HomeMy WebLinkAbout06.a.5) Handout-Add'l Written Announcements(o.a.5) NarwlocrF
oard Meetina of November 4. 2010
Written Announcements
Financial Information Reauest
a) Controller Requires Special Districts to Report
Compensation Info
State Controller, John Chiang, has announced that his office will now require
independent special districts to begin reporting compensation information for
District officials and staff. This compensation information will include both
salaries and benefits. Cities and counties were required to submit the same
information by October 2010. Special districts will be required to submit data to
the Controller by December 13, 2010. Letters are currently being sent to special
districts outlining the new reporting requirements. District staff will compile the
data and submit it by the deadline.
General
b) USEPA Public Hearing Update
The US Environmental Protection Agency (USEPA) released proposed new air
standards for Multiple Hearth Furnaces on October 14, 2010. On October 29,
2010, the District commented on those standards at USEPA offices in Research
Triangle Park, North Carolina. The District made three main comments.
The regulatory proposal states that the removal of mercury will yield
a benefit ranging from $130 - $320 million in medical cost savings
annually. The District asked for a copy of the Health Risk
Assessment so that it could be reviewed. This document
supporting this claim was not part of the Regulatory Proposal.
The District provided information that the cost to treat mercury to
the very low levels suggested in the proposed regulation is
approximately $125,000 per pound versus the $6,000 per pound
stated in the proposed ruling. Thus, the nationwide cost is $2
billion per year not the $105 million suggested in the proposed
regulation, making the cost to benefit ratio not justifiable.
Finally, the District indicated that the Household Hazardous Waste
(HHW) Program and Dental Amalgam programs reduced the
amount of mercury in the plant influent by 70 %. If the total cost of
our HHW program were assigned solely to mercury removal, the
cost would be $24,000 per pound of mercury removed. This does
not consider the very significant benefit of all of the other materials
removed from the environment at our facility, such as paints,
pesticides and herbicides. The District suggested that enhanced
source control is a better mechanism for mercury removal than the
proposed rule.
In closing, the District commented that by requiring existing incinerators to
remove mercury to these very low limits, wastewater agencies will be incurring
costs that are not justified by the benefits. The District will submit written
comments on the regulation for delivery to USEPA by November 29, 2010.