The city collected $23.8 million from two chemical companies that settled.
Watching
But Well 117 on Bullard, just west of Blackstone, is too contaminated to use, and the city doesn't need that well, Martin said. The city has no plans to clean up the contaminated soil, he said, and is relying on the state to find out who caused the problem.
So far, neither well has been conclusively linked to PCE contamination from dry cleaners.
The state Department of Toxic Substances Control is launching an investigation into the source of contamination for Well 117. Once the agency determines who is responsible, then steps would be taken to hold the property owners accountable for the cleanup.
All drinking water is routinely tested for certain chemicals. When PCE is detected, officials search for potential sources of contamination. When a dry- cleaning site is positively identified as the source, the state sends letters to the current and any previous property owners who might be liable, plus any former or current dry cleaning business owners, asking them to pay for cleanup, officials said.
Business owners often turn to their insurance carriers, and sometimes that puts money into the pot, but "we often find there isn't enough money to do the cleanup," said Antonia Vorster, supervising engineer for the California Regional Water Quality Control Board. If needed, the water quality board will dip into its Cleanup and Abatement Account as it did for
"Why bother with expensive cleanup if the drinking water can be treated?" is a common question, Vorster said. If it's left underground, she said, it will migrate to other wells.
In
Until the 1980s, the dry-cleaning industry routinely disposed of waste water containing small amounts of the fluid into the sewer system, and waste sludge was dumped on the ground, in a trash bin or down the drain. Sometimes hoses would break and cause spills.
“We disposed of it how we wanted,” said Robert Blackburn of
Most permanent cleanup of soil is done by drilling a hole in the ground and sucking out the vapors, trapping them in a filter. Water is pumped out and filtered, a process called "pump and treat."
Scientists are confident the cleanup methods, while costly, work. But the task is daunting because there are hundreds of sites throughout the state, and each site can take years to fix.
"It might not happen in my lifetime," Vorster said. #
http://www.fresnobee.com/local/story/1347307.html
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