The Environmental Protection Agency has hit the owner of a rural Central California toxic waste dump with penalties of roughly $300,000 for mishandling carcinogenic polychlorinated biphenyls, or PCBs.
The Kettleman toxic waste plant, which belongs to Chemical Waste Management Inc., was ordered to clean up soil next to the plant in July to reduce the PCB content to 50 parts per million or less. However, followup tests revealed that the PCB level remained at roughly 440 parts per million, which places the company in violation of the Toxic Substances Control Act.
Exposure to PCBs can cause cancer, provoke liver damage and harm the nervous system.
“Companies charged with safely disposing of society’s most toxic materials need to faultlessly follow the protective laws established to secure both the public safety and public trust,” said Jared Blumenfeld, the EPA regional administrator for the Pacific Southwest. “Violations of federal environmental laws at the Kettleman hazardous waste facility are unacceptable.”
As reported by the Los Angeles Times, the facility has also long been suspected by some local residents of being linked to birth defects in Kettleman City, Calif., a farming community of roughly 1,500 residents that lies just a few miles away. However, last week, state regulators ruled that the plant was not the cause of a rash of abnormalities in newborns, such as heart problems and cleft palates.
The plant is the only one in California authorized by the federal government to handle PCBs, and last year treated more than 4,000 tons of waste loaded with the chemical. Despite the fine, the Kettleman plant is still allowed to handle PCBs. EPA officials said the company has paid the $300,000 fine, cleaned up the contamination and modified its practices.
Waste Management was also fined $2.1 million by the EPA in 1985, for violations that included operating a landfill without authorization.
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