2 FIRMS SETTLE TOXICS CASE THIRD COMPANY STILL NEGOTIATING CLAIMS.Byline: Jim Skeen Staff Writer MOJAVE - Two companies have agreed to settlements that will repay California taxpayers for part of the costs of investigating soil contamination Soil contamination is the presence of man-made chemicals or other alteration in the natural soil environment. This type of contamination typically arises from the rupture of underground storage tanks, application of pesticides, percolation of contaminated surface water to at a Mojave metal-recovery plant. In separate settlements of a lawsuit filed in April, Commodity Refining Exchange agreed to complete a concrete cap over contaminated contaminated, v 1. made radioactive by the addition of small quantities of radioactive material. 2. made contaminated by adding infective or radiographic materials. 3. an infective surface or object. soil and to pay for monitoring costs, and PRG PRG Parti Radical de Gauche (French: Left Radical Party) PRG Purge PRG Programming Research Group (Oxford University) PRG Preliminary Remediation Goal PRG People's Revolutionary Government Metals Inc., a former operator of the plant, agreed to pay $50,000. State officials said the soil contamination at the Commodity Refining Exchange site includes the carcinogen carcinogen: see cancer. carcinogen Agent that can cause cancer. Exposure to one or more carcinogens, including certain chemicals, radiation, and certain viruses, can initiate cancer under conditions not completely understood. dioxin dioxin Aromatic compound, any of a group of contaminants produced in making herbicides (e.g., Agent Orange), disinfectants, and other agents. Their basic chemical structure consists of two benzene rings connected by a pair of oxygen atoms; when substituents on the rings are , found during an investigation that began in 1988 and spread to about three dozen Rosamond and Mojave industrial sites. ``In my view, these agreements serve to protect public health and the environment because they allow DTSC DTSC Department of Toxic Substances Control DTSC DARCOM Technical Steering Committee (the Department of Toxic Substances Control) to recover a substantial portion of its past costs and, in addition, ensure that the site will be fully remediated,'' James Tjosvold, chief of the department's central cleanup operations branch, said in a court filing. ``Once the concrete cap is complete, based on the information available to it, DTSC expects that there will be no further hazard presented to the public or to the environment.'' Spending more than $300,000, Commodity Refining Exchange has already built most of the cap. Officials said state government spent more than $230,000 investigating and pursuing cleanup of contaminated soil at the Commodity Refining Exchange plant, 11817 United Street. The settlements are expected to be approved in March by a federal district court judge. State officials said negotiations are continuing with a third company believed to have contributed to the contamination, but a fourth corporate suspect appears to be off the hook because it has no assets. State authorities were investigating a series of childhood cancer cases that occurred in Rosamond from the mid-1970s to the mid-1980s. There have been metal-recovery operations at the Commodity Refining Exchange site since 1970, and state officials claimed that flaws in the processing or in storing ash and slag contributed to the contamination. The settlements are not admissions of wrongdoing wrong·do·er n. One who does wrong, especially morally or ethically. wrong do by the companies, state officials said in the court filings. Both settlement decrees have provisions that would allow the state to reopen re·o·pen tr. & intr.v. re·o·pened, re·o·pen·ing, re·o·pens 1. To open or be opened again: Officials reopened the airport after the snow was cleared. Schools reopen in September. the case and seek remedies if previously unknown conditions were discovered. |
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