By
Dan Klepal
The Cincinnati Enquirer
Ray Agee's
reflection is seen next to a warning sign submerged in
the brackish water in the Excello Lock in Middletown,
which is along Dick's Creek. ([name of
photographer] photo) | ZOOM
| |
MIDDLETOWN
- A poison creek runs through it.
Dick's Creek, a tributary of the Great Miami River that
winds through the heart of this Butler County community, has
been off limits to the 55,000 townsfolk here since the
mid-1990s because of pollution that could cause cancer to
people who swim or wade in the creek or eat fish or drink from
it.
One of the most polluted waterways in the state, the
sediment at the bottom of Dick's Creek would be classified as
hazardous waste if found in a landfill, according to the Ohio
Department of Health.
Signs posted around the creek warn people to steer clear.
That's because of high levels of PCBs, or polychlorinated
biphenyls, which have been recorded at 2,000 to 3,000 times
the limit considered safe by the federal Clean Water Act.
"About the only place that comes close to the PCBs in
Dick's Creek is the Ottawa River in Toledo, where we had a
landfill discharging contaminated oil directly into the
river," said Bob Fry, chief of the Health Assessment section
at the Ohio Department of Health. "The problem with these
chemicals is that they don't readily break down in the
environment. They can get spread around by a flood, or by
someone wading in the creek."
The source of the PCBs in Dick's Creek is the subject of a
federal lawsuit against AK Steel Corp., a Fortune 500 company
that is the city's largest employer.
The U.S. Department of Justice filed the original suit
against AK Steel in 2000, asking the court to force the
company to abide by environmental laws, clean up the creek and
pay civil penalties. The Ohio EPA and two environmental
groups, the Sierra Club and the National Resource Defense
Council, were later allowed to join the litigation.
The lawsuit is winding its way toward conclusion. Attorneys
for all parties must complete the sharing of information about
the case - a process known as discovery - by August. Arguments
of law must then be completed by November, which is when some
sort of settlement or trial is expected.
AK Steel maintains that it does not pollute the creek and
that there are dozens of other plants, junkyards and sewer
systems that could have allowed the hazardous chemicals into
the stream. The company acknowledges that a small amount of
PCBs entered the stream from its landfill in 1995, but that
problem was quickly taken care of.
Company spokesman Alan McCoy said the steel maker spent $17
million on wastewater treatment at its Middletown plant alone
last year, and the company forked over an additional $3
million on investigation and remediation of the Dick's Creek
watershed.
"Assistant Attorney General Gary Cox said the contaminants
persist in the creek's sediment and that there have been
continuing violations since the lawsuit was filed.
Ray Agee doesn't need tests to know the creek he learned to
swim in is ruined. Agee grew up in Middletown and now lives
just yards from the AK Steel plant. He says children in the
neighborhood continue to play and fish in the stream despite
warnings. The creek runs directly behind Amanda Elementary
School's playground.
"That creek was pristine when I was growing up," said Agee,
62. "I've gone back there and seen bicycle tracks, footprints
and mud. I know kids are still getting in that water, and I'm
afraid for them. It's a great loss."
E-mail dklepal@enquirer.com
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