Whistleblower details unreported mercury spill at Hill AFB


Save Story
Leer en español

Estimated read time: 3-4 minutes

This archived news story is available only for your personal, non-commercial use. Information in the story may be outdated or superseded by additional information. Reading or replaying the story in its archived form does not constitute a republication of the story.

HILL AIR FORCE BASE — A whistleblower's claim that a 2007 spill of more than 60 pounds of mercury was not properly reported or cleaned up at this military base, where more than 24,000 military personnel and civilians work and live, has prompted a federal criminal investigation.

The Utah Department of Environmental Quality has backed up that claim, concluding after an investigation in September and October that the base violated permits because it failed to report the spill and cleanup, improperly stored the cleaned-up material, improperly labeled storage containers that were also not in good condition and failed to inspect containers storing the hazardous waste.

Health risks of mercury exposure
Although some forms of mercury are more dangerous than others, all are toxic. Depending on the type and amount, exposures to mercury can damage the nervous system, kidneys, liver and immune system.

Breathing mercury vapors can harm the nervous system, lungs and kidneys. Mercury vapors can pass easily from the lungs to the bloodstream. Elemental (also known as metallic) mercury, the shiny silver-white liquid found in some thermometers and switches, is most dangerous when inhaled and must be handled with care.

Source: SC Dept. of Health and Environmental Control.

Scott Anderson, DEQ director of solid and hazardous waste, said the Environmental Protection Agency is also conducting a criminal investigation. The DEQ sent a notice of violations to the base in a March 2 letter, requesting a response by April 2.

The DEQ letter puts the base on notice that it could face civil penalties of up to $13,000 per day. Anderson said actual penalties would be negotiated with base officials later but the clock on the potential for penalties began ticking when the spill occurred five years ago.

There are additional steps in the investigations, and any finding on penalties is a ways off. "We're not even close to that yet because we haven't gotten their official response."

Hill spokesman Rich Essary said base leadership was notified in October about an alleged mercury spill in an industrial area on the east side of the base.

"Hill Air Force Base is cooperating with an ongoing investigation. Our first priority is to ensure the health and safety of our people and the community. When we learned of the allegations, we took immediate action. After the presence of mercury at the site was confirmed through sampling, the Air Force followed standard environmental regulations and developed a corrective action plan to remediate the mercury," says a statement released Wednesday.

Salt Lake attorney Scott Boyd is representing the unidentified whistleblower, who is described as a former base employee.

Boyd said the Department of Defense and Department of Justice are also investigating, and said his client is protecting his identity because he is concerned about retaliation against family members who still work on base.

Boyd said that Hill workers in 2007 removed more than a dozen mercury-containing ring balance meters from boilers that were placed outdoors on pallets, and that the meters began leaking liquid mercury onto the ground. Patent documents describe a ring balance meter as a device for measuring fluid pressures.


One of the questions that is still unanswered is whether they recovered all of the liquid mercury, and if not, where it is or how it was disposed of.

–Scott A. Boyd


"More than 60 pounds of mercury was spilled. As noted on the DEQ website, any time one pound or more of liquid mercury is released to the environment, the spiller must call the National Response Center," Boyd said, and that untrained workers used vacuum cleaners to try and clean the area.

"Workers were unable to recover all of the liquid mercury," Boyd said. "One of the questions that is still unanswered is whether they recovered all of the liquid mercury, and if not, where it is or how it was disposed of."

Mercury, a liquid at room temperature, is exceptionally dense, and 60 pounds would equal slightly more than one-half gallon, by volume.

Anderson said the DEQ's investigation has not corroborated the claim that 60 pounds of mercury was spilled. "I expect the containers may have held that much, but to say that much was spilled, I'd guess it was a lot less than that."

The whistleblower cooperated in the investigation, which started with the EPA, Anderson said. A call to the EPA investigator has not been returned.

"The stored mercury was recovered and steps were taken to protect the health of the military personnel and civilians at Hill AFB and the general public," Boyd said.

Anderson said Hill does have hazardous materials storage areas that are approved by permit, and that the recovered mercury has since been moved to approved storage areas on base.

----

Contributing: Keith McCord

Email:sfidel@ksl.com

Most recent Utah stories

Related topics

Utah
Steve Fidel

    STAY IN THE KNOW

    Get informative articles and interesting stories delivered to your inbox weekly. Subscribe to the KSL.com Trending 5.
    By subscribing, you acknowledge and agree to KSL.com's Terms of Use and Privacy Policy.

    KSL Weather Forecast