IDEM Continues to Drop the Ball in Hartford City

The <a href="http://www.in.gov/idem/">Indiana Department of Environmental Management</a> has allowed Hartford Iron and Metal to continue business and to expand operations for eleven years after being originally cited for violations even though they are still not in compliance with the Court Order Decree of 2009. Since 2006, Hartford Iron and Metal in Hartford City, Indiana, has been in violation for improper methods for containing harmful chemicals, including PCBs, from their industrial work.

In 2009 the Indiana Department of Environmental Management and Hartford Iron and Metal agreed, in a Court Approved Consent Decree, to clean their site.

In 2011, and again in 2015, IDEM completed another inspection and found Hartford Iron and Metal was still in violation. Some methods of cleanup did occur, but none of them were substantial enough to actually make a difference.

The Indiana Department of Environmental Management has allowed Hartford Iron and Metal to continue business and to expand operations for eleven years after being originally cited for violations even though they are still not in compliance with the Court Order Decree of 2009.

It is time for real change for the citizens of Hartford City. Come join that change on October 21st and November 18th at 10 a.m. The meetings are located at City Hall, 700 N. Walnut St., Hartford City, IN.

If you have any questions, feel free to contact us at 765-730-4168 or email us at blackfordcoconcernedcitizens[at]gmail[dot]com.

The Neighborhood Impact of Hartford Iron and Metal [Updated 10/14/2016]

A Community Dialogue

Join the Conversation — Open to the General Public

  • Who: Representatives from the Hoosier Environmental Council, Hartford Iron & Metal, Blackford County Concerned Citizens, and Technical Assistance to Brownfields Communities (TAB)
  • What: Engage in conversation about how to address the impact of Hartford Iron & Metal on the immediate neighborhood
  • When: October 22, 2016 10 am – 1 pm
  • Where: City Hall, 700 North Walnut Street, Hartford City, IN map
  • Why: Neighborhood interests are underrepresented in remediation plans

Hartford Iron and Metal

click here for a printable version

 

A collaborative project between Blackford County Concerned Citizens and IPFW

 

Blackford County Concerned CitizensIndiana Campus CompactIPFW

 

About Indiana Campus Compact

Indiana Campus Compact (ICC) is a partnership of Indiana’s public, private, and community college higher education institutions focused on advocating, implementing, and improving service engagement, so that students graduate as well-informed, engaged and productive members of society, who are fully enabled to provide leadership and service that advances the public good in their communities. For more information, please visit www.indianacampuscompact.org.

Meeting on Hartford Iron Cleanup

Blackford County Concerned Citizens (BCCC) in partnership with the Hoosier Environmental Council (HEC) has reviewed the public record on the Hartford Iron contamination and cleanup.

On Saturday, Nov 7, 2015, BCCC hosted a meeting to provide an update on the cleanup. 18 Blackford County citizens attended including Mayor Hodgin.  The environmental consulting firm responsible for the next steps in the cleanup, Keramida, sent their Senior Vice President for Engineering Services, Kristen Belcredi, to the meeting.

BCCC president, Joe Castelo, gave an introduction.  Dr. Indra Frank, Environmental Health Director with HEC, gave a synopsis of the violations, agreed order, contaminants, and cleanup to date.  Her presentation is available here. Kristen Belcredi, from Keramida, explained the storm water system that is going to be installed.  It will collect all of the storm water that runs off of Hartford Iron into a retention pond that will be built on a property Hartford Iron owns on the south side of Chestnut Street.  From there the water will be treated to remove contaminants before being released into the storm sewer.  Ms. Belcredi explained that the water in the pond will be moving, which discourages mosquito breeding, but if necessary they will treat it to prevent mosquitoes.  There were some excellent questions from the attendees.

 

Hartford Iron satellite view 2-2012

Hartford Iron, satellite view

 

 

BCCC Forum, April 25, 2015

Blackford County Concerned Citizens Forum:

Embracing Opportunities for Community Health, Part 1 in a series

Blackford County Concerned Citizens is taking action to address environmental health concerns raised by the community including testing soil and water and doing computer-based mapping.  BCCC’s goal is to find and reduce environmental exposures that could increase the risk of cancer or neurologic disease.

More than 60 people were at City Hall in Hartford City for the Forum to hear about BCCC’s work to date.Audience

 

 

 

 

 

 

Dr. Sherrie Steiner’s Environmental Sociology class from IU-Purdue Ft Wayne (IPFW) presented the three projects they worked on this semester:

Indra speakingDr. Indra Frank, Environmental Health Project Director for the Hoosier Environmental Council, reported on health data for the county, the well testing project, and the project to test soil at sites where there used to be glass factories.  Her presentation slides.

Cheryl Mathews, Director of Education and Client Services for Cancer Services of East Central Indiana – Little Red Door, described the support services available to cancer patients in Blackford County through her agency.

Joe Castelo, president of BCCC, gave a history of the organization and described how this work was funded by donations from supporters and a grant from the Blackford County Community Foundation.  Joe asked attendees to consider renewing their support to continue BCCC’s work with a reminder that there is currently an opportunity for matching funds through the Blackford County Community Foundation.Joe Castelo and students

Click here for the event flyer.

Click here for the agenda.

Blackford County Concerned Citizens Volunteer Organization Meeting

We need your help today! If we are going to learn what is happening in Blackford County, we need to get everyone to fill out a survey! We need people to help get these surveys to everyone in Blackford County. We have lots of tasks that need to be done. Please attend the meeting if you are interested in helping with any of these tasks or would just like more information in general. If you are out of town but would still like to help please send an email to BlackfordCountyConcernedCitizens@yahoo.com• Take the survey to their church• Take the survey to their community organization• Organize a booth at community events to distribute the survey• Enter the data from the surveys• To search public records on the IDEM Virtual File Cabinet (can be done from any location)• Mapping the facilities and disease cases to make a comprehensive picture. • Fundraising• Local officers•Public Relations
Location: John XXIII Center 407 W. McDonald St Hartford City, IN
Start Time:
14:00
Date: 2011-10-09
End Time: 17:00

Groups to Host Community Event on Cancer Levels in Indiana Industrial Town

Hoosier Environmental Council, Concerned Citizens of Blackford County to Hold Public Health Workshop

HARTFORD CITY – MAY 10, 2011 – Citizens from Blackford County will meet on May 21st in the county seat of Hartford City, located 75 miles northeast of Indianapolis, to attend a first-ever Public Health Workshop focused on high levels of cancer in the county. Blackford County , once home to a number of automobile, chemical, gas and glass companies, has one of the highest levels of cancer, per person, in Indiana , according to the Indiana State Department of Health.

“We’ve been concerned and alarmed by the number of our neighbors who have been diagnosed with some form of cancer in the last ten years,” said Joe Castelo, former Mayor of Hartford City. Castelo, along with his daughter Katherine, and fellow Hartford City native Kathy Dunsmore, founded Blackford County Concerned Citizens (BCCC) to help educate the community on cancer levels in their community, understand what might be causing those high rates, and what people can do about it at the individual and community level.

BCCC is co-hosting the Public Health Workshop with the Hoosier Environmental Council (HEC), the state’s largest environmental policy organization. “We’re concerned that Blackford County ’s apparent cancer cluster might have some relationship with the number of abandoned industrial sites in the county,” remarked Jesse Kharbanda, Executive Director of HEC. Indiana, as a whole, ranks 10th in the nation in terms of hazardous waste production and in the top 5 for arsenic, benzene, chromium, and sulfuric acid toxic releases, according to the US EPA. When releases contaminate the air or water at unsafe levels, they can cause a variety of illnesses, including cancer, according to extensive research by the U.S. Centers for Disease Control.

The BCCC-HEC Public Health Workshop will be held on May 21, 2011 at the Lake Placid Conference Center in Hartford City at 1 pm. Registration is free. To RSVP or for directions, visit www.hecweb.org.