Scrapbook Photo 10/28/24 - 148 New Stories - REAL Environmental & Conservation Leadership In PA: http://tinyurl.com/32cbjjyt
DEP Settles With Keystone Landfill In Lackawanna County For In-Lieu Of Penalty Project Over Water Pollution Caused By Leachate

On December 11, the Department of Environmental Protection announced it has reached a Consent Order and Agreement (CO&A) with Keystone Sanitary Landfill (KSL) in Lackawanna County for violations related to leachate management and groundwater impacts at its facility in the boroughs of Dunmore and Throop.

The agreement calls for Keystone, in lieu of paying a $112,905 civil penalty, to provide landfill space for approximately 2,500 tons of construction and demolition waste dumped illegally, by another party, at a site in nearby Taylor Borough.

“Keystone is being held accountable for these violations and an illegal dump site will be cleaned up,” said Mike Bedrin, Director of DEP’s Northeast Regional Office in Wilkes-Barre. “The landfill has made adjustments to its leachate management plan and has also fixed a previous source of groundwater degradation.”

The violations at Keystone were noted during an evaluation of the landfill’s groundwater monitoring and an investigation of its leachate storage lagoons. 

During that investigation, department staff determined that leachate leaking from a liner in the lagoon seeped into and had impacted groundwater.  In addition, DEP also found that Keystone had stored leachate in the lagoons above regulatory limits.

Those issues are a violation of the Solid Waste Management Act.

Keystone Landfill has since addressed these violations and has updated its leachate management plan which included re-constructing the lagoons and lowering the amount of leachate it stores in them.

The agreement to provide landfill space for the illegally dumped waste is part of a Community Environmental Project that the department has been discussing with Keystone.

In 2017, Michael Stine of Northampton County admitted to dumping construction and demolition debris two years earlier at a private business along Keyser Ave in Taylor.  Stine, having been prosecuted by the State Attorney General’s Office, has not removed the debris.

The amount of landfill space Keystone has agreed to provide is equivalent to the monetary amount of the civil penalty.

The property owner has agreed to pay the costs of transporting the debris to the landfill.

As per the agreement, Keystone Landfill has one year to complete the project in Lackawanna County.

Click Here for a copy of the Consent Order and Agreement.

Media questions should be directed to Colleen Connolly, DEP Northeast Regional Office, 570-826-2035 or send email to: coconnolly@pa.gov.

For more information on environmental programs in Pennsylvania, visit DEP’s website, Click Here to sign up for DEP’s newsletter, sign up for DEP Connects events, sign up for DEP’s eNotice, visit DEP’s BlogLike DEP on Facebook, Follow DEP on Twitter and visit DEP’s YouTube Channel.

Related Articles:

-- DEP Invites Comments On Energy Transfer Partners Erosion & Sedimentation Permits For Revolution Pipeline Slope Failure Fixes

-- DEP Sets Jan. 13 Virtual Hearing On Chapt. 105 Waterways Permit For Phase I PennEast Pipeline Project

-- DEP Oil & Gas Advisory Board To Hear Update On Permit Fees v. Expenses; Oil & Gas Health Studies; Natural Gas Storage Fields; Reg. Update Dec. 16

-- DEP Advisory Committee To Discuss Final PFOS/PFOA/PFAS Soil, Water Cleanup Standards Dec. 16

-- DEP Hosts Dec. 15 Webinar On Transitioning To New ePermitting System For Oil & Gas Well Permits

-- DEP Works Thru Pandemic: 855 More Permits, 2,027 More Inspections Since Last Week

-- DEP Posts 80 Pages Of Permit-Related Notices In Dec. 12 PA Bulletin

[Posted: December 11, 2020]


12/14/2020

Go To Preceding Article     Go To Next Article

Return to This PA Environment Digest's Main Page