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Amid leachate problems at Bethlehem landfill, Casella bid to change operating plan challenged • New Hampshire Bulletin

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Amid leachate problems at Bethlehem landfill, Casella bid to change operating plan challenged • New Hampshire Bulletin


In early June, officials from the Department of Environmental Services made an unannounced visit to the landfill in Bethlehem, a small, northern New Hampshire town near the Vermont border.

They came to review records related to leachate – the “trash juice” created when rain mixes with waste – stored at the landfill managed by the Vermont-based company Casella Waste Systems.

Jaime Colby, who supervises engineering and permitting for the department’s Solid Waste Bureau, told Kevin Roy, a division manager for Casella, that they would take the data back to DES for further review, but that the department had concerns about storage of leachate on the liner system, according to a report produced by DES about the visit. 

Colby and another DES official returned to the site days later for a construction meeting, with clouds hanging overhead. This time, Colby told company officials DES was “very concerned” by the data it had seen in the landfill’s last several quarterly reports, according to the site visit report.

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Toxic ‘trash juice’ a problem at four New Hampshire landfills, state regulators say

Two days later, DES sent a letter of deficiency to the landfill that laid out how it had failed hundreds of times to keep leachate to its required levels and to file mandatory reports, data, and investigations with the state. The landfill – known as North Country Environmental Services, or NCES – was not the only one to receive such a letter this year; but, of the three  letters sent to other landfills reviewed by the Bulletin, none matched the sheer quantity of NCES’s violations.

High leachate levels can “lead to multiple serious operational and stability issues” in landfills, wrote Anirban De, a civil engineer with expertise in landfills, in a Sept. 9 opinion letter to DES completed on behalf of his client BCM Environmental & Land Law, the firm that represents the citizen-group North Country Alliance for Balance Change. The group is against Casella’s proposed landfill in Dalton and advocates for solid waste reform. 

In his letter, De laid out concerns related to high leachate levels, saying “numerous landfill slope failures have been attributed to elevated leachate levels and consequent increase in pore water pressure. Most of these failures have been catastrophic and some caused numerous fatalities.” He also expressed concerns about part of NCES’s recent request to the state to modify sections of its operating plan that deal with leachate. 

These changes would delete a line about the rate at which the facility generates leachate, extend its hours for hauling leachate under certain circumstances, and change some of the places where that leachate is sent, adding in a wastewater treatment facility in New Jersey that is nearly a six-hour drive away from Bethlehem. 

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“An investigation should be carried out to understand the underlying cause why the actual leachate generation rate is deviating from the value that was anticipated during design,” De wrote. “It is not appropriate to accept a deviation without investigating the reason and to not include any anticipated value in the permit.”

Amy Manzelli, an attorney from BCM Environmental & Land Law who represents NCABC, asked DES in a letter to reject NCES’s permit modification request, citing De’s opinion letter.

“An operating plan is part of the permit,” Manzelli explained. “So, you know, whether your permit says … the landfill can only operate eight hours a day, or the operating plan says the landfill can only operate eight hours a day, no matter where the requirement is stated, those are both legally enforceable requirements.”

DES must decide by Sept. 24 whether NCES’s application to modify its permit is complete, said Colby, the DES official, in an email. If it’s incomplete, DES will request more information; if it’s complete, the department has 60 days to make a decision, Colby said. 

In its letter, DES identified 450 occasions between July 2023 and June of this year when NCES failed to keep leachate levels on the liner to the required 1 foot or lower. Once, the leachate was more than 116 inches high, almost 10 times higher than the requirement. 

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Jeff Weld, Casella’s vice president of communications, said in July that the violations were “unacceptable” but contended that they posed “no potential harm” to people or the environment. “We have immediately implemented several operational improvements to diminish the production of leachate at the site,” he told the Bulletin, “while also increasing the number of wastewater treatment and hauling contractors available to help manage the site’s wastewater.”

De, the engineer, said these high levels of leachate were unusual. He specializes in geoenvironmental engineering and is the interim dean of the School of Engineering at Manhattan University. He worked for six years at a company that designed landfills and does consulting work on geoenvironmental and landfill-related issues for private groups, industry groups, and others, like the firm that represents NCABC.

“It is not common for landfills to have this type of high numbers, unless there is something going wrong,” he said in an interview. “… When we say it should not exceed 12 (inches), that’s the worst case in a very large storm. … For this case, it is not natural, not normal at all.”

DES noted in its letter of deficiency that landfills are supposed to keep leachate below those levels even “up to the 25-year, 24-hour storm events,” a descriptor used to describe the severity of a storm. The high leachate levels at NCES could not be explained away by the weather: “Precipitation data included in the (landfill’s) quarterly reports indicate that there were no storm events that exceeded the 25-year/24-hour storm,” DES wrote.

More leachate means more strain on the double-liner of the landfill.

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“If you are raking leaves, a bag of dry leaves is pretty light,” De said. “But if that is left in a rainstorm and it becomes soaking wet, you know how much heavier that bag gets, right? So now imagine you have waste in the landfill. … Things get much heavier when they are wet. So you now have a heavier mass of waste material inside the landfill that adds to the load that … can cause the thing to slide or move. 

“But also, we know that things become slippery when wet, right? So you have a heavier mass of waste sitting on a base that is now more slippery because … it is now wet. … Therefore it has a higher chance of instability, higher probability of instability” than if it had the maximum of 1 foot of leachate standing on it. 

Outside of affecting the stability of the landfill, high leachate levels pose the risk of leaks, De said. Liners are designed to be leak-proof, he said, but small defects can be tested by large amounts of waste water.

“Pieces of plastic are welded together to make that liner, and it is possible that, in reality, they do have some minor holes or minor defects in them,” De said. “But if you have a small head of water, it’s not going to leak that much. But if you have a large amount of standing water, like 10 feet of water, it’s going to start leaking and leaking quite badly. So if you have more leachate standing inside the landfill, you have a higher probability of (a) leak that will go into the groundwater.”

As part of its proposed changes to its operating plan, NCES has crossed out the rate at which the landfill generates leachate: “Based on operating experience at the facility, the long-term average leachate generation during operation ranges from about 250 to 650 gallons per acre per day (g/a/d),” it currently reads. (NCES is 51 acres, according to Casella’s website.) It doesn’t propose an updated range.

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NCES is asking to delete its leachate generation rate from its operating plan. (Screenshot)

That deletion concerns De. For a landfill to manage leachate – storing it in the facility’s tanks, hauling it away – it has to know how much it generates, De said. “You cannot handle an unknown quantity of something, right?” he said. In his understanding, normal operating plans contain that provision, as does NCES’s current plan. 

“I can’t think of a modern, well-run landfill where they have no idea how much leachate they are generating,” De said. “Something has to go wrong for them not to have any handle on the leachate generation.”

Asked why the leachate generation figure had been deleted rather than replaced, Weld, the Casella spokesman, said: “There’s any number of revisions made throughout these processes. Focusing on one instead of any number of the others is pretty typical of someone who may be trying to inflict their own bias on others. Leachate generation is highly variable, and this has been especially true over the more recent past due to more severe weather and more frequent high volume rain events, so it is likely that it was eliminated because it was not a requirement of the permit submission and it didn’t make sense to try and predict future weather events at this time.”

If the state approves the updated operating plan, NCES could also send leachate as far as a wastewater treatment center in Passaic Valley, New Jersey, a far trek from Bethlehem. Other facilities where leachate could be treated under the revised plan include three in state – in Concord, Franklin, and Allenstown – and two others across state lines in Anson/Madison, Maine, and Plattsburgh, New York. The Concord, Franklin, and the New York locations are in the existing operating plan; if the update is approved, the other locations would be added and four from Vermont would be axed. 

NCES is asking the state to approve these changes to where it sends its leachate for treatment. (Screenshot)

“Extreme concerns … arise out of trucking PFAS-laden, toxic leachate these very long distances,” said Manzelli, the attorney. 

“If you just sort of think through the visual of solid waste coming from many of these places, trucked to New Hampshire, and then converted through rain partially into leachate … and then hauled back to some of these places to their wastewater treatment plants,” Manzelli said. “It’s a very dangerous situation.”

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Weld said there would typically be six to 10 truckloads of leachate – each carrying various volumes – sent from NCES to treatments facilities on a given day, though “leachate volumes do vary seasonally and are influenced by precipitation amounts, so there can be significant changes week to week.” On how often each treatment facility would be used, he said, “there is no set schedule,” citing variables like the capacity of treatment facilities and how much leachate is being produced. 

He said trucks are loaded with leachate on a concrete pad that has a containment drain. “Any potential spills during loading operations would be collected by the drain and would flow by gravity back to the leachate tank vault,” he said. “All containment areas have redundant systems (pipe within a pipe, tank within a tank, etc.).” The driver remains with the truck “at all times during the loading operation,” he said.

The permit modification request, Weld said through email, “arose out of the intermittent reduction of the capacity of wastewater treatment facilities for acceptance of leachate for treatment and disposal over the past several months.” When these treatment facilities have to curtail the amount of leachate they accept, he said, landfill operators have to look for alternatives, during which leachate accumulates in the management system.

“Ordinarily, leachate is transported to the nearest (wastewater treatment facilities) that will accept it,” Weld said, “but when those (wastewater treatment facilities) suspend acceptance of leachate, the landfill operator has to look for more distant alternatives. The longer hauling distances increase the time the trucks spend on the road which means that fewer loads can be transported per day.” NCES is asking for the state to allow leachate hauling two hours earlier in the morning if the facility is nearing 1 foot of leachate on the liner or under other extenuating circumstances. 

Weld pushed back hard against the criticism from NCABC and the group’s call for DES to reject the permit modification request.

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“Reflexively opposing the permit modification makes sense only in terms of political strategy. It is environmentally illiterate,” Weld wrote. “Landfills are designed to ensure that leachate is removed from the liner as rapidly as is practicable. Objecting to changes that will increase the amount of leachate hauled from the site means that NCABC prefers the buildup of leachate on the liner system because anything that impedes leachate removal from the facility necessarily results in leachate accumulation.”

He said the group is “simply seeking publicity to help further their cause of stopping the necessary development of the Granite State Landfill to serve those customers once NCES closes.” It is scheduled to close by 2027.

Those opposed to the proposed landfill – not far from the existing landfill in Bethlehem and a half-mile from Forest Lake – dispute that it is necessary, saying the state has ample capacity for its own trash. Problems at the Bethlehem landfill have raised red flags for residents near the proposed site who worry about the impact of a new landfill on the environment and their way of life.



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New Hampshire

Charlevoix County farm arson suspect arrested in New Hampshire after January blaze

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Charlevoix County farm arson suspect arrested in New Hampshire after January blaze


CHARLEVOIX COUNTY, Mich., (WPBN/WGTU) — A Northern Michigan man accused of torching a Charlevoix County farm is now behind bars in New Hampshire.

Investigators said 23-year-old Daniel Fournier is linked to a January fire that caused an estimated $500,000 in damage.

Authorities tracked him to Merrimack, where he was arrested during a traffic stop while allegedly carrying a loaded pistol.

A search of his apartment turned up more firearms, suspected incendiary devices and evidence investigators say ties him to the Michigan arson.

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Fournier is fighting extradition and remains jailed pending another court hearing.



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Masked men with baseball bats terrorize 12-year-old during NH home invasion

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Masked men with baseball bats terrorize 12-year-old during NH home invasion


Two people are facing charges after they allegedly broke into a New Hampshire home on Tuesday wearing black masks and armed with baseball bats, all while a 12-year-old was inside.

Danville police said they received a call around 9 p.m. Tuesday for a report of a home invasion on Beatrice Street. A 12-year-old was home alone on a video chat with his friend when three people wearing black masks and armed with baseball bats broke through his front door. The 12-year-old’s friend quickly called 911.

According to police, the three people were attempting to locate the child’s father and threatened the father with serious bodily injury.

An officer soon arrived at the scene, set a perimeter, and called in two K9 units.

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A search of the area didn’t initially turn up anything, but a K9 track led officers to another nearby home. Police interviewed the resident of the mobile home, identified as Nathan Wilder, who denied any involvement in the home invasion.

As the investigation continued, police learned that the original caller had heard from some other friends that one of the suspects in the home invasion had bragged about being involved. They determined that Nathan Wilder, John Wilder and a juvenile were the three people who had broken into the home.

John Wilder admitted to police that he had broken into the home on Beatrice Street and said that Nathan Wilder and a juvenile had assisted him.

Police were able to locate and seized three baseball bats, two ski masks and a few articles of clothing used in the crime.

John and Nathan Wilder were arrested and the juvenile who was involved was released to a parent.

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John Wilder is charged with burglary with a weapon, criminal threat with a deadly weapon and criminal mischief. Nathan Wilder is charged with with burglary with a weapon and criminal threat with a deadly weapon. Both men are currently being held at the Rockingham County Jail awaiting arraignment.



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Former NH legislator sentenced to decades behind bars for exploitation of toddlers

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Former NH legislator sentenced to decades behind bars for exploitation of toddlers


A former New Hampshire state representative was sentenced to more than 33 years in prison for involvement in a child exploitation case — almost double the mandatory minimum.

Stacie Marie Laughton, 42, pleaded guilty to three counts of sexual exploitation of children after soliciting and receiving nude photos of three toddlers from an ex-girlfriend who worked at a daycare.

Lindsay Groves, 41, of Hudson, N.H., was sentenced to almost 22 years in prison earlier this month after pleading guilty to the same charges as well as an additional count of distribution of child pornography.

According to court documents, Groves took the photos of the victims in 2023 at Creative Minds daycare in Tyngsboro, where she was a teacher, during designated bathroom breaks and nap times.

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She then sent the photos to Laughton, who requested the images and asked that Grove touch one of the minor’s genitals. In the conversation included in the records, the pair sexualizes the victims.

“Did the girl give you an issue,” Laughton texted after receiving the photos.

“No… the boy didn’t either,” Groves texted back.

In a sentencing memorandum, Laughton’s counsel had argued that she should receive a shorter sentence than Groves and asked for the minimum mandatory sentence, which would have 15 years for each count to be served concurrently.

“Stacie Laughton is a complex 42-year-old woman,” the memo said, noting that she was the first openly transgender woman to be elected to the New Hampshire legislature.

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The filing described Laughton’s history of mental health, substance abuse, sexual abuse, and trauma as mitigating factors the judge should consider.

“One of the few consistencies in Ms. Laughton’s life is her challenges with mental health illnesses,” the memo said. “She began receiving mental health treatment at the age of four and has been in and out of extensive treatment programs ever since.”

The death of Laughton’s wife in 2020 and a tumultuous relationship with Groves also added to her mental health struggles, the memo said, stating that the defendant drank every day and had tried heroin for the first time leading up to her arrest.

A doctor quoted in the filing said that Laughton likely had a low IQ, tied in part to her premature birth, as well as “normal sexual interests.”

“This finding shows both how caught up Ms. Laughton was in her relationship with Groves that she participated in activity counter to this and is … an important factor in considering whether Ms. Laughton would be a future threat upon release,” the memo said.

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The filing described Laughton’s actions as “horrendous, reprehensible, and shocking,” but said that even though the crimes were “utterly inexcusable,” she should still receive a shorter sentence than her codefendant out of a sense of justice.

However, in their own sentencing memo, federal prosecutors requested Laughton receive 40 years in prison.

“These crimes only came to light when Laughton reported them in an apparent attempt to punish Groves for ending their relationship,” prosecutors wrote. “The defendant, of course, did not disclose her own role in the creation of the imagery.”

“She ultimately admitted that she told Groves to touch one child’s penis, and claimed that she was feeding Groves’s attraction to children,” their memo said.

The prosecutors said that Laughton’s voice was the “more prominent one” in the conversation about exploiting children.

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