While the University waits for a chemical waste disposal facility to be built, conditions deteriorate at the present storage site_ __ A radioactive and chemical waste disposal facility will be a welcome addition to the Umversi ty s Office of Environmental Health — one of these days The facility can I be built a moment too soon according to chemist Craig Reece the man in charge of disposal of all chemical waste at the University In fact Reece plans to send let ters to the state Department of Environmental Quality and the En vironmental Protection Agency citing potentially hazardous condi tions of the University s current chemical waste disposal area Reece says he sent a memo nearly eight months ago descnb mg the conditions of the disposal area — a loading dock tacrng Franklin Boulevard behind Science II — to Public Safety Di rector Oakley Glenn He says he never received a response Nothing s ever been done and I don t think anything ever will be Reece says I m complaining to agencies because I don t have faith the University wtH correct the problem without pressure The loading dock where Reece prepares 55 to 70 gallons of chemical wastes a month for transfer to Arlington (Oregon s on ly chemical waste disposal sitei. is situated next to an intake vent that supplies air directly to the teaching labs and library in the basement of Science II Reece says he knows of at leas' two instances in which fumes from chemicals he was working with oh the dock drifted into the research labs causing people to evacuate the building if there were ever a fue smoke will go right into the building Reece says A storm sewer drain lying in front of a flimsy chemical storage cage on the loading dock would cause an immediate environmental problem in the case o1 an ac udentai fepiK. according to Reece The drams lead directly into me rmttrace he uryi According to state regulations Reece must allow empty bottles in which chemicals have been stored to ventilate tor tive to eight days before feeding them to a glass Crusher Due to the tack of a proper facility Reece must simply leave the bottles unattended on the loading dock Sometimes he says people who don t know better take the pottles A large black drum labeled sui tunc acid that is too large to tit in the existing storage r age also sits on the dock Reece ays he's never received the add non at cages he requested to cooer • the problem At best Reece says me area is an eyesore ft serves as a mato' thoroughfare tor delivery trucks and student1 who seek access to Scienc e II it smells bad and looks tern pie he says But Reece says he envisions ■.omethtng much more serious if mere were an accident out there it would be a disaster If some tanatic dec ided to put a bul'et hole through one of those drums It someone a anted to they touW cause a rest problem chemical Stores Manager David Senkovich agrees that the present situation ts 'potentially danger ous " The (new building doesn * seem to be getting built very tast Senkovich says There needs to be an adequate facility — and the sooner the better But Senkovich maintains that University personrte in charge ot wasle management face the most danger and Reece couldn t agree more He complains that he gets little or no response to requests for sup plies he considers vital to his safe fy For instance in working so s closely with notious and some I femes carcinogenic chemicals he | says he often experiences nausea | because of improper ventilating ! equipment Fven less expensive items \ such as gloves and spill control Cloths — never get ordered We don t have anything to clean up a spill says Reece I don t even have a water hose available It someone spills something it s tough As we can do is lei it evaporate But Safety Direr tor Glenn says money is the main problem T he waste disposal program s budqet comes under his department and Glenn says he has responded to '' supply requests to the largest e« tent possible The things we haven t had money to buy are relatively minor he says Naturally those things you re going to have to get along without if you re going to take care j ot the larger more important things Besides Glenn contends the supplies Reece orders have never been there before and no one s ever come down with anything I Glenn isn t willing to say the * foadmg dock poses a potential hazard It s been there in the same way i Since 1950 he says arid I don t i remember incidents where any thing occurred I think the way (the waste dis posai site) it set up now is the best we can do at the present time arid until the buildings are completed l don t think it will be changed As for Reece s claim that exist •ng disposal conditions are dan gerous Glenrt counters that ♦here s simply no way around the tact that waste disposal is a hazar dous business Reece doesn t argue No mat ter how you IOOt< at it it s risky stuff that s why I don t like doing it on the loading dock he says I knew I was taking risks by getting into waste disposal Reece continues but I didn t know it would be like this According to University Planner David Rowe the new radiation and c hemical disposal facility has been plagued with several delays over the last five years Although ii was supposed to be built by November 1981 design plans haven t even been approved yet Construction won t begin until tall at the earliest and the job probably won t be finished until late winter or early spring With a budget of only $200,000 it s going to be tight Rowe says But according to him The ex tent of danger is not of scandalous proportions It s present and it needs to be dealt with but it will be with this building The proposed building is ex cellent Reece says It will be one of the best in the nation He says he |ust wants it built Story by Heidi Swllllnger Photos by Bill Wack 1111 I I I 1 PHOTO SPECIAL! 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