Citizens for
Safe Water Around Badger
E12629
Weigand’s Bay South - Merrimac, WI
53561
Phone (608)
643-3124 - Fax (608) 643-0005
Email: info@cswab.org
- Website: www.cswab.org
August 22, 2006
PRESS RELEASE
For Immediate Release
For more
information contact:
Laura Olah,
CSWAB (608)643-3124
EPA Makes
Landmark Decision Prohibiting
Open Burning
of PCBs by Military
The EPA today announced its
decision to prohibit open burning of PCB wastes found in old buildings owned by
the military. The landmark decision could block the planned burning
of hundreds of buildings at closing bases across the country including Wisconsin’s
Badger Army Ammunition Plant and the Ravenna Arsenal in Ohio.
Concentrations of PCBs in paint on pipes, walls, and other surfaces at Badger
are as high as 22,000 parts per million (ppm) which is more than 400 times the
EPA threshold of 50 ppm.
In a conversation with
representatives of Citizens for Safe Water Around Badger (CSWAB) today,
officials from EPA’s regional Chicago office said that EPA Headquarters
in Washington DC has made a formal decision prohibiting the military from open
burning regulated levels (above 50 ppm) of PCBs. Army officials in Wisconsin and Ohio have
been notified of the determination by telephone and a formal decision document
is being prepared.
“The EPA’s decision
is incredibly important especially in terms of children’s health,”
said Laura Olah, Executive Director of CSWAB, a community-led group that
organized a national campaign opposing the Army’s planned burns.
“Infants are extremely vulnerable to the devastating health effects
caused by exposure to dioxins and other toxins released by open burning.”
“This decision, however,
does not resolve the Army’s long-standing practice of open burning
munitions-contaminated wastes and infrastructure,” Olah emphasized.
“The prohibition only stops the Army from burning PCBs. If paints
are completely removed, these structures can still be burned.”
At Nebraska’s
Cornhusker Army Ammunition Plant alone, more than 1,200 explosives-contaminated
buildings have already been burned. Thousands more have been burned at
closing bases across the country including the Joliet Arsenal in Illinois,
Sunflower Army Ammunition Plant in Kansas, Indiana Army Ammunition Plant, Picatinny
Arsenal in New Jersey, and the Ravenna Arsenal in Ohio.
“There are safe
non-thermal alternatives to open burning,” Olah said. “The EPA’s
decision is an opportunity for change but the Pentagon has to be willing to
come to the table and be part of the solution.”
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- -
Laura Olah, Executive Director
Citizens for Safe Water Around Badger
E12629 Weigand's Bay South
Merrimac, WI 53561
Phone: (608) 643-3124
Email: info@cswab.org
Website: www.cswab.org