Maine
Waste with PFAS flowing into Maine rivers, but regulations unlikely to come soon
Maine is at present amassing details about the degrees of poisonous “perpetually chemical substances” current in wastewater to arrange for future regulation of the chemical substances.
Since October, 105 public wastewater remedy vegetation and 19 personal wastewater services throughout the state have been recurrently testing the liquid waste leaving their services, known as effluent, for per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances, underneath a brand new regulation that handed within the spring. They may check for about 10 months and are reporting the outcomes to the Maine Division of Environmental Safety.
Statewide outcomes are nonetheless being compiled, however many particular person wastewater remedy plant operators have stated they’re discovering the chemical substances of their handled waste, which will get discharged into waterways that maintain fish and different aquatic life, and generally feed communities’ ingesting water wells.
Whereas the state continues to assemble the PFAS check outcomes, plant operators are ready to listen to what requirements they should adhere to sooner or later. There are limits on the quantity of PFAS in ingesting water however not on the quantity present in wastewater.
“The query proper now, and on a state degree, too, is what’s an appropriate quantity?” stated Nick Champagne, superintendent of the Kennebec Sanitary Therapy District in Waterville.
PFAS are a category of chemical substances used to make merchandise immune to water, grease and warmth, they usually construct up in our bodies and the surroundings over time. Research are ongoing, however some have linked sure compounds to kidney most cancers, testicular most cancers, excessive ldl cholesterol, decreased response to vaccines, fetal issues and different well being issues.
Therapy vegetation are usually not the unique supply of PFAS. Quite the chemical substances come to the services from industries that use them to fabricate their merchandise; from houses the place folks wash waterproof clothes and flush human waste containing PFAS down the bathroom; and from landfills that want a spot to place their PFAS-infused runoff.
Wastewater services deal with standard pollution earlier than discharging their effluent into rivers, however they don’t seem to be designed to take away PFAS. Along with being specialised and dear, the know-how for PFAS elimination techniques remains to be being developed.
An affiliation representing wastewater services is hoping that any future restrict on PFAS in wastewater takes under consideration the fee for services to overtake their techniques.
“I want to hope that science and purpose will prevail by way of when you must steadiness the fee with the environmental impacts,” stated Kirsten Hebert, government director of the Maine Rural Water Affiliation.
Many wastewater remedy vegetation throughout Maine are already coping with elevated prices from having to landfill their semi-solid waste, known as sludge or biosolids, which comprises PFAS. Final yr the Maine Legislature instituted strict restrictions on spreading sludge, prompting the services to depend on landfills in Maine, out of state and in Canada.
Up to now, many services unfold their waste solids on farm fields as a kind of fertilizer permitted by the state authorities. The PFAS within the waste then seeped into groundwater.
“This has been the first supply of contamination that we’ve been grappling with right here in Maine,” Melanie Loyzim, commissioner of the Maine Division of Environmental Safety, advised the Maine Board of Environmental Safety on Thursday.
Of roughly 1,500 wells which have been examined to this point in Maine, 23 % have had PFAS ranges exceeding Maine’s interim customary of 20 elements per trillion, Loyzim stated.
The Waterville remedy plant’s operations provide an instance of how linked completely different waste streams are, how widespread PFAS contamination can grow to be and the way costly it might be for communities to discover a repair.
The power serves Waterville, Winslow, Fairfield and Benton, along with paper-plate maker Huhtamaki. It stopped spreading its sludge in 2003, earlier than many different services, however over the earlier 24 years it acquired state approval to put down 285,165 cubic yards of the fabric, in response to state information.
The Waterville wastewater remedy plant’s latest assessments have proven PFAS within the complete mixture of wastewater getting into the power, within the wastewater collected individually from Huhtamaki, in a mixture of waste from the 2 cities of Fairfield and Benton, and within the effluent being discharged out of the power.
The state’s testing of wells has revealed how Fairfield has to this point been hit hardest by PFAS contamination.
As of September, 175 wells in Fairfield had PFAS ranges above the state’s customary; 184 wells had detectable ranges under 20 elements per trillion; and 53 wells had no detectable quantity of PFAS, City Supervisor Michelle Flewelling stated.
The very best recorded degree in a personal effectively in Fairfield was 54,100 elements PFAS per trillion elements water, which is 2,705 occasions larger than the quantity at present deemed acceptable in Maine.
The Waterville remedy plant stopped spreading its sludge on fields again in 2003 not as a result of somebody suspected an issue with it however as a result of the spreading operation had grow to be an excessive amount of to handle, Champagne stated.
“The district owned the vehicles, and we had workers on employees that have been licensed to drive the vehicles,” Champagne stated. “It turned cumbersome to maintain the upkeep on the vehicles, after all, after which additionally retaining workers staffed to have the ability to drive the vehicles simply turned very cumbersome and dear.”
As an alternative of constant to unfold it, the power opted to ship most of its sludge to the state-owned Juniper Ridge Landfill in Previous City, Champagne stated. It additionally despatched a portion to Casella’s Hawk Ridge Compost in Unity to be changed into compost. Hawk Ridge, in flip, bought the compost to backyard facilities, golf programs, athletic subject managers, landscapers and others, in response to its previous advertising supplies.
Now that Maine regulation prevents Hawk Ridge from utilizing Maine sludge for compost, the vast majority of the Waterville plant’s sludge is landfilled.
However the choice is now proving costly, partially due to rising demand for landfill house. In 2021 Juniper Ridge took in 90,069 tons of municipal sludge, up from 36,713 tons in 2017, in response to a state submitting.
Final yr the fee to the Waterville remedy plant of landfilling its sludge went up 50 %, Champagne stated.
“We’re taking a look at a future now the place I’m not fully certain the place that’s going to cease,” Champagne stated.
One different landfill, nevertheless, has not seen a big enhance in sludge disposal, although prices have nonetheless elevated. Waste Administration’s Crossroads Landfill in Norridgewock has seen “no actual enhance in quantity to talk of,” spokesperson Garrett Trierweiler stated.
Nonetheless, numerous components could also be contributing to elevated prices, he stated, together with the restrictions on land spreading, fewer disposal choices, rising gasoline and transportation prices, and rising prices to handle the fabric.
Whereas landfilling sludge seems to be the most effective out there choice proper now, it isn’t an excellent long-term answer as a result of PFAS don’t really go away, Champagne stated. The chemical substances nonetheless ooze out within the type of landfill leachate, which will get despatched again to wastewater remedy vegetation, which flush it into Maine rivers.
Every wastewater remedy plant has completely different preparations. As an example the Kennebec Sanitary Therapy District has a contractual obligation to course of the leachate from Hawk Ridge’s holding fields, Champagne stated. These holding fields are nonetheless producing the liquid despite the fact that the power is not distributing compost.
The Waterville wastewater remedy plant additionally processes trucked-in waste from haulers who pump out residential septic tanks. In November 2021, the wastewater facility examined samples of the septic materials and located PFAS.
So whereas remedy vegetation are not spreading contaminated sludge on fields, the chemical substances are nonetheless ending up within the surroundings.
The U.S. Environmental Safety Company has proposed limits for the way a lot PFAS needs to be allowed in freshwater to guard aquatic life. But it surely has not but proposed a particular degree in freshwater geared toward defending human well being. Maine expects the federal authorities to develop this guideline by the top of 2024.
The Maine Division of Environmental Safety anticipates it is going to then use the federal standards to finish state rulemaking by the top of 2025. Then the division might incorporate the brand new guidelines into wastewater remedy vegetation’ discharge permits.
“With out that human well being standards, we actually wouldn’t be capable of decide what an acceptable discharge limitation can be,” Loyzim stated.
Extra articles from the BDN
Maine
Boothbay's botanical garden wants to collect samples of every native Maine plant
This story first appeared in the Midcoast Update, a newsletter published every Tuesday and Friday morning. Sign up here to receive stories about the midcoast delivered to your inbox each week, along with our other newsletters.
The Coastal Maine Botanical Gardens in Boothbay has big goals for its plants.
The gardens are now looking to build several new facilities that would total 42,000 square feet and eventually include a collection of all native Maine plant life.
Since opening in 2007, the gardens have drawn growing numbers of visitors to the midcoast — now more than 200,000 per year — with 300 acres of plants and grounds, as well as popular holiday light displays. But after that immense growth, the organization is now looking to focus more on its research capabilities.
The expansion, which still requires local approval, would include a 10,770-square-foot administrative and laboratory building, a head house, two greenhouses, a storage building, three hoop houses and several outdoor planting areas. The project would likely cost between $20 million and $25 million, with private grants helping to fund it. Construction could begin as soon as this spring.
Gretchen Ostherr, president and CEO of the gardens, said the expansion would help to pursue the gardens’ larger goal of inspiring connections between people and nature.
“A part of that design is really about teaching people about plants and about plant conservation, and just really trying to inspire a love of plants, especially in young people, but really kids of all ages,” Ostherr said.
While the organization currently does field research on plants, it does not have any labs where its scientists can work. Introducing a lab would allow the gardens to take more student researchers, use molecular biology and bring more educational value for visitors, according to Ostherr.
It would also allow the organization to begin storing more plants in a variety of ways. That would include a collection of seeds from native Maine plants that have been dried and frozen — or “cryo-preserved.” The researchers would also be able to expand their herbarium — which stores plants that have been pressed onto paper — from 20,000 to 100,000 specimens. Ostherr said DNA can be extracted from these specimens.
Ostherr said the goal is to prevent any Maine plants from going extinct. The herbarium would initially gather specimens of all native plants in the state. Eventually, the organization hopes to gather specimens for all of them in northern New England.
“At the end of the day, we’re all reliant on the plants for life,” Ostherr said. “You know that we will at least have the DNA material, either in seeds or in the herbarium or in cryo-preservation, so that if something happens to a plant, we would have the ability to still study it and potentially even restore it.”
The new facilities would be located behind the back parking lot of the gardens and wouldn’t be open to the public, Ostherr said. However, guests would be updated on the ongoing research by educational signs and classes.
Ostherr noted that the new facilities would be carbon neutral, using solar panels and electric heat pumps, as well as cisterns to collect and reuse rainwater.
Maine
How Donald Trump’s ‘day 1’ agenda would hit Maine
President-elect Donald Trump will return to the Oval Office Monday and has vowed to carry out various “day one” priorities that could affect Maine.
Although the specifics of various pledges are still unclear or subject to changes from the mercurial Republican, the promises that could come to fruition as soon as Trump’s inauguration concludes Monday touch on everything from offshore wind to Jan. 6 rioters, among other issues.
His offshore wind ban is in the works.
Maine has failed to win a massive federal grant for a contentious offshore wind port that Gov. Janet Mills is proposing on Sears Island in Searsport, but that all may not matter if Trump carries through on his vows to halt offshore wind development.
Trump reportedly told U.S. Jeff Van Drew, R-New Jersey, to draft an executive order to halt wind projects. Van Drew told the Associated Press on Wednesday his draft order would halt offshore wind development from Rhode Island to Virginia for six months.
That could allow Trump’s interior secretary nominee, North Dakota Gov. Doug Burgum, to review how leases and permits were issued. Under questioning from U.S. Sen. Angus King, I-Maine, he would not commit Thursday to honoring existing leases but generally said projects that “make sense” and are currently in law would continue.
Time will tell if Maine is included. Outgoing President Joe Biden’s administration already started selling leases for areas in the Gulf of Maine that could power more than 4.5 million homes.
Pardons may be on the table for Jan. 6 rioters from Maine.
Trump has vowed to pardon as soon as next week rioters who stormed the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021, and disrupted Congress as it certified Biden’s 2020 election victory, but he has not been clear on whether he will seek to pardon all of the more than 1,500 people who have been charged, with more than 1,000 sentenced so far, or only pardon non-violent offenders.
Roughly a dozen Mainers have been charged in connection with the deadly riot that featured attacks on law enforcement officers. Four Mainers have been charged with violent offenses, and not every case is resolved.
The most prominent defendant, Matthew Brackley, a former Maine Senate candidate from Waldoboro, is serving a 15-month prison sentence after he pleaded guilty to assaulting police. Kyle Fitzsimmons, of Lebanon, received a seven-year prison sentence in July 2023.
His Canada tariff plan already has Maine’s attention.
Trump has threatened to immediately slap 25 percent tariffs on imports from Canada and Mexico and higher rates on China. A delegation from Prince Edward Island is in Maine and other New England states this week to make the case for free trade.
Neighboring Canada is the state’s top trade partner, with wood products, seafood and mineral fuels among the key products that cross the border. Tariffs have previously played well politically in Maine but have hurt heritage industries at times, including during Trump’s first term.
U.S. Rep. Jared Golden, a Democrat from the rural 2nd District, reintroduced his measure Thursday to create a universal 10 percent tariff. Golden pointed to a Congressional Budget Office analysis that found it would raise $2.2 trillion through 2032. But economists have also warned of higher prices for consumers and slower global growth under Trump’s plan.
“Tariffs can be very complicated, but at the end of the day, this is what it means: If it costs our goods and services 25 percent more to come across the border, they’re going to be costing Americans 25 percent more to consume them,” Prince Edward Island Premier Dennis King said.
Maine
Golden proposes universal 10% tariff, saying it will protect Maine workers
President-elect Donald Trump promised to impose sweeping tariffs. Days before Trump is set to take office, Maine’s 2nd District Rep. Jared Golden has introduced similar legislation — a 10% tariff on all imported goods.
It’s intended to protect Maine industries and workers against unfair competition, Golden said.
The Democrat from Lewiston, fresh off a narrow reelection win in November, said in an interview that his proposal would put the U.S. on more equal footing with trading partners that for years have protected their industries and workers. In contrast, Maine has lost jobs in manufacturing, lumber and other industries because the U.S. has failed to shield its workers and markets from unbalanced trade, he says.
“It’s a lie that we allowed ourselves to believe, that our allies around the world don’t pursue protectionist measures,” he said.
Golden pushed back against two arguments against tariffs: that the levies are inflationary because producers will pass added costs to consumers and that governments will retaliate against the U.S. with tariffs of their own.
He said an analysis by the Congressional Budget Office shows that a 10% “universal tariff” could spur a short-term increase in prices of some foreign goods and services, but would likely reduce the cost of other goods and services, drive up the incomes of American workers and have no long-term effect on inflation. Addressing the possibility of protectionist retaliation, Golden said U.S. markets are among the largest in the world widely sought by trading partners and other countries.
“For the time being, dollar for dollar, we’ll out-compete them. They need us,” Golden said.
Although the CBO report acknowledged no long-term inflationary impact, it predicts that cost increases would “put upward pressure on inflation over the first few years in which the tariffs were in place.” The analysis said increases in tariffs on U.S. imports and retaliation from trading partners over the next decade would reduce the size of the economy and increase businesses’ uncertainty about barriers to trade, cutting returns on new investments.
Golden told the Washington Post that no House Republican or Democrat has agreed to co-sponsor his bill.
Representatives of Rep. Chellie Pingree, D-1st district, and Sen. Susan Collins, R-Maine, did not respond to emails Thursday seeking their opinions of Golden’s legislation. A spokesman for Sen. Angus King, I-Maine, said King is withholding comment on the issue of tariffs until more details emerge about policies developed by the Trump administration and Congress.
Kristin Vekasi, an associate professor in the Department of Political Science at the University of Maine, argues that tariffs are inflationary and would likely lead to a cascade of policies and responses that could ultimately undermine Golden’s intent to protect jobs.
“There’s broad consensus about some aspects of tariffs,” she said. “The thing that we generally see with tariffs is they increase prices for consumers.”
That could prompt the Federal Reserve to again raise interest rates to fend off inflation, in turn prodding investors to shift money to bonds, increasing the value of the dollar that would make goods less competitive in global markets and hurting production and jeopardizing jobs, Vekasi said.
In addition, if retaliatory tariffs are imposed on hydropower from Canada and oil from other nations, higher energy costs would affect most industries, she said.
Stefano Tijerina, who teaches international business at the University of Maine Business School, said more than 50% of Maine’s trade is with Canada and tariffs “would affect us tremendously.” Lumber and tourists “mostly come from Canada” and lobsters fished off Maine typically end up in Canadian canneries, he said.
Many companies have moved to Canada and other nations to sell goods back to U.S. consumers, he said. “We’d be putting tariffs on our own products,” Tijerina said.
While Golden’s legislation can be interpreted as bolstering President-elect Donald Trump’s push for tariffs after he takes office Monday, Golden introduced similar legislation in September and said tariffs were established by President Barack Obama and President Joe Biden, both Democrats. A softwood lumber tariff dates to the Obama administration, he said, and Biden raised tariffs against China.
The 10% percent tariff would apply to all imported goods and services, and would increase or decrease by 5%, depending on whether the U.S. maintains a trade deficit or surplus.
Golden said job losses accelerated in the 1990s due to the North American Free Trade Agreement, which has become a magnet of anti-free trade animus that crosses political lines from Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders on the left to Trump on the right.
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