U.S. Environmental Protection
Agency, Region 7
901 N. Fifth
St., Kansas City, KS 66101
Iowa, Kansas, Missouri, Nebraska, and Nine Tribal
Nations
Swiss Valley Farms Cooperative in Luana, Iowa,
to Pay $33,880 Penalty for Community Right-to-Know
Violations
Environmental News
FOR
IMMEDIATE RELEASE
(Kansas City, Kan., May 29,
2012) - Swiss Valley Farms Cooperative, a cheese manufacturer, has agreed to pay a $33,880 civil penalty to
the United States to settle two violations of environmental regulations related
to the public reporting of toxic chemicals at its facility in Luana,
Iowa.
In settlement
of this matter, Swiss Valley Farms Cooperative will also complete a supplemental
environmental project. Swiss Valley Farms Cooperative will purchase emergency
response equipment for the Luana, Iowa, fire department valued at approximately
$10,786.
According to an administrative consent agreement and final order filed by EPA Region 7 in Kansas City, Kan., in May 2011, the Agency requested information from Swiss Valley Farms Cooperative and found the company had failed to submit reports to EPA and the State of Iowa concerning quantities of certain toxic chemicals that were manufactured, processed or otherwise used at the facility during 2009. Those chemicals were nitric acid and nitrate compounds. Nitrate compounds are known to be harmful to human health and toxic vapors of nitric acid may cause severe injury, burns, or death. During calendar year 2009, the facility manufactured, processed, or otherwise used 187,000 pounds of nitric acid and 71,000 pounds of nitrate compounds.
Submission of the
annual toxic chemical reports is a requirement of the Emergency Planning and
Community Right-to-Know Act (EPCRA). Under EPCRA regulations, companies of
certain size are required to submit annual reports to EPA and state authorities
listing the amounts of regulated chemicals that their facilities release into
the environment through routine activities or as a result of accidents. The
reports provide an important source of information to emergency planners and
responders, and residents of surrounding communities.
EPCRA was enacted by
Congress in 1986 as an outgrowth of concern over the protection of the public
from chemical emergencies and dangers. After the catastrophic accidental release
of methyl isocyanate at Union Carbide’s Bhopal, India, facility in December
1984, and a later toxic release from a West Virginia chemical plant, it was
evident that national public disclosure of toxic release inventory information
was needed.
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