Radioactive Sand Detected at State's Largest Landfill, Advocates Demand Transparency from DEC

SENECA FALLS, NY (03/10/2023) (readMedia)-- Yesterday, the Finger Lakes Times reported that on February 24 radioactivity was detected in a load of foundry sand brought to Seneca Meadows for disposal. Kyle Black, the local district manager for Waste Connections – the Texas based, for-profit company that operates SMI – said the load is "segregated and isolated." According to the DEC, the sand is "isolated at the landfill with safeguards in place to ensure that it won't be disposed of at the landfill." The department says it "will continue to provide rigorous oversight of the facility." In response, Seneca Lake Guardian issued the following statement:

"Last weekend, when a leachate evaporator at SMI caught on fire, Kyle Black told us no environmental issues arose from the blaze. Now this week, we've learned radioactive sand was detected at the landfill – Kyle and the DEC say there's nothing to worry about. But how is the radioactive sand being stored, and where will it go? We can't just keep taking Kyle Black's word for it. We need the DEC to provide complete transparency and real oversight to the people living and breathing next to this skyscraper of garbage, as well as those that work there. These repeated health and safety concerns are exactly why the Seneca Falls Town Board originally voted to close the landfill by 2025," said Yvonne Taylor, Vice President of Seneca Lake Guardian.

Late on Saturday, March 4, a leachate evaporator caught fire at Seneca Meadows, six months after a fire destroyed another leachate evaporator at the landfill. Earlier this year, a garbage trailer at the landfill caught on fire. The fires have led to questions about SMI's handling of toxic leachate, of which the landfill produces 75 million gallons each year. Seneca Lake Guardian has raised concerns about contaminants in the smoke, as well as how much untreated leachate might be getting discharged when evaporators are destroyed by fires.

Located in Seneca Falls and standing nearly 30 stories tall, Seneca Meadows landfill produces 75 million gallons of leachate annually. Less than one-third is treated to remove PFAS and other contaminants. The rest – over 50 million gallons – is trucked, untreated, to Buffalo, Watertown, Chittenango and Steuben County wastewater treatment plants, which are not required to test for and don't have the mechanism for removing the PFAS. The discharges from those plants flow into and potentially contaminate drinking water sources.

The landfill can be smelled from miles away and exposes residents to unseen gasses and particulate matter that have been linked with mortality from lung cancer and respiratory illness. Landfills account for 17 percent of total methane emissions, a greenhouse gas more than 25 times as potent as carbon dioxide. Waste Connections, the landfill's operator, filed documents with the DEC to add 47 acres of new landfill space in the so-called valley infill between its two existing facilities and allow the landfill to continue operating through 2040. Closing Seneca Meadows on schedule would be consistent with the Governor's proposed $5.5 billion investment to reduce emissions and invest in clean air and water.

Background

The Seneca Meadows landfill, located in Seneca Falls, the birthplace of American Women's Rights, is the largest of 27 landfills in New York State. It is permitted to accept 6,000 tons of waste and produces up to 200,000 gallons of polluted leachate – formed when rainwater filters through waste – per day. A quarter of the landfill – which stands at nearly 30 stories tall – is trash from NYC, followed by four other states.

Seneca Meadows was previously required to stop receiving waste and halt operations by December 31, 2025. However, Waste Connections, the Texas based parent company of Seneca Meadows Inc., spent around $200,000 in 2021 promoting pro-landfill candidates who won seats in Town Board and County races and are now supporting the Valley Infill, SMI's planned seven-story high expansion. The expansion would keep the landfill operating through 2040 with allowable dumping on the Valley Infill (the former toxic Tantalo superfund site), rising another 70 feet into the viewscape. Even with the planned closure in 2025, the mountain of garbage promises years of problems and remediation that could take generations to mitigate.

Leachate and wastewater runoff from the landfill contain per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances (PFAS), which can cause widespread contamination of drinking water and harmful health impacts. Landfills are one of four major sources of PFAS, and landfills account for 17 percent of total methane emissions.

SMI is located two miles from Cayuga-Seneca Canal and three miles from every school in Seneca Falls and Waterloo, potentially exposing students to airborne particulates and unseen gasses known to contribute to respiratory illness, asthma, and migraine headaches. The landfill cannot process all of the methane that is generated and is forced to burn almost a billion cubic feet per year in 5 flares, contributing to climate change.

SMI is harming the Finger Lakes' natural resources that have led to the region being under consideration for a National Heritage Area Designation, and which the $3 billion, 60,000-employee wine and agritourism economy relies on. The odor from the landfill can be smelled from miles away, including at Thruway exit 41, the northern gateway to the Finger Lakes. Large, sustainable employers in the area are finding it difficult to recruit and retain employees, because nobody wants to raise a family near a dangerous landfill.

SMI's expansion is also at odds with the overwhelmingly popular amendment to the New York state constitution passed last year, which guarantees every New Yorker the right to clean air, clean water, and a healthful environment.

A recent Rockefeller Institute policy brief showed that New York is one of nine states that falls well short of the EPA guidance on enforceable drinking water standards for PFAS.

The "PFAS Surface Water Discharge Disclosure Act" – introduced by Senator May and Assembly Member Kelles last year – would require annual testing for all facilities permitted to discharge water. There are no federal or state regulations currently requiring PFAS disclosures from all facilities that might be discharging it.

DEC Commissioner Basil Seggos recently tweeted about his agency's intentions to "better serve disadvantaged communities all across New York," which should include SMI. According to the draft criteria of the Climate Justice Working Group – established by the Climate Act – there are five disadvantaged communities in Seneca County.

About Seneca Lake Guardian

Seneca Lake Guardian is a New York State Not-for-Profit Corporation with 501(c)(3) and is dedicated to preserving and protecting the health of the Finger Lakes, its residents and visitors, its rural community character, and its agricultural and tourist related businesses through public education, citizen participation, engagement with decision makers, and networking with like-minded organizations.