California board voted to nix a controversial hazardous waste proposal
Earlier this year, the California Department of Toxic Substances Control (DTSC) released a draft of its first-ever Hazardous Waste Management Plan, a document intended to guide the state's strategy on dangerous waste.
The draft plan included a recommendation to weaken California's disposal rules for contaminated soil — typically the largest segment of hazardous waste produced each year. The potential change would have allowed contaminated soil from heavily polluted sites to be dumped at landfills that were not designed to handle hazardous waste.
Environmental advocates and community members expressed concerns that the rollback could result in toxic dust blowing into communities near local landfills or dangerous chemicals leaching into groundwater. State officials countered by saying that contaminated soil would only go to landfills equipped with liners that would prevent toxic substances from seeping into local aquifers.
At a public meeting on the plan held on Thursday evening, the Board of Environmental Safety — a five-member panel established to provide oversight of DTSC — unanimously voted to remove that recommendation from the state's draft plan. That followed months of intense scrutiny from residents and environmental groups directed toward the plan. DTSC officials present at the meeting also signaled that they would support the board's decision to nix the revision.
'I heard you talk about the pollution burdens you already face,' DTSC deputy director Mandi Bane said to the crowd of a few dozen who had gathered at the department's offices in Cypress. 'The worry that DTSC is taking steps that will endanger your community by making that pollution burden worse, and [the] outrage that these steps will be taken without consultation and discussion. As a public health professional, the stress, the fear, the anger that I heard from folks was very concerning ... and I do want to apologize that this plan had that impact."
Heavily polluting industries have tainted soil across California. More than 560,000 tons of hazardous soil are produced each year in California as environmental regulators endeavor to prevent residents from coming in contact with chemical-laced soil and developers build on land in industrial corridors.
However, the vast majority of this soil is not considered hazardous outside of California. The state has hazardous waste regulations that are more stringent than the federal government and most states in the country.
There are only two waste facilities in California that meet the state's rigorous guidelines for hazardous materials, both in the San Joaquin Valley. Any hazardous dirt in California must be trucked there, or exported to landfills in neighboring states that rely on the more lenient federal standards.
State officials argued the current rules make it difficult and expensive to dispose of contaminated soil, noting that the average distance such waste is trucked right now is about 440 miles, according to the draft plan.
Ahead of the board vote, environmental advocates rallied outside of the DTSC offices in Cypress, calling on state officials to uphold California's hazardous waste standards for contaminated soil. Angela Johnson Meszaros, an attorney with Earthjustice, said the proposal would effectively forgo California's regulatory authority and rely on the federal environmental rules — at a time when the Trump administration is repealing environmental policy.
"This plan is a travesty, and I'm calling on DTSC to be better than this," Johnson Meszaros said at Thursday's meeting. "If we don't draw the line with this massive deregulatory effort, there is no line. We will be swept up in the insanity we see at the national level.'
The discussion of hazardous waste disposal has been thrust into the public spotlight recently as the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers continues to remove toxic ash and contaminated soil from properties destroyed in the Eaton and Palisades wildfires. Because disaster debris is traditionally considered not hazardous, federal contractors have been hauling this material to several nonhazardous local landfills without testing it.
In response to the federal cleanup plans, residents in unincorporated Agoura and the Granada Hills neighborhood in Los Angeles staged protests near local landfills.
Melissa Bumstead, an environmental advocate and San Fernando Valley resident, urged the Board of Environmental Safety to consider factoring disaster debris into the hazardous waste plan. With climate change fueling increasingly destructive wildfires, this will continue to be an issue for years to come, she said.
"This is an opportunity, not just with hazardous waste that is manufactured," Bumstead said, "but also hazardous waste that is created by wildfires on how to create a plan that is going to protect Californians in the future."
This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Washington Post
06-08-2025
- Washington Post
6 months after toxic mine spill in northern Zambia, US Embassy orders personnel out of the area
LUSAKA, Zambia — The United States Embassy in Zambia ordered all U.S. government personnel Wednesday to leave a region in the north of the country affected by a toxic spill from a Chinese-owned mine that happened six months ago. The embassy said in an alert on social media that new information revealed that 'hazardous and carcinogenic substances' including arsenic, cyanide, uranium and other heavy metals had polluted a major river system flowing through the town of Chambishi and the nearby city of Kitwe, and had possibly become airborne, following an accident at the mine in February.


E&E News
28-07-2025
- E&E News
EPA touts first-ever deal under accidental toxic release rule
The Trump administration is touting a first-ever enforcement action aimed at ensuring that major industries promptly report accidental releases of toxic air pollution to the Chemical Safety Board. The announcement, though, comes on the heels of the administration seeking to abolish the board. As part of the White House's budget request for next year, the investigative agency would be 'permanently canceled' at the end of September 2026.. Under the settlement announced Monday, Pacific Gas and Electric, one of the nation's largest utilities, agreed to a $45,273 penalty for failing to report a June 2023 mishap at a San Jose, California, natural gas distribution facility that sent an employee to the hospital. Advertisement While PG&E notified EPA's National Response Center and the Pipeline and Hazardous Materials Safety Administration, the utility 'did not submit a report directly to CSB within eight hours of the accidental release' as required by 2020 regulations, according to the settlement, which federal regulators hope will set a precedent for the future.


The Hill
24-07-2025
- The Hill
US signs MOU with Mexico on Tijuana River sewage crisis
The U.S. and Mexico on Thursday took collaborative steps toward curbing a longstanding cross-border environmental crisis: the unfettered sewage flow from Tijuana into Southern California. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) administrator Lee Zeldin and his Mexican counterpart Alicia Bárcena Ibarra signed a memorandum of understanding (MOU) that addressed the 'environmental, public health and national security consequences' of transboundary wastewater contamination. The officials expressed their intentions to 'permanently stop untreated wastewater from polluting coastal communities,' while reaffirming previous commitments and endorsing new strategic projects. 'What the residents of Southern California need and deserve, what they've been waiting for, for too long, isn't just a solution that is a band-aid for that moment, but a permanent, 100 percent solution,' Zeldin told reporters from Mexico City, prior to the signing. The crisis at the heart of the MOU involves the passage of polluted wastewater from Mexico into southern San Diego County via ocean plumes and the Tijuana River. This fetid flow — rife with both pathogens and toxic chemicals — stems from inadequate treatment near Tijuana. For years, these circumstances have closed down beaches and sickened Navy SEALs. Following demands from California Democrats in March that the EPA chief visit the region, Zeldin did so in April — and demanded that Mexico put a stop to the situation. Recalling his previous visit to reporters on Thursday, Zeldin described smelling 'that foul smell that so many residents of Southern California have been complaining about for so long.' He said that upon leaving the area, there was a 'burning desire at the Trump administration to dedicate a tremendous amount of energy, of time, to make sure that the residents of Southern California would be receiving this good news as quickly as possible.' The administration, he explained, prioritized three major milestones — all of which gained Mexico's approval in Thursday's MOU. The first, he explained, revolved around Mexico's outstanding commitment to allocate $93 million toward completing water infrastructure projects specified in a previous treaty, called Minute 328. In the MOU, Mexico expressed its intention to spend $46 million in 2026 and $47 million in 2027 on these initiatives, which include major rehabilitations of wastewater treatment channels, pumps, backup power supplies and other equipment. The second key pillar, according to Zeldin, focused on expediting the timelines for getting projects done faster. As such, the MOU contains construction schedules for calendar year 2026 and 2027, adhering to a 'project priority schedule.' The third goal of the MOU, Zeldin said, was the stipulation that the US and Mexico would seek to engage in a new agreement — a new 'minute' — on new initiatives necessary 'to get over the finish line.' The parties, according to the MOU, intend to secure that minute by Dec. 31 and execute its actions immediately, through existing or new binational workgroups. 'This isn't just an agreement for 2025,' Zeldin said. 'It was a product of a conversation of where do we need to be in 2030 and 2035, and beyond.' The MOU does, however, include some immediate action for 2025, such as Mexico's pledge to divert 10 million gallons per day of treated sewage from the Arturo Herrera and La Marita wastewater treatment plants to a site further upstream of the Rodríguez Dam — at an internal cost of $13.3 million. Mexico also agreed to rehabilitate a wastewater collector known as the 'Parallel Gravity Line' for about $8.42 million. The EPA chief also emphasized President Trump's personal passion about solving this crisis, noting that 'none of this would have been possible' without his participation. Zeldin recalled that after Trump heard a story about the environmental and national security impacts on Navy SEALs, the president concluded 'that he wanted to get this done.' In response to the MOU announcement, Tom Kiernan, president and CEO of American Rivers, described the partnership in a statement as 'a massive step forward for the Tijuana River.' 'We appreciate the Trump administration's dedicated effort to restore this river back to the vibrant resource it once was,' Kiernan added. Kristan Culbert, the organization's associate director of California River Conservation, added that 'communities along the Tijuana River have suffered this public health crisis for far too long.' 'We are hopeful and optimistic that the Trump administration will be the catalyst for a major turnaround for this river,' Culbert said.