San Luis Obispo facing millions in environment fines

October 18, 2012

Dan De Vaul

By KAREN VELIE

San Luis Obispo is facing millions of dollars in fines by state and federal agencies investigating the illegal dumping of toxic wastes by city employees and failure to follow environmental regulations. If the fines are levied, city taxpayers could find themselves paying for the city’s conduct.

Regulators, residents and some city staffers have accused the city of illegally dumping toxic waste on private and city properties, not complying with permit requirements that are designed to protect community water sources, failing to properly report hazardous waste disposals and conspiring to keep regulators and the public in the dark.

As a result, the city faces hefty fines from two different investigations in which federal and state regulators are looking into environmental mismanagement and illegal dumping. In addition, some concerned city employees said they reported further environmental mismanagement issues to regulators during their interviews.

The investigation into the failure to follow environmental regulations was by a contractor for the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency and staff from the Central Coast Regional Water Quality Control Board. They were checking to see if San Luis Obispo was complying with portions of its storm water management plan permit dealing with construction water runoff and pollution protection.

City staffers told the city council they had passed the audit with high marks. But, an investigation report says regulators found program deficiencies and potential violations that will likely result in a formal notice of violation and fines.

The potential violations are the result of the city’s failure to control refuse such as chemicals, litter and sanitary waste at a construction site. In addition, the city has not been keeping required inspection schedules and checklists in place to protect public health and the environment, the report says.

In the city’s annual storm water report, Storm Water Manager Freddy Otte signed under penalty of perjury that the city has developed a comprehensive program with inspection checklist and training programs. However, during the audit, management admitted the program was still in the development phase.

In their summary, the investigators slammed the city for having no real controls in place to protect against water pollution at one site. Investigators reported inadequate performances by employees after interviewing  Otte, Utilities Director David Hix, Utilities Program Manager Aaron Floyd, Chief Building Official Tim Girvin, Hazardous Materials Coordinator Kerry Boyle and City Community Development Director Derek Johnson.

“City had the ability to not hire ‘bad players,’ ” investigators say in their summary of a public project review.

In addition to the compliance problems, investigators have been told about dumping and pollution at Dan De Vaul’s 72-acre ranch on the outskirts of San Luis Obispo. The land includes acres of wetlands and flood plains that help replenish the Los Osos aquifer.

That Los Osos aquifer is contaminated with nitrates. More than a decade ago, De Vaul, seeking income and more workable acreage, agreed to allow the dumping of what was first described as fill dirt on his property, he said.

City management and several local developers paid trucking companies between $200 and $400 a load to remove the refuse. The truckers would then pay De Vaul to empty truckloads of fill dirt, asphalt grindings and grit from the sewer plant on his property, De Vaul and several city employees said.

Grit is the refuse that fails to break down during sewage treatment. Its makeup varies though it generally has high levels of nitrates. Asphalt grindings, produced during the removal of old roadways, are contaminated with numerous toxins known to negatively affect public health and the environment including hydrocarbons and asbestos.

“I know they brought in asphalt grindings, I did not know about the shit from the sewer plant,” De Vaul said. “They brought in dirt once from Abercrombie & Fitch they said might be hazardous, but then they said it cleared.”

De Vaul said his income from the disposals was cut off abruptly about seven years ago. A city employee said staff was warned the city could be fined if it was discovered they were not following federal and state laws regarding the disposal of waste.

“Then they started taking it to a hazmat place near Kettleman City,” De Vaul said.

Even so, city staff failed to report the dumping or to attempt a cleanup. It would not be the last time city employees allegedly conspired to conceal the illegal dumping of hazardous waste.

Solvents, varnish and creosote seeped from cans to a strip of wood separating the asphalt from the soil. Picture taken one week after discharge.

In Jan. 2011, waste water collections Supervisor Bud Nance ordered staffers to dump between 50 and 60 gallons of hazardous waste in the city’s corporation yard on Prado Road. After it was discovered, city employees sent dozens of emails that outlined their plans not to properly clean up or report the illicit dumping. Many of the emails were reported in earlier CalCoastNews stories.

At the time, SLO Fire Department Hazardous Materials Coordinator Kerry Boyle said that the city was not required to report the dumping.

But, after criminal investigators from the California Department of Toxic Substances Control (DTSC) arrived in late 2011, Boyle reversed his position and slapped the city with a notice of violation for breaking 13 laws.

The investigations by the DTSC and the EPA are continuing. The city’s failure to report the illegal dumping at the corporate yard could result in fines totaling more than $7 million and indictments of several of the city’s mid-level managers.

Another issue facing the city deals with reporting and record-keeping for its hazardous waste disposal. The city of San Luis Obispo, along with other agencies, is supposed to send its hazardous waste manifests to the DTSC, which works to protect California’s people and the environment from the harmful effects of toxic substances through enforcement, pollution prevention and regulations. The regulations apply to the disposal of toxic substances.

A public records request from CalCoastNews for several years of the city’s hazardous waste manifests resulted in the receipt of numerous manifests that had never been sent to the DTSC as required by law.

Many of the manifests that were provided by the city were incompletely filled out, others have dates showing that the city was conducting its business on Sundays or have no dates of the disposals and still others bear signatures of employees who contend someone forged their name.

In its response to the records request, the city included a handful of waivers that say it is a Conditionally Exempt Small Quantity Generator (CBSQG) which generates no more than 100 kilograms (27 gallons or 220 pounds) of hazardous waste per month. The waivers say entities that generate small quantities of hazardous waste are not required to use DTSC registered transporters or submit manifests.

But, Charlotte Fadipe, a spokesperson for the DTSC, said that federal laws permitting small generator status are not recognized in California. There are some state allowances for small generators, she said.

“California rules do not recognize CESQG status, nor does the shipping description on a manifest differ for generators of less than 100 kg per month,” Fadipe said in an email.

City Attorney Christine Dietrick and Councilman John Ashbaugh said they are confident that the city has followed environmental requirements.

“The City is in compliance with applicable law on disposal of hazardous wastes, and if there are occasional disposal issues or practices that require council attention, we will address them promptly,” Ashbaugh said in an email several months ago.

 


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My, my, my. No wonder the City and County were so hot to take over De Vaul’s property.


I wonder when the City and County became worried about the evidence of toxic dumping on the DeVaul property?


I hope Kerry Boyle (HazMat coordinator for the SLO City Fire Dept) is indicted. No one should be surprised that the employer of John Ryan Mason is also the employer of Kerry Boyle.


QUOTING ARTICLE: “…City staffers told the city council they had passed the audit with high marks. But, an investigation report says regulators found program deficiencies and potential violations that will likely result in a formal notice of violation and fines.

The potential violations are the result of the city’s failure to control refuse such as chemicals, litter and sanitary waste at a construction site. In addition, the city has not been keeping required inspection schedules and checklists in place to protect public health and the environment, the report says.

In the city’s annual storm water report, Storm Water Manager Freddy Otte signed under penalty of perjury that the city has developed a comprehensive program with inspection checklist and training programs. However, during the audit, management admitted the program was still in the development phase.


Wow, this is big. Otte lied about the status of the implementation? Is he NUTS?


The development of a Stormwater Management Program is a BIG deal. Here is a link to SLO City’s Stormwater Management Plan (Phase II, 2010): http://www.slocity.org/publicworks/stormwater/documents/2-10SWMP-JE.pdf .


SLOCity’s Phase I Stormwater Management Program was submitted in 1990.


QUOTING THE ARTICLE: “A public records request from CalCoastNews for several years of the city’s hazardous waste manifests resulted in the receipt of numerous manifests that had never been sent to the DTSC as required by law.”


HOLY $HIT! I can see where the “conspiracy” charges come from. They are in HUGE trouble.


———–


QUOTING ARTICLE: “Many of the manifests that were provided by the city were incompletely filled out, others have dates showing that the city was conducting its business on Sundays or have no dates of the disposals and still others bear signatures of employees who contend someone forged their name.”


FORGERY? Are you kidding me?


Has anyone checked to see if on the Sundays listed, if employees qualified to do the work actually reported those hours on payroll reporting forms?


These are salaried employees, they get paid if they work or NOT, when they want and how they want. They do not clock in or out and just sign a time sheet filled out by the department secretary each pay period without verification. Been done that way since the beginning of time and is common practice with government employees.


It may be “common,” but if personnel policies dictate a different way of documenting the time they spend on work activities, then the time sheets are fraudulent.


Slobird is wrong. All timesheets of salaried employees are reviewed and signed by the supervisor. The supervisor is legally personally responsible for reporting the time. I spent 14 years as a state employee reviewing and signing timesheets and I would never have allowed someone to misreport time spent, because I would be nave to pay any misrepresentations myself, in addition to probably loosing my job.


Not so there waterguy, maybe your agency, division or you personally were more responsible and on target for procedure. City employee never see their time card until the day they are to sign it. The City employees work 9/80 work schedule (in 9 days you work your 80 hour work schedule whereby they get an 3 days weekend every other week). The employee does not log in/out and the only deductions are when you turn in a request for vacation or you are sick and I bet their is NOT one time that ever varies from there normal work schedule, i.e. if they work from 7:30 to 5:30 you will not find an employee that is ever late or goes home early – not required. I recommend anyone in San Luis Obispo go to City Hall on any Tuesday thru Thursday and watch the employees walk in at 8 or leave at 5. These employees are suppose to work from 7:30 to 5:30i shift or a 8:00 to 6:00 shift. Monday;s and Friday’s are regular 8 to 5 schedules. Scam the time!


Hmmmm….let’s see, the investigation was carried out by a contractor for the FEDERAL EPA, and part of the charges involved a “conspiracy.”


Doesn’t that sound like something the FBI would be asked to help with?


You may recall that out at De Vaul ranch, one of the nicest things that happened in the midst of the homeless debacle, Cal Poly students volunteered to help clean up the ranch. I don’t what group but they went out to help put the place including the buildings back together and repair the obvious problems. Now we have students that have been exposed to toxic/hazardous waste out at the ranch. It was years of dumping out there, not just a little bit of bad stuff.


And I feel suspicious of the effort that the city seemed to make to get De Vaul off of his property. And get the homeless people out of there. Is it a coincidence or did they know and try to coverup the problems by pressuring De Vaul. Hoping to get him to leave his property. Then they would never have to fess up to all this mess. It seems so unlikely that the pressure over the homeless didn’t have ulterior motives. So how far up the chain of command did people in the City Gov’t know. Who knew and for how long have they known about the toxic waste being deposited on the ranch.


NICE thinking, problem solved, now, we know the rest of the story!


The City’s obsession with getting de Vaul off of his property makes sense in the context of the City knowingly illegally dumping toxic waste on property to fill in wetlands, something the city has reportedly been trying to cover up.


Here’s a novel excuse:


“I vas only following orders.”


I don’t think that will fly before the EPA and the State.


The city focuses on visible trash cans and feeding the ducks while it dumps toxic waste and then denies that it’s a probelm!


This is an absolute outrage. Mayor Marx and the rest of the city council, and the management in the city, who knew or should have known about this, all need to GO and GO NOW!


Vote them out. FIre Katie Lichtig. And fire that city attorney Dietrich who seems to think everthing is fine and the city can do no wrong.


What a waste. Everyone who lives here should be outraged. This will really attract tourists! This will certainly encourage residents to increase their taxes (Measure D-12) and guess where the rest of the Measure Y money will go?


These people should all be fired. And let’s NOT use city resources to defend them when they face criminal charges!


The city is completely out of control. I am so sad and disgusted, words fail me.


Oh my, what a MESS and what a San Luis Obispo City cover-up!!!


SLOTox anyone?