logo

Clean Water News

SearchRSS Feed

For Immediate Release:
11/16/2005
For More Information:
Contact Dan Jacobson
(916) 446-8062 x 105

Opposition to Proposed Rialto Cleanup Settlement Voiced

(Rialto)  City residents, local community groups and state environmental organizations united in opposition today to a proposed settlement agreement between the Santa Ana Regional Water Quality Control Board and a party suspected of contaminating local drinking water supplies with rocket fuel. The proposed deal will provide no immediate community relief from contamination, and will delay clean water supplies to the community by more than a year. 

 

“This agreement is a great deal for polluters and a bad deal for people,” stated Davin Diaz, of the Center for Community Action and Environmental Justice.

 

Public comments submitted by public interest groups cited two major concerns with the proposed agreement:  It does not require Goodrich to provide residents with a safe, secure supply of water while cleanup negotiations and further testing efforts continue; the deal also prevents the board from ordering Goodrich to provide a safe source of water for more than a year.   Furthermore, the proposed agreement requires only more testing of contamination in the area, and recovers less than 2% of the ultimate amount of money that it will take to clean up the contamination in the region.

 

“Despite the companies’ combined yearly revenues of more than $5 billion, Goodrich Corp and Black & Decker have to date failed to clean up the mess they created more than forty years ago,” stated Sujatha Jahagirdar, Clean Water Advocate for Environment California Research & Policy Center. “The time for delay is over.  It’s time for these companies to clean up their mess and provide citizens with clean water in the meantime.”

 

Nestled near the foothills of the San Bernardino Mountains, the City of Rialto had what local water officials described for decades as one of the purest drinking water supplies in the region.   In the late 1990’s, Rialto water officials discovered rocket fuel pollution in the city’s drinking water supply up to 800 times safety recommendations issued in other states

 

Contamination is suspected to have seeped into several of the town’s drinking water wells from a nearby industrial site once owned by Goodrich Corp. and Black & Decker.  The problem began back in the 1950’s and 1960’s when both companies owned and operated a weapons manufacturing plant in the northern part of Rialto that used massive quantities of rocket fuel.  According to former employees at the plant, rocket fuel routinely leaked from the facility during operations and workers regularly disposed of rocket fuel in unlined pits behind the plant.

 

Despite their responsibility and years of negotiations, neither Goodrich Corp. nor Black & Decker have agreed to clean up the mess they have created.  While the companies delay, many citizens of Rialto drink water that is polluted by rocket fuel.  According to data supplied by local and state water officials, water from drinking water wells contaminated at up to three times the safety levels issued in many states is piped to homes in the city.  At levels found in contaminated wells, perchlorate can lead to Attention Deficit Disorder, learning disabilities and decreased IQ.

 

With several other wells unusable due to contamination, the drought-prone city teeters on the brink of running out of water.  Residents have also been forced to pay water bill price hikes to pursue the polluters for clean water. 

 

 “The Santa Ana Water Board has the power to order Goodrich to provide immediate relief to the community,” concluded Diaz.   “Any deal should provide clean water to Rialto residents now.”