Things that will Trash you home's value: landfills and power plants.

When researchers looked at five municipal landfills near residential property in Cleveland, Ohio, they found the stench was enough to drag down property values by 5.5% to 7.3%. Landfills are most hurtful in populated, expensive, residential areas. The effect was basically nonexistent in sparse, rural areas.

Likewise, the University of California at Berkeley found homes within two miles of a power plant drop 3% to 7% in value.

http://www.businessinsider.com/factors-lessen-home-value-2015-11

 

Editorial: Don't Let Fee Boost Landfills

The Times-Tribune Editorial Board nails it on the head!

Excerpt:
Landfills must be taxed to compensate for their massive environmental and economic impacts. But that also makes the government dependent upon them for revenue. Consider the symbiotic relationship between the state government and the casino industry. Harrisburg smiles on gambling expansion without regard for its vast negative social impact because the state government itself is a croupier.

Mr. Blake says he wants to fund more recycling to help mitigate the impact of the proposed massive expansion of the Keystone Landfill in Dunmore and Throop. But he shouldn’t be focusing on mitigation. His object should be to stop the expansion, which is contrary to the public interest in many ways.

Dunmore Borough’s government already has demonstrated that it can’t cut its umbilical cord to landfill cash.

State officials should not create any new incentive to make the landfill expansion look attractive. It would be a blow to Northeast Pennsylvania whether the fee is $6.25 or $8 a ton.

http://thetimes-tribune.com/…/don-t-let-fee-boost-landfills…

Sewer Permit Inquiry Valid

Thank you, Scranton City Council and Times-Tribune Editorial Board for bringing this issue to the public. Recent admissions of "miscommunications" and "typographical errors" in matters regarding the health and safety of our citizens signal incompetence at best and cover-up at worst.

Excerpt:
City council exhibited fortitude this week by pushing forward with an inquiry into the recent modification of a Scranton Sewer Authority discharge permit for Keystone Sanitary Landfill.

Michele Dempsey, a leader of Friends of Lackawanna, a grass-roots group opposed to the landfill’s ominous, massive expansion plan, recently gave Councilmen Bill Gaughan and Wayne Evans documents apparently indicating the sewer agency in December changed the dump’s wastewater-discharge permit, adding a second line for leachate, the liquid runoff from garbage. Council members have justifiable concerns that the apparent alteration allows the landfill to use the secondary line for leachate, in addition to a dedicated sewer line.

Gene Barrett, executive director of the authority, said the modification only corrected a typographical error and that the landfill’s original permit allowed discharge into the alternate line.


http://thetimes-tribune.com/…/sewer-permit-inquiry-valid-1.…

In the Dark of Night, Foul Odor & a Changed Permit

KSL's Wastewater Permit CHANGED Mid-Contract to Allow Use of the Green Ridge Sewer Line in Apparent Violation of Settlement Agreement with the Residents of Scranton

Because the citizens of Scranton and Scranton Council did not want leachate running through the Green Ridge line--which is a combined sewer overflow line where leachate could back up into their homes, overflow into the Lackawanna River or smells and toxins could escape through stormwater drains into the air--they entered into a Settlement Agreement with Keystone Sanitary Landfill (KSL) in 1990 that resulted in a dedicated line being constructed to take leachate from the landfill to the Sewer Authority.

KSL's 2012-2017 Wastewater Permit with SSA ONLY permitted use of the dedicated line, consistent with the Settlement Agreement. However, during the investigation of the mysterious malodorous substance that flowed through the Green Ridge line and evacuated the Sleep Inn and St. Joe's last September, Friends of Lackawanna raised questions about KSL's use of the Green Ridge line since they had admitted to running leachate down it that same night in violation of the permit. On December 17, 2015, the Scranton Sewer Authority CHANGED the permit to ALLOW use of the Green Ridge line for leachate!

There does not appear to be any special conditions for this use and since the Green Ridge line is gravity fed, why would KSL pay to pump leachate through the dedicated line? Also, broken pumps or "mechanical failures" should not have been an excuse to use the unpermitted Green Ridge line--the leachate lagoons at KSL can hold 11 million gallons and are required to be able to handle overflow and the leachate can be trucked to the SSA, as it was for 3 years during construction of KSL's onsite pre-treatment plant.

This landfill continues to play by a different set of rules and put the health and safety of our citizens at risk. It needs to be shut down. Enough is enough!

 

http://m.thetimes-tribune.com/news/scranton-council-to-review-landfill-leachate-issue-1.2011973?pplogin=true

Pat Clark on Steve Corbett Show

"We established our strategy, decided how we can win this and now we are doing our damndest to execute the plan to the best of our ability." - Pat Clark summarizing the Friends of Lackawanna plan this past Friday on Corbett.

This segment provides a good summary of the current status of our activities, discusses the enormous effort FOL is putting forth and a call to action for people that want to get involved.

 

http://media.wilknewsradio.com/a/113367494/attorney-pat-clark-friends-of-lackawanna-and-corbett-update-on-fight-against-keystone-landfill-expansion.htm

Senator Blake Raising Concerns about Expansion

Thank you, Senator Blake, for citing these important issues regarding Keystone Sanitary Landfill's proposed expansion! Under current regulations, neither health studies nor environmental monitoring of areas impacted by a landfill are mandated. Without the ability to affirm the safety of our citizens, this expansion must be denied.

http://thetimes-tribune.com/…/sen-blake-talks-about-budget-…

Excerpt:
Citing issues raised by opponents of Keystone Sanitary Landfill’s proposed expansion, he also said it may be time to explore updating Pennsylvania’s recycling law to increase the dumping fees at landfills to fund additional recycling efforts, and to require municipalities to recycle more.

“I think if we don’t divert refuse from landfills, there will never be any incentive for them not to expand,” he said.

In addition, Mr. Blake said he is looking into legislation to require the state Department of Health to conduct health screenings of people who live in proximity to landfills. No such provision currently exists, he said.

“It should be obvious that that happens,” he said of the screenings.

Keystone Landfill Health Study Underway

January 30, 2016

In today's article, Friends of Lackawanna core member Pat Clark states, "the fact that no health studies are required by DEP regulations when considering a landfill expansion is an assault on common sense and an insult to those that bear the risk of having one within their community."

Amazingly, neither health studies nor ongoing monitoring of areas surrounding a landfill are required by DEP when considering a Landfill Expansion. We think that is dangerously unwise policy so we asked for one and it is underway. At some point, the decision makers will realize that this entire process if fatally flawed.

 

http://thetimes-tribune.com/news/keystone-landfill-health-study-underway-1.2001479

Casey Pushes for New Legislation to Combat Lead Poisoning

January 28, 2016

"When you don't take action to stop something like this from happening, you have robbed a child of his or her future...and basic justice." - Senator Bob Casey

Our next post will outline the similarities between the absolutely avoidable contaminated water travesty in Flint, MI and what is happening in NEPA. We need to write/call and put pressure on our elected officials to act on our behalf now before more children are robbed of their future and basic justice.

https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=A7VlRywaHeU

Dunmore council members disappointed source of odor not identified

Thank you, Dunmore Councilman, Vince Amico, for continuing to push the DEP to get answers, even if the answers are unacceptable.

Excerpt:
“It’s worrisome that ... the guilty party, whoever they may be, were able to get away with it essentially,” Mr. Amico said. “I can’t believe they weren’t able to find the culprit. It just seems wrong that someone wasn’t held accountable.”

Landfill Says it Was Mistaken About Leachate Discharge

January 26, 2016

FOL core member, Michele Dempsey, makes great points in today's Times-Tribune article regarding the leachate that KSL consultant, Al Magnotta, admitted they discharged into an unpermitted sewer line on the night of the horrid solvent incident that is now conveniently a "mistake" caused by "miscommunication" and they didn't actually discharge leachate--despite the fact the valve had been left open for an unknown amount of time! This is insulting to the citizen's intelligence.

Excerpt:
“It is unnerving and unacceptable that the DEP’s final answer to so many important questions is a shoulder shrug that only serves to raise even more questions,” said an emailed statement from one of the group’s leaders, Michele Dempsey. “There are relationships between the entities involved in this investigation that are preventing the community from getting answers. It’s time to look at the close relationships that exist between KSL and SSA ... and the cozy relationship between KSL and DEP that hints at the latter being a captured agency.”

Those close relationships include the fact that Keystone Sanitary Landfill (KSL) and the Scranton Sewer Authority (SSA) share the same solicitor, the same engineer and the owner and director of each company are close friends. And DEP often seems to be protecting KSL more than the citizens, as evidenced by not reporting that leachate was leaking into our ground water for over 12 years and not issuing a violation. Now they appear to have KSL's interests at heart again, saying the leachate incident was a "miscommunication".

Captured agency refers to a government agency unduly influenced by economic interest groups directly affected by its decisions. It shapes its regulations and policies primarily to benefit its favored client groups at the expense of less organized and often less influential groups rather than design them in accordance with some broader or more inclusive conception of the public interest.

http://thetimes-tribune.com/…/landfill-says-it-was-mistaken…

DEP grants Keystone Sanitary Landfill extension to provide info

January 9th, 2016

Keystone Landfill wants a 50 year expansion. That's crazy enough. But what's even crazier is that they are "surprised" DEP actually wanted to see the full set of engineering plans and studies. FOL was asked for our reply and our take is in the story:

“Four more months won’t magically make this a good idea,” said Dunmore resident Pat Clark, one of the grass-roots group’s leaders. “Four more months doesn’t change the fact that this mega dump sits in the middle of our community. And four more months of shining a light on this expansion will only continue to prove that the harms outweigh the benefits. So KSL can have as much time as it wants because no amount of additional time can make this expansion a good plan for the future, health or reputation of our area.”

Read the whole story at the link below and let us know your thoughts:http://thetimes-tribune.com/…/dep-grants-keystone-sanitary-…

Chris Kelly: Breaking Away

Chris Kelly reminds us that this opposition is a marathon, not a sprint. There will be peaks and valley's. 2015 is the year that the people found their voices and we are shouting to our elected officials in unison, "Enough is enough!"

Excerpt:
Let 2015 go down as the year Scranton began celebrating its 150th birthday and Lackawanna County finally started growing up.

A citizen-led fight against an indefensible 50-year expansion of Keystone Sanitary Landfill in Dunmore and Throop gained ground. Grassroots opposition to a natural-gas-fired power plant in Jessup spotlighted the folly of selling out small communities to giant corporations for a few jobs and a pittance paid in lieu of taxes.

http://thetimes-tribune.com/opinion/chris-kelly-road-to-recovery-a-marathon-not-a-sprint-1.1987811

Friends of Lackawanna Appeals Keystone Sanitary Landfill's Zoning Decision

Excerpts:
Accusing the Dunmore Zoning Board of bias, abuse of its discretion and errors in legal judgment, a grass roots group (Friends of Lackawanna) fighting Keystone Sanitary Landfill’s expansion plan appealed the zoning board’s decision that the landfill is not subject to the borough’s 50-foot height restriction.

“They got it wrong, and they had to ignore the law to (come to that decision),” Friends of Lackawanna attorney Jordan Yeager said. “We’re dealing with a powerful landowner who is used to getting his way. We expect to get a more fair hearing in the courts.”

DEP Tells KSL Which Benefits It Will Consider

We are still reading, analyzing and "peeling back the onion", but here are FOL's initial comment's on the DEP Environmental Assessment Letter:

1. As evidenced by its very detailed response letter, DEP is doing a thorough job in analyzing, and questioning, every element that Keystone submitted as purported Benefits.

2. We agree with all ten items that the DEP has indicated it will NOT consider as a Benefit. In the Harms-Benefits Analysis that Friends of Lackawanna submitted earlier this year, we also stated that each of those ten items should be disqualified.

3. We believe that as DEP receives more details on the six purported benefits it categorized as "require additional information," they too should be removed from the analysis.

4. As DEP keeps thoroughly peeling back this onion, the more "benefits" will be eliminated from consideration. What will be left is mostly items that revolve around money.

5. Ultimately, because many of the non-monetary benefits are correctly being disqualified, this analysis may come down to one simple variable: cash. Specifically, is the money that this Landfill has to pay either by statute (State fees or payments to host cities) or as a cost of doing business (payroll, goods and services), enough? Are those fees enough to let this Landfill dominate our region for the next five decades?

6. At some point, every benefit that KSL is given credit for will run out. However, the harms and potential harms can go on forever. Once the variable of time is taken into consideration, the benefits simply cannot outweigh the harms. And it isn't even close.

Read more in The Scranton Times.

Editorial: Pat Clark of FOL

The view of the landfill from the Dunmore Reservoir. 

The view of the landfill from the Dunmore Reservoir. 

Another eye-opening editorial by FOL core member, Pat Clark. It's time to stand up for ourselves and hop out of the pot before we boil!

Excerpts:
Have you ever heard the boiling frog metaphor? If you place a frog in a pot of boiling water, it will immediately jump out. If you place a frog in a pot of room-temperature water that is gradually heated, the frog will not notice the danger and will boil to death. Science may debate the actual reaction that the frog would have, but the metaphor rings true — it speaks to our general inability to react to threats and changes that gradually occur over time....

So, without detailed [health] information that covers an adequate sample size covering an acceptable time period, how could any agency reasonably conclude that a massive landfill expansion is safe for people in the surrounding communities? They cannot. To do so would be, at best, guessing, and at worst, putting the lives of the people they are supposed to protect at risk....

At some point, we need to stand up for ourselves and hop out of the pot before the water boils.

If the DEP is willing to grant any form of this expansion without enough health or environmental data, it is rolling the dice and gambling with people’s lives. That is an unnecessary, irresponsible and unacceptable risk.

News on the DEP's First Environmental Assessment Review Letter

From WNEP coverage:
The people who have been most vocally against the landfill expansion aren't satisfied.

"For us, there's not a happy compromise, you know, we've done our fair share for society and enough is enough," said Michele Dempsey of Friends of Lackawanna. "So, right now we feel that more harms are being added to our community and no benefits are really coming back from this and it's time to stop, enough is enough."


Excerpts From The Scranton Times:
The state Department of Environmental Protection requested the designs and a litany of other information from the Dunmore and Throop operation after finishing its first environmental assessment of the nearly half-century expansion proposal.

The agency issued its initial review in a letter to Keystone on Tuesday and released it to the public on Friday.

“Our initial reaction is that we are pleased to see that the DEP is taking many of the public’s concerns into consideration and are thoroughly evaluating them,” said Dunmore resident Pat Clark, one of the organization’s leaders. “However, just as we have (said) since our first reading of the harms/benefits analysis, it remains exceptionally clear that the overall harms for this project clearly outweigh the benefits.”

DEP's First Environmental Assessment Review Letter

Friends, we are still reading through the DEP Environmental Assessment Review Letter. Initially, we are pleased to see that the DEP is taking many of the the public's concerns into consideration and are evaluating them. However, just as we have said since our first reading of the Harms Benefits Analysis, it remains exceptionally clear that the overall Harms for this project clearly outweigh the Benefits.

We will post more once we have had the opportunity to thoroughly evaluate the letter. A link to it is below.

DEP: Discharge in Scranton Might Have Been Petroleum-Based

“We want answers to all of our questions,” Ms. Dempsey [FOL core member] said Tuesday. “Saying we can’t find the source is not going to be good enough. We want accountability. This is a very serious incident and it can’t be shrugged off.”

There are 2 distinct issues here: 1) What was the solvent and the source of it? and 2) According to KSL's wastewater permit, there are no circumstances under which they can use the sewer line through Green Ridge, therefore: How often do they use it? How much leachate do they send down it? And how often? Who are they accountable to?