San Jacinto River Coalition

East Harris County, Texas

The San Jacinto River Waste Pits Superfund Site is an example of the damage that hazardous chemicals can do to our local environment, but it also shows how the dedicated work of our citizens can force a change.

Nearly 60 years ago, the Champion Paper Mill hired McGinnis Industrial Maintenance Corporation to dispose of highly toxic waste in two pits on the banks of the San Jacinto River on either side of the I-10 interstate.

Today, the experts say nearly two-thirds of that waste has washed into the river and, without remediation, the remaining dioxins and other chemicals in the pits will be a threat for the next 750 years.

Time Passes And Residents Suffer

In 2015, THEA collaborated with the government agencies and researchers to assess disease rates for the communities around the San Jacinto River Waste Pits.

 

Here’s what we found:

  • Women living on the east bank of the San Jacinto River, adjacent to the Waste Pits, have among the highest rates of maternal mortality and comorbidities in the nation. 

  • Thirty percent of pregnancies in this area result in at least one serious complication. 

  • Area residents have contracted abnormally high rates for 14 different types of cancer, including Childhood brain cancer, leukemia and liver cancer.

  • Additionally, a birth defect study showed an increased incidence of congenital heart defects and a rare disorder causing babies to be born with exposed digestive organs.

That is why THEA’s San Jacinto River Coalition is so committed to a full cleanup of the Superfund Site. Together, THEA and the coalition members have cut decades off the time it usually takes to work through the Superfund process.

  • In late 2016 we submitted 55,000 petition signatures to the EPA supporting removal of the waste material so that it would never again be a threat to people or the environment.

  • On October 11, 2017, The EPA issued their long-awaited Record of Decision (ROD), which unequivocally ruled in the coalition’s favor ordering a full remediation of the site costing nearly $115 million to be paid by the two responsible parties - International Paper and Waste Management.

  • In 2021, the Remedial Action of the Southern Impoundment (or Waste Pit) began. This is the phase of the Superfund process where physical removal of waste takes place.

Now we need to build on that success to make sure the area is restored and people are protected.

Hurricane Threat

The ecosystem is still at risk with every hurricane or extreme rain event. Hurricane Harvey’s storm surge fully submerged the Waste Pits and damaged the cap that was supposed to keep the chemicals from reaching the river. An EPA dive team found cancer-causing dioxin levels in the river water that were more than 2,000 times higher than maximum recommended levels.

Seafood Advisory

Elevated levels of dioxin found in fish in the San Jacinto River 20 years ago were one of the first signs that told experts there was a problem in the vicinity of the waste pits. The advisories against eating fish and shellfish on the San Jacinto River remain in place and testing of marine life continues to show unacceptably high levels of contamination.

The continued health threat to people who eat seafood from the area is a major reason there are consumption advisories warning people that fish and crab from the area are not safe for consumption.

Solutions, Not Band-Aids 

The EPA has committed to clean up the San Jacinto River Waste Pits. To THEA, that means excavation and a full removal of more than 212,000 cubic yards of contaminated material. Nothing less than a river where children can safely swim or fish, will do. However, the responsible parties in the cleanup continue to push for half measures and the ability to seal up parts of the pit and leave it in place. So, we continue to engage the EPA, review every document submitted to the agency and receive feedback from coalition members so that we can effectively represent them.

Sign Our Petition
To The EPA

 

We want to champion your voice. Each submitted letter represents to the EPA the strength of our communal interest and expresses the urgency to fully remediate the San Jacinto River Waste Pits Superfund Site. We’re proud to have seen several achievements towards our goal and invite you to lend your voice to the cause today.