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May 30, 2001
Contact:
Vicki Clark: 805-963-1622
Drew Bohan: 805-563-3377; Cell 805-455-2396
ENVIRONMENTAL GROUPS PREVAIL
IN NEXT STEP OF HALACO SUIT
Citizen Suit Withstands Attempts by Halaco
To Dismiss it
OXNARD, CA - In a victory for citizens and neighbors concerned
about toxic chemicals and pollution emitted by the Halaco Engineering
Co. in Oxnard, a federal district court judge last week rejected
Halaco's efforts to dismiss a citizen enforcement suit filed against
the facility by the Environmental Defense Center (EDC) on behalf
of the Santa Barbara ChannelKeeper (SBCK). The groups filed the
suit in January to force Halaco to clean up toxic chemicals that
have been leaking into the air, water and ground at the metal
smelting facility next to Ormond Beach in Oxnard for over 20 years.
The lawsuit charges Halaco with violating the Clean Water Act
and Clean Air Act, laws enacted to protect public health. Since
1980, the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) has found Halaco
in violation of the Clean Water Act for its discharge of waste
to the Ormond Beach Wetlands. Two decades have passed and Halaco
has still not fixed the problem. Halaco has also been emitting
air pollutants in violation of the Clean Air Act since at least
1990. A recent health risk assessment of Halaco's facility conducted
by the Ventura County Air Pollution Control District (APCD) found
significant cancer and chronic noncancer risks from Halaco's air
emissions. APCD has received hundreds of complaints about Halaco's
fumes by neighbors of the facility.
"This is a clear victory for the public," said Drew
Bohan, Executive Director of the Santa Barbara ChannelKeeper.
"It shows that citizens play a key role in protecting the
health of their air and water."
"Until now, Halaco has been able to resist attempts by agencies
to force them to comply with laws intended to protect public health,"
said Victoria Clark, attorney for the Environmental Defense Center.
"We are hopeful that Halaco will finally be held accountable."
For over twenty years, Halaco has aggressively fought attempts
by the Environmental Protection Agency, Air Pollution Control
District, Regional Water Quality Control Board, California Coastal
Commission and other agencies to force Halaco to comply with the
law. The company has even sued individuals at these agencies and
has threatened others, claiming that they are trying to put the
company out of business.
For the last three decades, Halaco has piped contaminated wastewater
from its facility into a series of waste ponds adjacent to Ormond
Beach and Ormond wetlands. These waste ponds have no liner to
prevent the contaminated waste from entering the groundwater that
underlies Halaco's property. Government officials recently discovered
high concentrations of numerous toxic chemicals, including radioactive
thorium 230, in the ground and water at Halaco's Oxnard facility.
The company scoops out the metal filings and other contaminants
that sink to the bottom of the waste ponds and piles it around
the outside of the ponds, forming what is now a 40-foot high slag
heap located just 150 feet from the ocean. This slag heap is porous,
so contaminated liquid from the settling ponds passes right through
it into the wetlands and creeks that flow into the ocean. The
slag heap is not posted with warning signs and is unfenced, leaving
curious children and other passersby at risk.
Santa Barbara ChannelKeeper is a non-profit organization dedicated
to protecting the ecological health of the Santa Barbara Channel,
its watersheds and habitats. Currently a project of the Environmental
Defense Center (EDC), ChannelKeeper uses advocacy, education,
scientific study and enforcement to insure the well being of the
Channel. For more information, call (805) 563-3377. The EDC is
a non-profit, public interest environmental law firm serving California's
Central Coast since 1977. For more information, contact EDC at
(805) 963-1622.
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