UsQSF®
SAINT FRANcIs
MEDICAL
CENTER
September
8,
2008
S
OFFICE
John
Therriault,
Clerk
SEP
15200
Illinois
Pollution
Control
Board
OF
ILLINOIS
TOO W
Randolph
ontrol
Board
Suite
11-500
Chicago,
IL
60601
To whom
it may
concern:
Enclosed,
please
find
a
copy
of my
May
8,
2007
correspondence
to
the IEPA regarding
the
continued
operation
of
PDC’s
Hazardous
Waste Facility
in Pottstown,
Peoria
County. As
physicians
caring
for
cancer patients
in Peoria
County
and Central
Illinois,
we
applaud
and
commend
the recent
decisions
of
the
IEPA and
the
Peoria
County Board
to deny
the
pennit to
expand the
facility.
This letter
is in response
to PDC’s
recent
request
(and subsequent
Illinois
Pollution
Control
Board
Public Hearing)
to
de-list,
as
a
hazardous
waste,
Electrical
Arc Furnace
Dust,
(K06fl.
effectively
expanding
the
operational
life
of
the
facility.
As stated
in the
prior
letter,
physicians
in Peoria,
including
those serving
on the
Cancer
Committee
at OSF Saint
Francis
Medical
Center,
(which I chair),
remain
highly
concerned
about
the continued
importation
and accumulation
of
toxic and/or
known
carcin4xenic
chemicals
into Peoria
County,
by PDC
or anyone
else.
It has been
well
documented
by
the IDPH
through
data obtained
from
the
American
Cancer
Society,
that
Peoria
county
has an
elevated
can cer
incidence,
when
compared
to
most
other
counties
in Illinois.
This is
not to
say that PDC
is responsible
for the
elevated
cancer rate
in
Peoria
County, since
as scientists,
we recognize
that carcinogenesis
is a multi-factorial
problem.
PDC claims
that
their
“proprietary”,
new
process will
stabilize,
and
render
inert, the
heavy metals
included
in EAF
dust. Exactly
which of
the heavy
metals, (thirteen
of
which
are
listed
as
constituents
of EAF
dust by
the EPA),
and any other
potentially
carcinogenic,
volatile
organic compounds
that will
be “stabilized”
is
not made
clear
by
PDC.
Inquiring
minds
want
to
know!
Regardless,
whether
or not
some of
PDC’s individual
waste
streams,
(such as EAF
dust),
are
processed
by
PDC
in a different
manner
has little
bearing
on the
overall issue,
which
remains,
the
unacceptable
health
risks posed
to our population
by
importing
these
compounds
into
Peoria
from
outside the
County
of
Peoria,
and
outside
the state
of
Illinois. We
believe
the import,
for
processing
or
interment,
should cease
immediately.
Moreover,
hazardous
chemicals
already
buried in unprotected
areas of the
facility should
be remediated
as
soon as
possible.
530
N.E. Glen
Oak Avenue
• Peoria,
Illinois 61637
°
Phone
(309)
655-2000
vzvrw
osfsaintfrancis.
org
The
Sisters of the
Third
Order
of St. Francis
As
to
the
argument
about
disposing of the Peoria-generated
hazardous
waste (including
EAF dust),
from Keystone or
Caterpillar, I
think most persons would
agree
that,
“what is
gçjrated
in
Peoria
stays
in Peoria”. That
is just the cost of
doing business in any
community,
and frankly, all
of Peoria benefits
from those
industries. That said,
many
similar
industries have decided
to recycle
the heavy metals rather
than
bury
them in
landfills.
What we, as physicians
and scientists,
take issue with and
simply do not understand,
is
the
scientific
logic behind
importing
more
of these toxic
substances into an
environment
that already has an abnormally
high
cancer burden. The
increased health
risk posed by
importing
these
toxic
compounds
is borne
by
the community as a
whole, who reap no
benefit
for assuming that
increased risk.
It seems only fair and
logical
that
other states,
that produce
hazardous
substances, bear
the appropriate
costs for the disposition
of such,
both
fi-om a financial and
health risk
perspective.
We,
as physicians caring
for families in
and around
Peoria County, respectfully
request
that the Illinois
Pollution
Control Board
act in the best interests
of
the
health of Peoria
county
citizens, (as did the
IEPA
and the
Peoria
County
Board
previously),
and deny the
current request
of Peoria
Disposal Company
to dc-list electrical
arc furnace dust
as a
hazardous
waste stream.
Furthermore,
we ask
that any
future request from
PDC, which
would otherwise prolong
the (term
limited) life of the
Hazardous Waste
Facility, be
carefully
considered
in this context.
Sincerely,
James
L. McGee, M.D.
Chairman Cancer Committee
OSF Saint
Francis
Medical
Center
530 N.E Glen
Oak
Peoria, IL, 61637
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FI\Nc;Is
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)ICAI,
CEN[i;k
J (OIi?071
Hol?( 10
?iIc.
May
8,
2007
Stephanie
Flowers
Hearing
Officer
#2
Illinois
Lnvjronrnental Protection
Agency
102
1
Grand Avenue
East
P.O. Box 19276
Springfield,
IL 62794-276
Dear
Ms. Flowers:
I am the Chairman
of the Cancer
Committee
at
OS.F Saint Francis
Medical Center which
iS
CompoSed
of
cancer surgeons,
oncologists, pathologists,
radiation therapy physicians,
nurses,
cancer
registrars and a lay person
from the Peoria business community.
We
discussed
P.DC’s
pending
applical:ion iso
expand
the
hazardous waste disposal
facility
at
PDC
#1 in
Pottstown, After reviewing
th TDPT—I data
on
elevated cancer rates
in Peoria
County,
the Committee
members felt that continued
operation of the PDC
facility poses
significant
risk
to
the
health of Peoria
County
residents.
During the
discussion,
it
was
agreed
that
no
one
is
saying
that PDCs
operation
is directly
causing
cancer. Rather, the
concern was that
it
just does
not make good sense to continue
importing known
carcinogenic hazardous waste from outside Peoria County
and outside
the state of
Illinois, and burying it in a site
so close
to
a populated
area and
over
i:hc
aquifer, in
a
county with
a clocuiriented high
cancer
burden.
The
Cancer Commiltce
therefare adds its
voice
to
those of the Medical
Staff
of all
three
Peoria
Hospitals,
the
Peoria
Medical Society
and
the
illinois
State Medical
Society
in
opposing
the expansion of the Peoria
Disposal
Company’s [lararcious
Waste
Land
P1
at
Pottstnwn.
Moreover, we urge
the 1EPA
to helpus
protect the
health
oLPeoria Count
residents
by
addressing the cleanup of
the
closed,
unprotected “legacy’’
areas of
the
land fill which existed prior to RCRA regulatjons,
Sincerely.
(
,..,../
.1
an es McGee,
M .1).
(‘hair, Cancer Committee
.2()
.
is.
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Cancer
Rates
IDPH,
Illinois
Cancer
Registry
500
Cancer
Cases
(per
490
I
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U
Illinois
Peoria
County
Peoria
County
2000-2004
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