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soon as the Rev. John Southwick heard the latest round of Runkle Canyon
soil testing for the leukemia-causing radionuclide strontium-90 (Sr-90)
came back low, he started to question the results. After all, the Simi
Valley resident reasoned, the picturesque canyon had previously tested
27 times higher than background for Sr-90. One hotspot, the closest one
to the Boeing’s old Rocketdyne lab, had clocked in at 411 times
“hotter” than normal for the area.
“Are we to believe that Runkle Canyon’s soil, which is next to the site
of this country’s worst nuclear meltdown, the Santa Susana Field
Laboratory (SSFL), tests cleaner than the background readings of Sr-90
in the area?” Southwick wrote in a Jan.7 letter to the city of Simi
Valley, government regulators and the media. Citing the prior reports,
he reasoned that “…the City’s recent split-sample results are nearly
104 times lower than these previous results. This demands explanation
and hence our request for the entire Environmental, Inc. report which
is a publicly-paid-for document and therefore, by law, you must
provide.”
KB Homes had hoped to build 461 residences in the 1,595-acre canyon,
but those plans have been delayed since the summer of 2006 when
Southwick and a cadre of residents who call themselves the “Radiation
Rangers” (See: “Dirty Business,” Nov. 1, 2007) questioned the safety of
the project. In May 2007, the Rangers had Runkle Canyon tested for
heavy metals and found high levels of arsenic, nickel and vanadium
which is documented in reports on their Website StopRunkledyne.com .
Later city tests found even higher levels as well as barium, cadmium,
chromium and lead.
“KB Homes has tried to assure the citizens of Simi Valley that the
land is safe from Sr-90 contamination and generated their own Dade
Moeller report,” Southwick continued in his letter, which also demanded
the developer’s laboratory analysis. “This average is just 26.9 percent
of the EPA’s background number for strontium-90 in the area.”
While the Rangers wait for the city and developer’s reports, a new
document discloses a previously undetected carcinogenic contaminant in
Runkle Canyon groundwater, trichloroethylene (TCE). The Reporter has
obtained a December 2007 study of offsite pollution around SSFL
prepared by an Arcadia-based environmental engineering firm MWH for
Boeing, NASA and the Department of Energy which shows that TCE has been
detected in approximately 10 percent of several dozen groundwater
samples collected on Runkle Canyon property.
Around 1.73 million gallons of TCE were used at SSFL as a solvent to
hose down rocket engines, as the Reporter first revealed during its
investigation of the Runkle Canyon-adjacent Ahmanson Ranch development.
That project tanked over toxic troubles in 2003 before becoming state
park land (See: “Air Apparent,” Feb.13, 2003). Approximately 530,000
gallons of the carcinogen, which is a volatile organic compound, have
seeped into the area’s groundwater. With the current rate of
remediating TCE being less than 10 gallons a year at SSFL, it will take
more than 50,000 years to clean up.
That is not good news for KB Homes, since TCE vapors are extremely
dangerous and can cause unconsciousness, impaired heart function and
death. In December 2002, the EPA found that vaporized TCE is five times
more hazardous at the same level of contamination than TCE in water.
The agency revealed that the poisonous vapors have the potential to
collect in structures that are built over shallow groundwater. This
very disturbing phenomenon has occurred in several sites around the
country, including homes in the Silicon Valley city of Mountain View.
The MWH report was generated for the California-EPA Department of
Toxic Substances Control, which has been put in charge of the
Rocketdyne cleanup, in order to ascertain the extent of pollution
around the lab. The DTSC’s SSFL Project Director, Norm Riley, had
previously pressured the city of Simi Valley and KB Homes to have the
developer invite the department to look into Runkle Canyon’s pollution
problems.
The Reporter has learned that KB Homes may do just that. “There is no
agreement to show yet,” Riley said in an e-mail. “Just before
Christmas, KB told me that it had decided to enter into a voluntary
cleanup agreement (VCA) with DTSC, but that agreement has not been
executed. I expect that this agreement, like most VCA agreements, will
provide for a review by DTSC of all information related to conditions
at the site, the possibility of additional work directed by DTSC, if
necessary, and the possibility of cleanup directed by DTSC, if
necessary, with KB paying all associated DTSC cost.”