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Regional EPA officials plan public meeting to reaffirm safety of West Lake landfill

This article first appeared in the St. Louis Beacon, May 29, 2013: Regional officials with the federal Environmental Protection Agency are holding a public meeting Tues., June 25 to allay fears of Bridgeton area residents about the possible health risks posed by the radioactive waste stored at the West Lake Landfill.

The meeting is to be held at Pattonville High School, from 6:30-8:30 p.m.

The EPA's message, delivered Wednesday via a report and conference call, is that the waste – leftover from the 1970s – is safely contained and poses no risk.

Public attention has been heightened about the safety of the radioactive material because it’s part of larger landfill complex, now no longer active, that also includes the controversial Bridgeton Landfill, which is emitting strong odors and has an underground section that’s smoldering.

“The aerial survey has shown that the radiological contaminated wastes remain contained within secure fenced areas…and do not pose health risks to the public,’’ said regional EPA administrator Karl Brooks in a conference call Wednesday with reporters.

He said the results were consistent with previous radiological surveys conducted in the 1990s of the area, which has been a federally designated Superfund site because of the contamination for over 20 years.

“The site is securely fenced and clearly marked with warning signs. Under these conditions, this material poses no health risks to the public,” Brooks said. “A person would have to illegally trespass onto the site to be exposed to elevated levels of radiation.”

Brooks said the EPA is continuing to monitor and analyze the ground water in the area.

The EPA’s survey was conducted in March under the EPA’s Airborne Spectral Photometric Environmental Collection Technology (ASPECT) Program, in which “a pilot, co-pilot, technician and scientific equipment on board flew multiple low-altitude passes over the site and adjacent residential and industrial properties to identify surface areas that emit gamma radiation,” the agency said in a statement.

The Missouri Department of Natural Resources conducted asimilar survey of West Lake less than two weeks ago, on May 16,and has reported some of the same conclusions – that the radioactive waste is secure and not emitting unhealthy levels of radiation.

The Missouri Coalition for the Environment has challenged the federal and state assurances, contending in a recent statement that “the data show clearly that the subsurface landfill fire has moved beyond the equipment that was meant to stop its advance toward tons of radioactive wastes left over from the purification of uranium for nuclear weapons.”

Ed Smith, the coalition’s safety director, contended that recent statements by the EPA and Missouri Attorney General Chris Koster back up the group’s assertion. The coalition has long sought to have the radioactive waste removed.

Work continues to end odor at Bridgeton Landfill

Missouri filed suit earlier this year against Republic Services Inc., the parent company of a subsidiary that owns the Bridgeton Landfill portion. Republic currently is in a remediation program to eliminate the odors, although the construction has temporarily made the smell worse.

Republic is paying for temporary housing expenses for some residents forced to move by the smell but hopes to have its work completed by the end of this summer. The process includes removing concrete piers that may be exacerbating the odors, and helping fuel the high underground temperatures recorded in a portion of the site. Republic ultimately plans to install a plastic cover over the entire landfill.

Republic has been filing regular reports on its progress with the state DNR, which has in turn posted the reports on its website.

What has frustrated some residents, and reporters, is that state and federal officials haven’t said exactly how far the radioactive waste is from the hot underground portion of the Bridgeton Landfill, which Koster and the Coalition for the Environment have characterized as an underground fire. (Republic disagrees with that characterization.)

The latest gauges of the hot underground portion have recorded temperatures of up to 170 degrees Fahrenheit.

Koster, who has publicly displayed a map showing the locations of the underground fire and the radioactive section, generally has agreed with federal and state officials that the radioactive waste is too far away to be threatened by the hot underground section. The map shows the two sites to be about 1,300 feet apart.

But the Coalition for the Environment is citing different distance estimates made by the EPA and Koster.

“The EPA stated at its January meeting on West Lake that the landfill fire was 1,200 feet from the radioactive wastes,” the coalition's Smith said. Koster, meanwhile, has most recently estimated the distance at 1,000 feet.

The coalition cites the different estimates as proof that the fire is moving closer to the radioactive waste. State and federal officials deny that's the case.

Jo Mannies is a freelance journalist and former political reporter at St. Louis Public Radio.