Hawaii 2024 Regular Session

Hawaii Senate Bill SCR77 Compare Versions

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11 THE SENATE S.C.R. NO. 77 THIRTY-SECOND LEGISLATURE, 2024 STATE OF HAWAII SENATE CONCURRENT RESOLUTION Urging the department of health to ensure the safe management of ash from waste INCINERATION facilities.
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3737 Urging the department of health to ensure the safe management of ash from waste INCINERATION facilities.
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4343 WHEREAS, waste incineration facilities reduce every one hundred tons of trash to approximately thirty tons of ash; and WHEREAS, H-Power is the only trash incinerator in Hawaii, operating in Campbell Industrial Park on Oahu, burning up to two thousand six hundred tons of waste per day, making it one of the largest waste incinerators in the nation; and WHEREAS, the ash produced from H-Power is currently dumped in the Waimanalo Gulch Landfill in Honokai Hale; and WHEREAS, fly ash from trash incinerators is regulated as hazardous waste in several other nations, but in the United States, the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) categorically defines incinerator ash as non-hazardous, even when tests show fly ash is qualified as hazardous over ninety percent of the time due to the leaching of lead and cadmium, and bottom ash would test hazardous thirty-six percent of the time due to leaching of toxic lead; and WHEREAS, since 1994, the United States Supreme Court ruled incinerator ash must be handled as hazardous waste if it tests hazardous; so the EPA changed the test and allowed the mixing of fly and bottom ash and other methods that enable incinerator ash to pass the test; and WHEREAS, EPA staff admit that the ash testing regulations (which require testing incinerator ash only for what leaches out of the incinerator at a certain pH in short-term lab tests) are based solely on whether people will be exposed by consuming water that has passed through ash and leached groundwater and ultimately to drinking water supplies; and WHEREAS, EPA staff admit that ash testing regulations are not based on skin exposure to incinerator ash or inhaling and ingesting it; and WHEREAS, workers typically handle incinerator ash with no respiratory protection, truck ash to a landfill in trucks where some ash can blow or spill during transit, dump ash from trucks where ash dust usually rises in a cloud that wind can carry, and use toxic ash as daily cover material for itself, instead of a tarp or clean soil to prevent wind from blowing ash into the community; and WHEREAS, the City and County of Honolulu are currently working with Covanta to develop an ash "recycling" facility at Campbell Industrial Park where incinerator ash would be exempted from being handled as waste and would be used to build roads or for other purposes that can put workers, the public, and the environment in more contact with incinerator ash than would occur if it were properly contained and landfilled responsibly; and WHEREAS, roads and other construction materials are not forever and will erode and eventually break up, releasing more ash particles, without cautionary warnings, including participles of highly toxic dioxins and furans, and toxic metals like arsenic, cadmium, chromium, lead, and mercury; now, therefore, BE IT RESOLVED by the Senate of the Thirty-second Legislature of the State of Hawaii, Regular Session of 2024, the House of Representatives concurring, that the Department of Health is urged to enforce section 342H-30, Hawaii Revised Statutes, so that incinerator ash (a type of "solid waste") may not be managed in a manner other than properly contained in a landfill and that trucking and landfilling must at least use secure tarps to ensure that ash cannot be blown by wind into the community; and BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED that the City and County of Honolulu is hereby notified that "recycling" or "reuse" of incinerator ash violates state law, is not protective of public health, and should not be pursued; and BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED that certified copies of this Concurrent Resolution be transmitted to the Governor, Director of Health, Chief Energy Officer, and Mayors of each county. OFFERED BY: _____________________________ Report Title: DOH; Safe Management of Incinerator Ash from Waste Incineration Facilities
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4545 WHEREAS, waste incineration facilities reduce every one hundred tons of trash to approximately thirty tons of ash; and
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4949 WHEREAS, H-Power is the only trash incinerator in Hawaii, operating in Campbell Industrial Park on Oahu, burning up to two thousand six hundred tons of waste per day, making it one of the largest waste incinerators in the nation; and
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5353 WHEREAS, the ash produced from H-Power is currently dumped in the Waimanalo Gulch Landfill in Honokai Hale; and
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5757 WHEREAS, fly ash from trash incinerators is regulated as hazardous waste in several other nations, but in the United States, the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) categorically defines incinerator ash as non-hazardous, even when tests show fly ash is qualified as hazardous over ninety percent of the time due to the leaching of lead and cadmium, and bottom ash would test hazardous thirty-six percent of the time due to leaching of toxic lead; and
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6161 WHEREAS, since 1994, the United States Supreme Court ruled incinerator ash must be handled as hazardous waste if it tests hazardous; so the EPA changed the test and allowed the mixing of fly and bottom ash and other methods that enable incinerator ash to pass the test; and
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6565 WHEREAS, EPA staff admit that the ash testing regulations (which require testing incinerator ash only for what leaches out of the incinerator at a certain pH in short-term lab tests) are based solely on whether people will be exposed by consuming water that has passed through ash and leached groundwater and ultimately to drinking water supplies; and
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6969 WHEREAS, EPA staff admit that ash testing regulations are not based on skin exposure to incinerator ash or inhaling and ingesting it; and
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7373 WHEREAS, workers typically handle incinerator ash with no respiratory protection, truck ash to a landfill in trucks where some ash can blow or spill during transit, dump ash from trucks where ash dust usually rises in a cloud that wind can carry, and use toxic ash as daily cover material for itself, instead of a tarp or clean soil to prevent wind from blowing ash into the community; and
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7777 WHEREAS, the City and County of Honolulu are currently working with Covanta to develop an ash "recycling" facility at Campbell Industrial Park where incinerator ash would be exempted from being handled as waste and would be used to build roads or for other purposes that can put workers, the public, and the environment in more contact with incinerator ash than would occur if it were properly contained and landfilled responsibly; and
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8181 WHEREAS, roads and other construction materials are not forever and will erode and eventually break up, releasing more ash particles, without cautionary warnings, including participles of highly toxic dioxins and furans, and toxic metals like arsenic, cadmium, chromium, lead, and mercury; now, therefore,
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8585 BE IT RESOLVED by the Senate of the Thirty-second Legislature of the State of Hawaii, Regular Session of 2024, the House of Representatives concurring, that the Department of Health is urged to enforce section 342H-30, Hawaii Revised Statutes, so that incinerator ash (a type of "solid waste") may not be managed in a manner other than properly contained in a landfill and that trucking and landfilling must at least use secure tarps to ensure that ash cannot be blown by wind into the community; and
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8989 BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED that the City and County of Honolulu is hereby notified that "recycling" or "reuse" of incinerator ash violates state law, is not protective of public health, and should not be pursued; and
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9393 BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED that certified copies of this Concurrent Resolution be transmitted to the Governor, Director of Health, Chief Energy Officer, and Mayors of each county.
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163163 Report Title:
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