http://www.baaqmd.gov/The-Air-District/Board-of-Directors/Agendas-and-Minutes.aspx
All posts by Milpitas
Weds, March 18th@7pm, Milpitas Stop Odor Weekly Meeting
Milpitas Stop Odor Weekly Meeting. Everyone is welcomed!
Time: Mar 18th, Weds, 7:00 PM – 8:30 PM
Meeting Location: (not finalize) Barbara Lee Senior Center (room TBD). Next to Milpitas City Hall.
Address: 40 North Milpitas Boulevard, Milpitas
Agenda:
I. Report from the BAAQMD Meeting on 3/11
a. What happened
b. What we learned
II. Preparation for the Community BAAQMD Meeting
a. What is our goal
b. How do we accomplish our goal
III. What happens after the May 6th San Jose City Council Hearing.
a. Win or Lose: How do we deal with the odor issue for the next 5 – 7 years (minimum).
i. Sensors placed in the community
ii. Odor study
April 23rd, Thurs 6pm BAAQMD public Meeting at Milpitas City Hall
Bay Area Air Quality Management District (BAAQMD) is Hosting a Public Meeting
March 16th, BAAQMD Committee Meeting in SF
Address: 939 Ellis St, San Francisco, California 94109
Time: 10:30am – NOON
Bay Area Air Quality Management District, Stationary Source Committee Meeting.
Agenda Item 4: Odor Issues and Subsequent District Actions in the Milpitas Area.
The Committee will receive an update on odor issues, and Subsequent District actions in the Milpitas area.
http://www.baaqmd.gov/~/
Please submit written comments to mmartinez@baaqmd.gov at least 24 hours in advance of the meeting. All correspondence must be addressed to the “Members of the Stationary Source Committee”
The Landfill Gas Energy Recovery Hoax (2006)
ABSTRACT FOR 2006 LANDFILL METHANE OUTREACH CONFERENCE
The Landfill Gas Energy Recovery Hoax
by Peter Anderson, Executive Director
CENTER FOR A COMPETITIVE WASTE INDUSTRY
硅谷紐比垃圾場漏氣是臭味主因之一 | 硅谷垃圾場 | 垃圾場擴容 | 大紀元
What’s that Stink in the Air?
http://lomaprieta.sierraclub.org/loma-prietan/story/whats-stink-air/3917
Report the smell to BAAQMD 1-800-334-ODOR (6367) Photo: Gavin Munro
Have you driven along the South Bay highways between 880 & Dixon Landing Rd and 237 & N. First Street and smelled a foul odor? Depending on the day and time, it can range from nothing to a powerful olfactory onslaught. What a relief it is to have the bad smell dissipate as you continue driving towards downtown San Jose, Sunnyvale, Mountain View or Fremont.
Years ago, the offensive odor used to happen infrequently, maybe a day or two after a particularly hot spell in summer. But more recently, it’s been frequent, almost every day in some areas. Think of the people who live and/or work in those neighborhoods — they can’t escape the offensive odor like a passerby can.
What could be causing the stink? The most often-mentioned “culprit” is the Newby Island Landfill. Within a 2-mile radius of Newby Island more than 10,000 children attend schools and preschools. The area has a daytime population of over 100,000 residents and workers and the heavily traveled highways see over 120,000 daily commuters. There are several possible contributors to the malodorous situation. The northernmost section of San Jose is home to not only the Newby Island Landfill and Resource Recovery Park, but also:
– Zanker Facilities (multiple operations including a landfill and anaerobic digester)
– San José-Santa Clara Regional Wastewater Facility (including open air sewage sludge drying beds)
– Salt ponds and wetlands (in various stages of restoration)
There is a grassroots movement to solve the prevalent odor problem. Hundreds of residents protested at San Jose City Hall on January 14th and February 11th to highlight the issue. Scores of people testified at both the 1/27/2015 CalRecycle meeting in Sacramento and the 2/11/2015 San Jose Planning Commission meeting. Residents from southern Fremont, Milpitas and northern San Jose described how the lack of clean air is affecting their children both at home and at school, and the families’ quality of life, working conditions for local companies, and called it a public nuisance that must be removed. Some residents said they live several miles from Newby Island and never had an odor problem until recently.
Republic Services is the operator of Newby Island and currently has a permit application in process to expand the height of the landfill from the current maximum of 150 feet by over 60% to 245 feet. The new height would be equivalent to a 20-story building tower. The grassroots movement is questioning the prudence of allowing the landfill to grow when there’s no determination as to how much it’s contributing to the current odor problem, and established a petition to stop the landfill expansion which thus far has gathered over 20,000 signatures.
Several odor studies have been hotly debated as to the size and location of the areas studied, the methodologies used, the validity of the data and the conflicting conclusions. Many voices, including State Assemblymember Kansen Chu, have called for a comprehensive regional odor study to cover all possible sources of odor. On February 11th, Republic Services announced it has taken the lead in forming a coalition with other emission sources in the area. The South Bay Odor Coalition will be a collaboration of Republic Services, U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, Cargill, Zanker facilities in North San Jose and other partners to mitigate their odor impacts to surrounding cities. Plans include community participants from Fremont, Milpitas and San Jose.
Republic Services states they have been implementing odor mitigation measures. However, odor complaints to BAAQMD (Bay Area Air Quality Management District) resulted in the issuance of five Notices of Violations in January, 2015 (3 to the landfill, 2 to the resource recovery operation). During the first six weeks of 2015, BAAQMD was able to confirm 48 more complaints — 15 confirmed complaints were traced to the Newby Island landfill as the odor source and 33 confirmed complaints were traced to other operations at Newby Island. Residents in the affected areas continue to file odor complaints as the condition persists.
The issue is an on-going concern and will continue to develop over the next few months. The San Jose Planning Commission is expected to discuss Republic’s permit application again at their 5/6/2015 meeting and could vote on the application at that time.
The Sierra Club, Loma Prieta Chapter, is reviewing the available information and does not yet have a position on the landfill operation or expansion permit application.
How to Report an Odor Complaint
BAAQMD (Bay Area Air Quality Management District) has a 24-hour, toll-free complaint hotline: 1-800-334-ODOR (6367)
Sometimes, a BAAQMD inspector can be at your location quickly (within 10 minutes) to confirm your report, sometimes it takes up to 1.5 hours or 2 hours, depending on the staffing available at the moment, their current location and how many complaints are being logged.
Each and every complaint report is important! BAAQMD inspectors utilize the information to investigate and track the odor to the source.
Tips from BAAQMD on Making a Complaint:
“Air pollution complaints should be made as soon as possible after detecting an odor or observing smoke or fallout. The sooner we receive a complaint, the sooner we can begin an investigation. Be prepared to describe the odor in as much detail as possible. Does it remind you of a familiar smell such as rotten eggs, rotten cabbage, sweet or sour chemicals, burning plastic, garlic, chlorine or asphalt? Is it oily, musty, metallic, pungent, light or heavy?
Let us know whether the odor is intermittent, recurring, or constant over longer periods of time. How long have you been experiencing the problem? What impact have the emissions had on you? Please phone in complaints each day that you observe the pollution, not just the first time you notice it. This helps us track the extent of the problem.”
Author bio: Patti Sexton is a community advocate, residential energy efficiency advisor, building analyst, and master composter.
Weds, March 11th@7pm, Milpitas Stop Odor Meeting
Milpitas Stop Odor Weekly Meeting. Everyone is welcomed!
Time: Mar 11th, Weds, 7:00 PM – 8:30 PM
Meeting Location: Barbara Lee Senior Center (Denny Weisgerber Room). Next to Milpitas City Hall.
Address: 40 North Milpitas Boulevard, Milpitas
Agenda:
1. BAAQMD Meeting Summary
2. Update on upcoming BAAQMD community meeting
3. Updates on the two lawsuits
4. Update on Online Presence
5. Fundraising Campaign
6. Recent & Upcoming Outreach
7. Ideas for Additional Outreach Activities
8. Accomplishments & Progress
9. Question & Answer Session
Before the meeting (6PM – 7PM) Heidi Cuda, a television reporter will be interviewing people in regards to the odor issue. All those who want to be interviewed, contact Heidi directly (Heidi.Cuda@aljazeera.net), and she can decide whom to interview. Raymond and Patti are facilitating the 3/11 meeting and will be there at 6PM to introduce Heidi to the residents.
Republic’s Newby presentation in Milpitas 03/04/2015
Republic’s Newby presentation in Milpitas 03/04/2015. If you follow the link to playlist, you should be able to find specific sections including the Q&A. Follow this link to YouTube.
https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PL7BfkWZkTKoZqzpZ3j3-OSSLbr07rgnMU
Cleaner air linked to bigger, stronger lungs in Southern California children – LA Times
Cleaner air has for the first time been linked to bigger and stronger lungs among school-age children, according to findings released Wednesday from a two-decade study in Southern California.
http://www.latimes.com/local/lanow/la-me-clean-air-lungs-children-20150304-story.html#page=1