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Friday, June 30, 2017

Navy Toxic Dump Plan for Oahu - Meeting Open House at Ewa Beach Public and School Library at 7 p.m. on Thursday, June 29, 2017. In addition, the Navy has extended the 30-day public comment period until July 21.

This Thursday, Ewa Library: Feedback Sought For Navy’s Chemical Dump Proposal

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Kanehili kanehilivideos@gmail.com

Jun 27 (3 days ago)
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In order to provide members of the community with another opportunity to learn about this site, the Navy will be holding an Open House at Ewa Beach Public and School Library at 7 p.m. on Thursday, June 29, 2017. In addition, the Navy has extended the 30-day public comment period until July 21.

Denise Emsley
Public Affairs Officer
Naval Facilities Engineering Command Hawaii
400 Marshall Road
JBPHH HI  96860-3139
denise.emsley@navy.mil
808-221-6387 - cel

Ancient Hawaiian Wetlands - Navy Chemical Dump - Threatens Ewa Leeward Shores.   
See Site Photos and dumping on this link:
http://kanehili.blogspot.com/2017/06/wetlands-navy-chemical-dump.html

More feedback sought for Navy’s landfill cleanup proposal
By William Cole, Honolulu Star-Advertiser
The Navy is extending the public comment period on a proposal to spend $1.2 million
to reduce potential exposure to chemicals at a Barbers Point landfill where asbestos
and burned waste were dumped between 1942 and 1997. The surface soil contains
antimony, lead and hydrocarbons that exceed state Department of Health standards, the
Navy said. The Navy is proposing to add cover material, put in place erosion control
measures and add perimeter warning signs at the site.

Under The Radar: Ancient Ewa Freshwater Karst Pond - Navy PCB Toxic Waste Dump

Hiding all this from the public for 14 years with an under the radar "public notice" for
comment, the Ewa-Kapolei community was shocked and surprised - no neighborhood
board notice, no political reps apparently notified - HCDA apparently not notified.
PHOTOS on link show the chemical dump site's natural, cultural history and ecology
more complicated than just simple localized chemical dump.

Here's what you likely don't know:
Stockpiling of Asbestos, PCB and other toxic chemicals for 14 years without any
analysis of heavy rains washing the materials down subsurface karst ancient coral
reef waterway channels into the Leeward beach shorelines used for camping,
fishing, parties, endangered seals, turtles, limu, etc.


Recent studies found that high levels of lead and other heavy metals on the surface
were exposed by recent rains.
This site is directly adjacent to a Fish & Wildlife endangered species preserve where
school children are regularly taken to observe and care take the rare native plants and
Opae Ula native shrimp which live in the same underground coral reef brackish water
that comes directly windborne and via subsurface water from this toxic dump.


Karst ponds and underground channels act as storm drains during heavy rains.

The Navy wants to treat the site by covering it up with more soil, but environmental
watchdogs say that's not enough.


A Kapolei landfill is more hazardous than initially thought as clean up options, costs vary


 "If they were going to do anything, they should seal it up and treat it like a Brownfield site,"
Carroll Cox of Envirowatch Inc. said. treat it like a Brownfield site," Carroll Cox of
Envirowatch Inc. said. (Ric Daysog, HNN Story)

This site is an identifiable ancient natural karst pond and wetlands and ancient Hawaiian
habitation area. It was identified as wetlands and ancient Hawaiian sites in the major 1999
Tuggles research down for the closing of the Naval Air Station Barbers point.


Thermal Desorption Treatment of PCB-Contaminated Soil
Former Naval Air Station Barbers Point. Oahu, Hawaii.
Department of the Navy.


An estimated 26,306 cubic yards of PCB-contaminated soil from 100 sites
at various Navy installations on Oahu were sent to the site for treatment.
Soil from 21 sites totaling more than 5,600 cubic yards had been excavated and
processed through the NAVFAC Kalaeloa site (2003- to ?)

PCB Contaminated soils from military bases all over Oahu, including possibly Kaneohe
MCBH where there have been lawsuits filed.

Site Used By Migratory and Endangered Hawaiian Birds

It still has visits by migratory birds, ducks. They have been gradually bulldozing
over it but water keeps appearing. It's an ancient karst water pond but they always
deny it.
What Chemicals Have Been Stockpiled There?

PCB- Short for polychlorinated biphenyl. A family of industrial
compounds used as lubricants, heat-transfer fluids, and plasticizers. The
manufacture and use of PCBs has been restricted since the 1970s because
they are very harmful to the environment, being especially deadly to fish and
invertebrates, and stay in the food chain for many years. Most of the
toxic materials came from WW-II and 50's-60's era Oahu military bases.
PCB's are found in old electric power transformers as dielectric and coolant fluids.
PCBs as definite carcinogens in humans. The maximum allowable contaminant
level in drinking water in the United States is set at zero.

The North American producer, Monsanto Company, marketed PCBs under the
trade name Aroclor from 1930 to 1977. The commercial production of PCBs started in
1929 but their use has been banned or severely restricted in many countries since the
1970s and 80s.

Dichlorodiphenyltrichloroethane (DDT), DDT and other pesticides had been shown to
cause cancer and that their agricultural use was a threat to wildlife, particularly birds.
DDE is dichlorodiphenyldichloroethylene-breakdown product of DDT.

 DDD (DDT) is dichlorodiphenyldichloroethane

Polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs) are a class of chemicals that occur naturally
in coal, crude oil, and gasoline. They also are produced when coal, oil, gas, wood,
garbage, and tobacco are burned. Cancer is a primary human health risk of exposure
to PAHs.[43] Exposure to PAHs has also been linked with cardiovascular disease and
poor fetal development.

Total petroleum hydrocarbons (TPH) is a term used to describe a large family of several
hundred chemical compounds that originally come from crude oil.

Also: residual sewage sludge (and what ELSE? we don't know?

Navy admits lapses in Red Hill flow studies  By William Cole  June 24, 2017

The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency and state Department of Health sent a June 7
letter criticizing the Navy for providing too little information on water flow modeling to
determine where previously spilled fuel might end up, even though the Navy has spent
almost two years on the environmental investigation.

A better understanding of groundwater flow patterns is a critical step in the investigation
of contamination at Red Hill, the EPA said on its website.

 “While most parties agree that groundwater generally flows from the mountains to the ocean,
there are specific geologic characteristics in the area around Red Hill that may cause some
groundwater to flow in directions other than directly towards the ocean,” the EPA said.
Running out the comment clock: Started May 23 - public was not aware. 
Navy says they ran notice in daily newspaper which makes it "ok"
Claim they wanted "public comment" but seem to hope they get ZERO as this was
all Under The Radar.
Is there a plan to make this a new City trash dump that has been a hot
potato for many years? Politicians want all trash and toxic substances 
dumped in West Oahu and "Wild West" back roads Kalaleoa are ideal. Is this next?

Only now is there admission of a remediation plan, however these toxic
substances were trucked in from all over Oahu since 2003 and stockpiled
for disposal. How much has all the waste leaked into the porous karst
caves and channels down into the shoreline food chain of limu, reef fish,
turtles, seals etc. ? It has all been kept a secret for at least 14 years.

Only discovered two weeks ago, information about the "public notice" and
"public meeting"  was already well underway- started May 22 .
Thermal Desorption Treatment of PCB-Contaminated Soil.
Former Naval Air Station Barbers PointOahu, Hawaii.
Department of the Navy.

Site Was Pond Wetlands Before WW-II, 2003 Navy Turned It Into Turned Into
PCB Toxic Dump


Still visited by migratory birds, ducks. They have been gradually bulldozing over it
but water keeps appearing. It's an ancient karst water pond and wetlands but
they 
deny it. 1928 air photos show it was there before WW-II Navy airfield,
then after base closure was turned into toxic waster disposal site because it was so
far away and out of sight. Nobody asked any questions.


Not one person in the Ewa-Kapolei community was informed about this Navy Project
Plan, including either of the two local neighborhood boards which is where nearly all
community projects are presented and questions answered. No one with the Hawaii
Community Development Authority were this Navy parcel is located was aware of this
plan or the claimed public meeting. A call to all of the local offices of elected officials
in the area revealed not one of them or their staff knew about any public meeting.

Elected leaders of the Neighborhood Board # 34
Hawaii Community Development Authority (Governor Appointed leaders)
State Senator(s) of the district and surrounding areas
State Representative(s) of the district and surrounding areas
City Council Members of the district and surrounding areas
Adjacent Neighborhood Boards (downstream of potential PCB run-off)
Hawaiian Cultural leaders in the area
Residents of the Kalaeloa community

More Suits Filed Over Fears Of Toxic Soil At Marine Corps Base Hawaii

http://www.civilbeat.org/2016/12/more-suits-filed-over-fears-of-toxic-soil-at-marine-corps-base-hawaii/

Residents began to report problems with asthma, cancer and birth defects.

Navy seeks comment on waste 

mitigation plan

The Navy is seeking public comment on a proposal to spend $1.2 million to reduce potential exposure to chemicals at a Barbers Point landfill where asbestos and burned municipal waste were in trash dumped between 1942 and 1997. Surface soil contains antimony, lead and hydrocarbons that exceed state Department of Health action levels, the Navy said. The Navy is proposing to add cover material, put in place erosion control measures, add perimeter warning signs and conduct a review every five years at the industrial site in an old coral pit south of Runway 11 at Kalaeloa Airport.

The Barbers Point Sanitary Landfill is adjacent to the site of a 2003-04 operation to cleanse more than 44,500 cubic yards of soil contaminated with polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs) that were collected from 14 military installations around Oahu. A thermal treatment plant was brought in to bake the soil at 900 degrees to remove PCBs as sludge.

A coral pit used to generate fill and road-base material in the early 1940s was subsequently used for the landfill, the Navy said. “Bagged asbestos was reportedly disposed of at the site between 1976 and 1991,” the Navy said in a synopsis of the mitigation plan. “According to historic reports, municipal waste was burned and placed in the landfill, then covered with coralline soil from a nearby coral pit. A landfill cover of compacted gravel and sand was placed over the site prior to closure in 1997 as a final waste containment measure.”

A Navy review between 1994 and 1998 indicated that chemicals of potential concern were not present in concentrations that could pose a risk, but the report was reviewed in 2011 and found to have “data gaps” over the characterization of the surface soil, the Navy said.

Under the Comprehensive Environmental Response, Compensation, and Liability Act, also known as Superfund, the Navy is responsible for the investigation and cleanup of contamination resulting from its past operations.

The landfill, consisting of about 4.8 acres, no longer is in operation, but is part of the Navy’s Solid Waste Management Facility, which takes in green waste and sewage sludge.

The landfill cover was maintained as a vegetated surface until 2009, when heavy rain caused flooding and erosion of the cover, the Navy said. Compost material was spread across the surface, but charred wood and plastic started to become visible.

The $1.2 million mitigation plan is the Navy’s “preferred” alternative among several being considered. The most expensive would be the $42 million removal and disposal of soil and debris down to 10 feet.

Ewa Beach historian John Bond said he has concerns over the contamination remaining in the ground. Army Air Corps photos from 1928 show a karst sinkhole pond mauka of the landfill site, and “anything you put in the ground there is going to leach right down into the water table and into the ocean,” he said.

Bond said the Navy mitigation plan is new to him and other community members and that further review of the alternatives is needed. The state Department of Health in December said it concurred with the Navy’s preferred plan.

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