Link to National Sierra Club Angeles Chapter Angeles Chapter
Home About Us News Environmental Issues Outings Sections & Groups Join/Give Search/SiteMap
News
Southern Sierran
Navigation Panel

June 2009

Psychology of Zero Waste
Help Save L.A. County's Last Wild River
Letters and Emails
Thinking Outside the Dump: Zero Waste
Chapter Task Force Takes on Montebello Hills EIR
Chapter Activists Working to Keep City Parks Hiker-Friendly and Mountain-Bike Free
Committee Offers You An Easy Way To Help Slow Global Warming
Club Launches Online Communities
Angeles Chapter Foundation 101
Mark Your Calendars! Lobby Day Is August 23, 24
Don't Waste The Desert On Trash
Palos Verdes Landfill
Zero Waste: Fun with Repurposing
Evolution of a Waste Watcher
Called to Action by a Turtle
COMPOSTING 101

Current Issue
Back Issues


 

Southern Sierran
PALOS VERDES LANDFILL

BY JOAN DAVIDSON

Co-Chair, South Bay Open Space Task Force

The Department of Toxic Substance Control (DTSC) has recently concluded a Five Year Review of the Palos Verdes Landfill.

The landfill was operational 1952-1980, covering approximately 300 acres, and includes the burial of over 47 billion pounds of hazardous wastes. The landfill accepted 40% of the hazardous wastes for the Los Angeles region.

A prior mining site, the landfill does not have a liner, nor an EPA approved cap, and daily accepted the co-disposal of toxic liquids into solid wastes. Today, the EPA would not allow any of the above conditions. Landfills today must have liners, caps and may not accept toxic liquids into a solid waste landfill. In 1993 the DTSC was assigned as the lead state agency over the Palos Verdes Landfill that had been placed onto the State Priority List. Previously the landfill had been placed onto the Cortese list that identifies the most toxic landfills.

On April 27th a community meeting was held at the South Coast Botanic Gardens in Palos Verdes to discuss the recent publication of the DTSC Five Year Review of the landfill.

The Five Year Review was scheduled to be published in September 2004 and has been greatly delayed. The review was published in March 2009 claiming the landfill has met the remediation plan. Residents turned out to question the state agency and its findings in this review. Community members greatly differed with these presented conclusions at the meeting and asked for additional information to be released to the public along with additional testing.

The Palos Verdes Landfill is a unique waste site situated in a very densely populated neighborhood bordering Torrance and Palos Verdes. Some residents are within a few feet of the landfill border. Residents who live within the perimeter of the landfill are greatly concerned about gases migrating into their homes.

A main concern regarding the review was that it was conducted by the owner of the landfill, the Los Angeles County Sanitation District. Many residents want an independent review to be conducted. Such issues as proper air modeling and sufficient testing and characterization of the landfill gas migration were questioned. Due to the close proximity of the homes to the landfill many residents have asked for indoor air testing. The DTSC has refused to conduct indoor air testing, even though Senator Dianne Feinstein has written to the DTSC requesting that the indoor air tests be conducted. In addition, the DTSC did not include in this review the current approved project for the landfill gas to energy center to be demolished, and replaced with an 80% flare system.

The Task Force questions the wisdom of this project.

The LACSD also has refused to conduct an Environmental Impact

[top of page]
bottom line

   
Angeles Chapter Home
Search / Site Map
Copyright © 2004 -2012 Angeles Chapter Sierra Club
3435 Wilshire Blvd #320, Los Angeles, CA 90010
(213) 387-4287
Comments, suggestions about this page
This page last modified: 6/3/2009