A lot of radioactivity ends up in landfill

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A speech I gave at the IEMA meeting in Springfield on Sept. 30:

I’m not politically correct and I’m angry; angry that instead of protecting the people and lowering the limits on Ra-226-228, IEPA and IEMA chose to increase the health hazard on people of Illinois, by raising the limits on Ra-226-228 that can be dumped on farm fields and into landfills.

Morris, IL, Grundy County is a great place to live but we are in a high-risk health area. We have three nuclear power plants, one spent nuclear fuel storage site, really four storage sites altogether and several chemical plants within a 25 mile radius of Morris.

Within the city limits we have a nuclear laundry that washes clothing that is contaminated by workers in the power plants, and a leaking Environtech landfill that we can’t get the IEPA to do anything about.
We have a hospital that uses nuclear medicine. We have a cancer clinic that uses nuclear medicine and there may be others.

Morris has a population of about 12,000. I challenge anyone to name another city in Illinois or even in the United States with a population of 12,000 that has their own cancer clinic.

We have a very serious health problem in Grundy County and raising the limits on radium disposal will only make it worse.

The Morris water department filters the radium out of the drinking water. The waste from the hospital, cancer clinic, water department and nuclear laundry end up in the Morris Waste Water Treatment Plant.
For many years they spread the sludge on farm fields and they may still do that, but most of it goes into the leaking Environtech landfill in the city limits of Morris.

There is no oversight at the landfill, they police themselves; kind of like letting a fox guard the chicken house.

There are probably other towns that dump their radium contaminated sludge in this landfill and that’s another problem even though all of the cities are within the law, this is not a licensed low-level radioactive waste landfill. To allow this, is a criminal act.

I understand that the rule now states that if the sludge has 12 pCi/g or over up to 50 pCi/g it has to have special permission from IEMA and has to have 10 feet of cover over it at closure of the cell. Does anyone believe that if a cell only had eight feet to go before closure they would not dump sludge in it? In all of the documents I have read the IEPA inspector has never mentioned this. For many years Environtech dumped sludge on open surface at ground level as witnessed by several people who live near the landfill.

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