Coalition calls for industrial landfill for CFAC cleanup 8-28-2023By CHRIS PETERSON Hungry Horse News
The Coalition for the Clean CFAC announced
recently that it will urge the Environmental Protection
Agency to consider a different cleanup plan for the
old aluminum plant.
The Proposed Action calls for creating a slurry wall
around two leaking dumps, while consolidating
contaminated soils at the former Columbia Falls
Aluminum Co. site.
The two dumps, the old wet scrubber sludge pond
and the west landfill have been leaking cyanide and
fluoride into the groundwater since at the least the
1990s. Both are common pollutants at aluminum
plants.
The slurry wall plan has an estimated price tag of
roughly $57 million and is endorsed by CFAC’s
parent company, Glencore.
But the remedial investigation of the site also looked
at several other alternatives and one of those was to
consolidate all of the toxic waste at the site into one
large hazardous waste landfill.
That plan came with an estimated price tag of
roughly $165.6 million. According to studies, the net
result would create a new landfill that would be about
43 acres in size. It would also require monitoring and
maintenance.
This alternative keeps the waste “high and dry” and
away from groundwater, argued Mayre Flowers of
the Coalition during an interview last week. She said
most of the Coalition’s recommendations are nothing
new, they’re simply part of the voluminous studies on
the best way to clean up the Superfund site. The
Coalition made its choice after doing what she termed
a “deep dive” into the clean up documents with
Karmen King and other experts from Skeo, an EPA-
funded firm that helps residents decipher complex
Superfund documents.
“Most of what we recommend comes straight out of
the plan,” she said.
Flowers claimed the slurry wall technology is
unproven with the local soils, which are glacier till, a
sandy, gravelly soil that’s the remnants of glaciers
that once covered the area long ago.
She also claimed another plant, the defunct Kaiser-
Mead plant near Spokane, Washington, also
considered a slurry wall, but rejected it based on
concerns about the effectiveness.
It is important to note that the Atlantic Richfield Co.
brought up a similar complaint in its arguments
against the slurry wall. But ARCO, unlike the
Coalition, has skin in the game. As a former owner of
the plant, it’s charged with paying for about 35% of
the cost of cleanup.
Glencore, however, claims the slurry wall will work
and it will do tests on its effectiveness and depth
before proceeding, under EPA guidance. Slurry walls
have been used to contain waste at a multitude of
landfills across the U.S., the company’s experts note.
The company has also expressed frustration in the
delay in releasing the Record of Decision on the site’s
cleanup and the fact that the EPA is funding technical
help for the Coalition more than a year after the
public comment on the Proposed Action was closed.
The company also notes that Flowers, and fellow
Coalition member Shirley Folkwein had eight years
to attend numerous CFAC meetings and other events,
but didn’t do so until recently.
See CFAC on A3
Coalition calls for industrial landfill for CFAC cleanup
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An aerial view of the CFAC site in 2023.
They also claim the EPA is, in essence, complicit in
delaying the Record of Decision.
“What may have started as a well-intentioned attempt
to accommodate requests to better understand the
technical basis for the (Proposed Plan) has morphed
into an effort by a handful of activists from outside
Columbia Falls to use EPA contractors (Skeo) to
attempt to undermine the EPA’s own Proposed Plan
and restart the site analysis and decision making
process to try to achieve their desired remedial
outcome,” argued Cheryl Driscoll of Glencore in an
Aug. 14 letter to the KC Becker, Region 8
administrator for the EPA. “This is an unproductive
use of government resources and any associated EPA
expenditures are inconsistent with the National
Contingency Plan and therefore not recoverable by
the EPA.”
The company also notes that the research and plans
that were done to date were all overseen and
approved by the EPA and the state Department of
Environmental Quality.
As for Coalition’s support of an on-site industrial
landfill, Flowers noted it would need sideboards to
guarantee that if it’s built, it would only accept waste
from the CFAC site,
not other sites.
EPA project manager Matt Dorrington said he had
not heard from the Coalition that they were proposing
endorsing the industrial landfill alternative.
But he also noted the formal public comment period
on the Proposed Action ended a year ago, on Aug.
31, 2023.
Another key aspect of the ROD is the sale of the land.
Glencore has agreed to sell more than 2,000 acres of
the CFAC property to developer Columbia Falls Mick
Ruis. But that sale is contingent on the release of the
ROD.
The Coalition is soldiering on. It plans on holding
more public meetings with King Sept. 18 and 19 and
Oct. 9 and 10 in Columbia Falls, exact time and
locations to be announced.
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