Assorted Landfill & Dredge Pictures

Some up to date pictures.

They've fenced off the 309 side. With a NO TRESPASSING sign.

 

Here's a picture of their new rail spur. So they can bring more cars in.

 

Here is some of the things that are contained in their CLEAN fill.

 

 

Our good friends at Norfolk & Southern have been providing transportation for the Dredge!

 

Empty Dredge cars on new siding (Note: full dredge cars on other siding in background waiting to come in.) Shovel removing Dredge from cars.

 

 
New Rail spur beening added to the property to bring in the dredge.
 

 

Getting Prepared to dynamite. Results of dynomiting.

 

Some Pictures of the Dredge And whatever is growing on it

 

Wheel Washer on the 309 side Scale on the 309 side

 

Pictures taken between December 9 and January 18.

New paved entrance behind Craigs on 309. New trailer set up to monitor trucks New paved road from 924

 

Upper part of new paved road off 924. Trucks dumping dredge. Bulldozer pushing freshly dumped dredge.

 

   Grading upper landfill under spring. Very hard to see in foreground - Gradall in Pit O                         Grading upper landfill below the spring.  

 

Working in Pit O

 

I thought you would like to see pictures of some of our local haulers as well hauling dredge.

M & J - Sugarloaf Triple K Bonners

 

Pictures taken on June 30, 2006, when all of the participants of this issue were on the site.

They consisted of members of CAUSE an their attorney, members of SUFFER and their attorney, the attorney of Hazleton Creek Properties LLC, the attorney for The Hazleton Redevelopment, Geologist Robert Gadinski, Dr. Christopher Duffy and Associate, Penn State, members of DEP and their attorney, and Environmental Hearing Board Judge LeBuskes.

 

Participants at former capacitor site Measuring a well in the sewer land
Measuring a new well. Trying to open a well.
Viewing the sewer ponds from the railroad tracks. Another well being measured.

 

 

Fort Mifflin, Philadelphia, PA

Pictures courtesy of www.mcadoo.info/

 

Hundreds of yards of trash.
 
 
Grass on this hill no longer exists as of 7/23/05.  It's pushed down over garbage.
 
 
Trees between this fresh dirt and trash no longer exists.  They have all been pushed down over garbage. 7/23/05
 

 

This is what the same area looked like on July 23, 2005 after the DEP started covering everything up.

Tree were boreholes are.  Were surrounded by trash.
 
They are pushing this fill down to the level where the boreholes are.
 
No one can imagine how much dirt is here. It is vast.
 

 

 

These are the capacitors as they still remained on the Landfill on 11/18/05
 

They're Gone!  But Where?  To Onyx?

Why hasn't the toxic soil been removed to date - 1/27/08?

 

 

Here are some of the various shot we've taken over the course of about 20 months.

This is a PP&L Insulator
 
This sunken field was level years ago.  Said to contain 1,500 barrels of Methyl Ethyl Ketone. Part of sunken field now contains water.
Sewer Pond on the property behind the Sewer Authority's pumping station on Beech St. Sinkhole on east side of property. DEP even marked it off for us, so we don't fall in. Pole line in the pit with high wall in background.
Old dump road in from route 309. Wire actually coming up out of the ground. This Red soil has been contaminated with some chenical.

 

 

This is some of the so-called reclamation that is currently going on.

Surveying Road Building
Pushing In Dirt - Filling In Holes Pushing Down Banks

They are covering everything in sight, rocks, trees and anything you can think of.

 

 

Here are some shoots of the famous barrels that don't exist anymore.  I must have hallucinated this.

I managed to get some better pics of the barrels now that the leaves are down.

And that's just in one location!  The EPA estimates that approximately half the barrels are in tact.  They estimate the landfill will be leaching at the rate of 8gpm/per acre over 19 acres.  That's a total of 80 million gallons per year into the Jeddo Tunnel System.

 

I thought you would like to see a picture of a huge turtle found dead at the reclamation site in what they call "The Dead Zone", because nothing is alive there.  Neither is this turtle!  (Picture courtesy of Richard Funk's column  in the Lehighton Times News)

 

Just thought I would throw in this nice picture of the Dredge McFarland,
this is the puppy who's going to dig your dirt for you.

 

Following that, this  site needs some levity, so here's ours.

 

©2006 - 2008 - Oscette@ptd.net