20071113 Representative Reyes Comments on ASARCO GAO Investigation

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    GAO report details troubling Asarco behavior

    11/13/2007

    El Paso, TXNews

    Congressman Reyes comments on the Government Accountability Office report he requested

    regarding the Pentagon, hazardous waste and Asarco.

    Congressman Silvestre Reyes, D-El Paso, released the following statement regarding todays release

    of a report (attached) he had requested be completed by the Government Accountability Office

    (GAO). The report, entitled "Hazardous Waste: Information on How DOD and Federal and StateRegulators Oversee the Off-Site Disposal of Waste from DOD Installations," includes a review of

    hazardous waste disposal activities conducted by Asarco and described by the Environmental

    Protection Agency (EPA) as "illegal."

    "While the GAO report does not make any new conclusions regarding Asarco's behavior, the report

    does shed light on Asarco misconduct associated with the company's and its subsidiary Encycle'sdisposal of hazardous waste from the Rocky Mountain Flats Arsenal. Above all, the report confirms

    what many in El Paso and I have been saying, that Asarco has not been committed to the health and

    well-being of the El Paso community and is not responsible enough to merit a renewal of its permit.

    "The report makes clear that the hazardous waste disposed of by Asarco originated in the Basin Fevaporation pond at Rocky Mountain Arsenal in Colorado. The installation was initially used to

    manufacture chemical weapons, such as mustard gas, and then later leased to the Shell Chemical

    Company for the production of agricultural chemicals including pesticides. Basin F was created forthe disposal of wastewaters from manufacturing and wastes from demilitarization activity. The pond

    was in operation for 22 years and was at times filled to its 240 million gallon capacity. When the

    basin was closed in 1988 it contained 11 million gallons of wastewater contaminated with pesticidesand metals such as copper, arsenic, and zinc.

    "The report references the Asarco violation of the federal Resource Conservation and Recovery Act

    (RCRA), which occurred when Asarco failed to manage the military materials as hazardous waste.

    As outlined in the report, the hazardous waste was shipped to El Paso without a required RCRAhazardous waste manifest, Asarco stored the hazardous waste without a permit, and Asarco disposed

    of the hazardous waste in its industrial furnace without a permit.

    "By misrepresenting its disposal activities at the El Paso smelter as recycling, Asarco skirted public

    disclosure requirements that would have been required if Asarco had attempted to acquire permitsfor its El Paso hazardous waste disposal activities.

    "According to the RCRA statute, before the issuance of a RCRA permit, the EPA would have to

    cause to be published in major local newspapers of general circulation and broadcast over local

    radio stations notice of the agencys intention to issue such permit, and provide written notice of

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    EPAs intention to issue such permit to each unit of local government having jurisdiction over the

    area in which such facility is proposed to be located and to relevant state agencies. If there was

    opposition to such a permit, there would have had to be a public hearing on the matter here in ElPaso. If Asarco had not engaged in what the EPA termed sham recycling, its operations would have

    been subject to the light of public scrutiny and criticism.

    "Instead of pursuing a permit, which would have required public disclosure of hazardous waste

    disposal activities, Asarco misused the RCRA recycling exemption and was able to hide its activitiesfrom El Pasoans. EPA subsequently forced Asarco into a consent decree, and Asarco paid outmillions of dollars on the condition that details of its activities would not be released to the

    public.

    "However, due to a bureaucratic error at EPA, the consent decree was released. This draft reportindicates that there are deficiencies with EPAs approach to informing communities about its

    enforcement of environmental laws. While consent decrees can be a valuable tool for federal

    agencies to address wrongdoing by polluters without risking potential inaction by the courts, a

    communitys right to know about the disposal of hazardous materials in their back yard needs to be avery high priority. The EPA should be more proactive in informing citizens about companies in their

    community against which the agency is taking enforcement action."

    Media note: Those with questions for the GAO about the report may contact Chuck Young of the

    GAO Public Affairs Office at (202) 512-3823.