environmental Strategist, between the lines: Here is a common, everyday environmental exposure for contractors. What do you do with excess material from job sites?
Environmental Risk Management Thought: Storm water runoff from road ways contains contaminates such as petroleum products, anti freeze, lead, cadmium, asbestos, hydraulic fluids… I hope this construction company at least had the material tested to make sure it did not contain any contaminates before they filled in the wetlands and stream area or this could get real ugly.
What are your contractors doing with their excess material?
Iowa Construction Company to Pay Civil Penalty for Impacting Stream and Wetlands
Company did not have permit for fill activities during highway project
January 5, 2011
A private construction company hired by the Iowa Department of Transportation to work on a section of Interstate 35 in Clarke County, Iowa, agreed to pay a $60,000 civil penalty to the United States for performing unpermitted fill activities that impacted a section of a nearby stream and three acres of adjacent wetlands.
Manatt’s Inc., of Brooklyn, Iowa, did not have a permit from the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers to perform fill work at the site in June or July of 2009, according to an administrative consent agreement filed by U.S Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) Region 7 in Kansas City, Kan.
Manatt’s approached the owner of private land adjacent to the I-35 construction project to seek permission to use material from the construction site to fill in approximately 1,000 linear ft of an unnamed tributary of White Breast Creek. Although the landowner agreed to the proposed activity, neither the landowner nor Manatt’s obtained a permit from the Corps of Engineers to allow the work within the stream and wetlands, as required by the federal Clean Water Act.
EPA Region 7 issued an administrative compliance order to Manatt’s on December 10, 2009, requiring the company to provide the agency with a plan to restore or mitigate the impacted site. Since that time, Manatt’s has been working with EPA and the Corps to develop a restoration and mitigation plan for the stream and wetlands.
Source: U.S. EPA January 5, 2011
