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Land Quality |
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Environmental Cleanup |
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| DEQ Home > Land Quality > Environmental Cleanup > Dry Cleaners > Impediments Affecting Statute Implementation | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Dry Cleaner ProgramImpediments Affecting Dry Cleaner Statute ImplementationsDuring implementation of the dry cleaner statute, DEQ identified several impediments specific to the dry cleaner industry that needed to be considered as the program matured: Perchloroethylene Can Be Difficult and Expensive to Clean UpThe technical means of removing Perchloroethylene (PCE) from water or soil are well developed and commercially available. For a given concentration of contaminant, reasonably accurate estimates of the cost of cleaning up a given volume of water or soil can be made. However, it is often difficult to estimate the volume of water or soil contaminated and the rate at which PCE concentration will decline over time. Both depend on site-specific factors that vary greatly. Volumes and concentrations cannot be predicted without detailed site investigations. Cleaning up contamination from dry cleaning facilities can be expensive because of the characteristics of the solvent. For example, PCE leaks out of sewer systems through openings too small for water to pass. It is also heavier than water and can sink to the bottom of aquifers where it can slowly release contaminants to groundwater. Cleaning up contaminated groundwater to the levels required for a beneficial use such as drinking water can be difficult and costly. Dry cleaner cleanups involving contamination in or near drinking water aquifers currently being conducted have projected costs ranging from $1million to $3 million. These sites represent worst case scenarios because they involve large releases that have contaminated or threaten to contaminate an aquifer used for public drinking water. Although there may not be a "typical" PCE cleanup because conditions vary so much from one site to another, the DEQ estimates the total cost to clean up all dry cleaner sites to be over $100 million. Language BarrierApproximately half the dry cleaners in Oregon have operators who speak Korean as their native language. Therefore, the DEQ provided all written guidance in both English and Korean. Vietnamese translations are also provided for the recent increase in the number of Vietnamese speaking dry cleaner operators. Ability of Dry Cleaners to Make Capital InvestmentSome dry cleaners in the state are unable to make the capital improvements necessary to comply with the requirements of becoming a zero release business. Companies that can not afford these compliance requirements will either go out of business, risk fines for operating illegally, or risk being ineligible for liability protection and funding from the program. Dry cleaners who have spent the money necessary to achieve compliance feel they are at a competitive disadvantage with those who have not made a similar investment and are not in compliance. |
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