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Western PA Town Fights Radioactive Landfill Reopening

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Pennsylvania Residents Fight Landfill’s Reopening Amid Radioactive Waste concerns

grove City, Pennsylvania – Concerns over radioactive waste have ignited a fierce battle as residents fight the reopening of the Tri-County Landfill. For years, locals have opposed the landfill, fearing it would worsen existing pollution. Recent revelations about the types of waste the landfill plans to accept have heightened those fears, particularly regarding the disposal of oil and gas waste.

The Rising Alarm Over Radioactive Waste

Beverly Graham, Recording Secretary for the Citizens’ Environmental Association of The Slippery Rock Area (Ceasra), expressed the community’s growing unease. “We realized we didn’t only have a trash problem, but we had a radiation problem,” she stated. This concern arose after Ceasra discovered a map, published by investigative journalists at the Public Herald, identifying landfills in Pennsylvania accepting oil and gas waste, including the Seneca Landfill, also owned by Vogel Holding, the same company behind the Tri-County project.

the worry stems from the toxic and radioactive nature of oil and gas waste, especially that generated from fracking.Research indicates increased radioactivity downstream from Pennsylvania landfills that accept such waste. Yet, this waste can be disposed of in municipal landfills like the one proposed near Grove City.

Location, Location, Location: community Impact

The Tri-County Landfill’s location amplifies these worries. Situated near a housing complex, an airport, and an outlet mall, it’s also a short drive from Grove City’s Main Street. “It’s in the middle of a population centre,”

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