November 20, 2019

Is waste incinerator poisoning Sauget with heavy metal emissions? CDC will investigate.


Source: Belleville News-Democrat

 

The Center for Disease Control will investigate whether a waste incinerator is poisoning people in Sauget.

A federal agency within the CDC is expected to announce Wednesday it will conduct a preliminary investigation into “potential health hazards” from pollution near the Veolia North America-Trade Waste Incineration facility.

The Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease Registry is expected to determine if the Sauget incinerator is causing heavy metal poisoning.

A permit, issued by the EPA that went into effect July 1, required Veolia to install and operate mercury emission controls on two incinerators that didn’t previously have them.

In June, however, local environmentalists said The Environmental Protection Agency had allowed Veolia to relax heavy-metal emissions monitoring.

The facility takes waste such as propellants and explosives, reactive metals and poisonous materials for disposal, according to the company’s website.

The environmental group, at the time said, under the new permit, Veolia would be able to emit a harmful level of heavy metals into the air. In October, Duckworth raised the issue with EPA inspector general nominee Sean O’Donnel.

“I’ll continue working to get to the bottom of it and I’m pleased the federal government will engage with Illinois EPA and the Illinois Department of Health to gather and review data.”

In June, Carrie K. Griffiths, vice president of communications for Veolia North America, said in a statement in June that the technology to do what environmental groups are demanding it use has not proven to be reliable in measuring heavy metal emissions.

“Certain environmental activist groups want Veolia to install continuous multi-metals emissions monitors,” Griffiths said in an emailed statement to the BND. “This technology isn’t proven yet and is not currently used at any hazardous waste incinerators across the globe. Once it becomes available and can be a reliable technology to monitor metals, we will support its use at all commercial hazardous waste incinerators across the United States.”

In the statement, Griffiths added Veolia had worked with the EPA to ensure the facility is in compliance with regulations set in place under the Clean Air Act.

“We have also improved the Sauget facility with new capabilities to ensure it will continue to consistently operate in compliance with our permit limits in the future. We are committed to safety and have not had any air pollution violations in the past,” Griffiths said.

At a news conference outside the incineration in June, East St. Louis resident Mamie Cosey said she doesn’t allow her great-grandchildren to play outside because of the air quality.

“Whenever they’re burning, it affects the element because you can come outside at night and the skies are red,” Cosey said.

The Rev. Jenniffer Warren Hauser of the First Presbyterian Church in Granite City said if the heavy metal output isn’t monitored, the plant could be fatal.

“What we don’t measure, will still kill us,” Hauser said in June. “You can’t choose what air you breathe, but we have the right to know what is in it. This revised permit removing this monitoring requirement is a travesty (and) a pandering to multinational corporations, by an administration that doesn’t care (whether those living in) the metro-east live or die.”


By:  Kavahn Mansouri