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Humboldt Baykeeper in the News
For Immediate Release:
July
5, 2006
Humboldt Baykeeper,
Californian’s For Alternatives to Toxics File Suit over
Dioxin “Hot Spot” Dioxin Levels near Former Simpson
Timber Plywood Mill Confirm Systemic Problem Around Bay.
Humboldt Baykeeper and
Californians for Alternatives to Toxics (CATs) filed suit in
federal court today. They are asking the court to order Simpson
Timber Company and Preston Properties to clean up toxic contamination
at the old Simpson Plywood mill, currently the site of Flea Mart
by the Bay, on Del Norte Street in Eureka.
The site was contaminated
with the wood preservative pentachlorophenol (“penta”)
more than twenty years ago, when Simpson used penta to treat
the marine plywood made at the mill site. Penta – a known
carcinogen in its own right – is widely known to be contaminated
with the much more toxic dioxin, the same toxic chemical found
in Agent Orange.
Baykeeper and CATs say that
they were forced to bring suit because dioxin-laden soil was
still on site, impacting Humboldt Bay and the Eureka Marsh. Simpson
and the North Coast Regional Water Quality Control Board (Regional
Board) have been negotiating clean-up of the site for over fifteen
years.
Most recently, Simpson has
filed a report with the Regional Board requesting no further
clean-up of the site. Pete Nichols, Director of Humboldt Baykeeper
said, “Simpson recently
asked the Regional Board to sign-off on their proposal that no
further action be taken to clean-up the site.” Nichols
added, “After
fifteen years of talk, it is quite clear that the Regional Board
is not going to make Simpson find and remove the bulk of the
contamination.”
The
2003 report to the Regional Board, produced by SHN Consulting,
claimed that SHN had removed contaminated soil along the drainage
ditch leading to Humboldt Bay and that, “the primary areas
of concern were removed.” But, Nichols noted, “Simpson
and SHN never tested the ditch area for dioxin, even though the
law requires it.”
In April, Baykeeper consultants
sampled mud from the same ditch Simpson and SHN said they had
cleaned up. Baykeeper found dioxin at levels tens of thousands
times higher than the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) considers
safe. The sampling also revealed high levels of dioxin in Bay
sediments, where the ditch empties.
According to the EPA, dioxin
is one of the most potent carcinogens known and causes a range
of birth defects in children who are exposed when they are in
the womb, including diabetes, and sexual and behavioral abnormalities.
The suit alleges that the parties have created a human health
risk from the dioxin contamination around the site and environmental
harm to Humboldt Bay, the Eureka Marsh, and groundwater under
the site.
Patty Clary of CATs said, “Humboldt Bay is one
of the most important mariculture centers on the west coast,
and this contaminated site is directly adjacent to the only public
fishing pier on the Bay.” CATs has been fighting for years
with the Regional Board to require dioxin sampling at all penta-contaminated
sites. "Penta remains toxic in the environment for many
years, but dioxin is worse in every way, persisting as a hazard
for generations unless we clean it up,” Clary stated.
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