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    Judge suspends delivery of radioactive soil from New York to Michigan

    By ED WHITE Associated Press,

    2024-09-18

    https://img.particlenews.com/image.php?url=0FuTDh_0vbQt05F00

    DETROIT (AP) — A judge stopped on Wednesday the delivery of World War II-era radioactive soil from New York to a Michigan landfill, a temporary victory for suburban Detroit communities that don’t want the waste.

    Wayne County Judge Kevin Cox signed a restraining order two days after a lawsuit was filed by opponents seeking to stop the shipments. He set a hearing for Sept. 26.

    The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers is managing the removal of low-level radioactive soil from Lewiston, New York, a legacy of the Manhattan Project, the secret government project to develop atomic bombs during World War II featured in the 2023 movie “Oppenheimer.”

    Wayne Disposal in Van Buren Township, 25 miles (40 kilometers) west of Detroit, is considered to be the closest licensed facility that can take the hazardous material, according to the Army Corps.

    The lawsuit, filed on behalf of Belleville, Romulus, Canton Township and Van Buren Township, came after a tense town hall meeting and claims by elected officials that they were in the dark about the plan.

    Anne Marie Graham-Hudak, the elected supervisor in Canton, said there’s a school just 500 feet (152 meters) from the landfill. She’s pleased with the judge’s order.

    “If residents in Lewiston, New York, are pushing to get it out, why come to a more populated area?” Graham-Hudak said. “They should encapsulate it where it is. Why are you moving it?”

    The lawsuit says the public won’t tolerate Wayne County “being the nation’s dumping ground of choice” for hazardous materials.

    Area fire officials do not have a strategy or equipment to respond if problems occur at the landfill, according to the lawsuit.

    Critics also want time to weigh in on whether Republic Services, which operates the site, should be granted a new state operating license. The Phoenix-based company had no immediate comment on the restraining order.

    WIVB-TV reported in August that contaminated soil — the equivalent of 3,700 king-sized mattresses — was being moved from New York. The TV station posted a photo of an enormous white bag that resembled a burrito, one of many that would make the trip.

    Michigan environmental regulators, speaking at a Sept. 4 public meeting, said there was no requirement that the public be informed ahead of time, though the Army Corps has not been silent in New York about the process.

    T.R. Wentworth II, manager of Michigan’s Radiological Protection Section, told the Detroit Free Press that the state has no concerns about the materials being a risk to health and safety.

    Copyright 2024 Nexstar Media Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

    For the latest news, weather, sports, and streaming video, head to WOODTV.com.

    Comments / 5
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    Wanda Alberta
    29d ago
    🤔 well if it's so low. level as you say leave it where it is we don't need nor want it here. To say we the people of Michigan had no reason to know about this goes to show how underhanded and corrupt our government truly is. Thank you to the judge who put a stop to this for now. Let's hope it doesn't happen and it stays where it was. New York it is your mess you deal with it clean up your corrupt government and the mess you allowed them to make don't make it another States problem as well
    Kevin O'Brien
    29d ago
    why move it after 80 years? how do michiganders benefit from this?
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