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Mon Valley residents speak out against landfill permit request

By Paul Paterra 5 min read
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A crowd of about 50 people attended the hearing at the Rostraver Central Fire Department.
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Allen Rost of Speers was among those who expressed his opposition to the permit request from the Westmoreland Sanitary Landfill.
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Belle Vernon Area High School Junior Steven Collinet speaks at Thursday鈥檚 hearing in Rostraver.

Westmoreland Sanitary Landfill鈥檚 request to discharge treated waste into the Monongahela River was met with opposition during a hearing Thursday at Rostraver Central Fire Department social hall.

Twenty people spoke out against the state Department of Environmental Resources granting a National Pollutant Discharge Elimination System permit, citing concerns about potential impacts to the water supply. The river serves as a source of drinking water for thousands of residents and is part of the headwaters to the Ohio River basin, which provides drinking water to about five million people.

The landfill, owned by Noble Environmental, applied for the permit last June.

The National Pollutant Discharge permits regulate certain amounts of pollutants to be discharged into waterways, such as the Monongahela River. Leachate is described as a liquid that has come in contact with waste material. The liquid, which is generated at landfills, can pick up contamination that must be continually removed and treated.

DEP Southwest Region representatives on hand Thursday included Curt Holes, lead reviewer/environmental engineer; Mike Fifth, environmental engineer manager, and Eric Gustafson, regional director.

Kristen Jackson, of Belle Vernon, expressed concern about potential impacts to the people and property in the area.

鈥淚鈥檓 concerned about the effects it will have on my family鈥檚 health, the water supply, the wildlife, the soil in my backyard and the environment,鈥 she said. 鈥淚鈥檓 not sure how or why DEP would even consider issuing Noble Environmental a permit to process hazardous waste, given its history of violation or fines for not handling the polluted liquid waste properly. I鈥檓 concerned the landfill operators are not capable of handling toxic waste safely.鈥

Jackson said her son, Casey, who enjoyed hunting in the area, died of Ewing sarcoma 12 years ago at the age of 21. She wondered if contaminants in the area could have been the cause.

鈥淎 cause of this rare cancer has yet to be found,鈥 she said. 鈥淭here have been numerous cases of this childhood cancer in Southwestern Pennsylvania and many believe it can be related to fracking and the toxic waste it produces 鈥 I don鈥檛 know where the owners of Noble Environmental live, but I have a feeling it isn鈥檛 anywhere near the Speers Run Stream or the Rostraver Landfill and they can go home to a safe environment and sleep soundly and not live in fear that their health, their family鈥檚 health or their neighborhood is potentially being destroyed by toxic waste.鈥

Representatives of environmental organizations Protect PT and Three Rivers Waterkeeper were also present to voice their opposition to the request, referring to the landfill operator鈥檚 previous fines and violations.

Gillian Graber, executive director of Protect PT, said, 鈥淲e are deeply concerned about their ability to adequately treat their leachate so that the Monongahela River is not impacted.鈥

鈥淭he landfill has a known issue with compliance and not containing their toxic waste within the landfill,鈥 said Heather Hulton VanTassel, executive director of Three Rivers Waterkeeper. 鈥淲e need stricter permit regulations and meaningful enforcement of violation to the Clean Water Act to prevent future pollution and harm.鈥

Debbie Fought cited a report from John Stolz, a professor at Duquesne University, who also spoke Thursday night, that stated chemicals such as chlorides, bromides, and radium would be discharged into the water.

鈥淚 don鈥檛 understand these words, but I know I don鈥檛 want to breathe them or drink them,鈥 she said.鈥

Allen Rost, a Speers resident, claimed the DEP has not established a maximum flow rate or volume of leachate that is allowed to be put into the river.

鈥淭he river is running low, and they continue to put more in, concentration levels go up and it doesn鈥檛 flow, it doesn鈥檛 disperse, it doesn鈥檛 diffuse,鈥 Rost said. 鈥淭hey don鈥檛 have a plan for both continuous and random sampling monitoring of this fracking leachate. They have it for other things but it needs to be much more robust than it is for the standard landfills. These leachates will damage and possibly kill the river ecosystem as well as the adjacent land ecosystem for miles along its bank.鈥

Steven Collinet, 17, a junior at Belle Vernon Area High School, expressed his opposition to the permit and potential implications for future generations.

鈥淲e the youth of Rostraver Township are bothered and will be surely affected by the mistreatment of sewage being placed in the waters we drink, swim and fish in,鈥 he said. 鈥淔or our future, let there be cleanliness for us all.鈥

A copy of Thursday鈥檚 testimony will be made available once it is prepared. Comments will continue to be taken until the close of business April 3.

Comments can be sent via email to ra-epnpdes_swro@pa.gov. They also may be mailed to DEP Southwest Regional Office, in care of Clean Water Program, 400 Waterfront Drive, Pittsburgh, Pa., 15222.

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