WEDNESDAY, APRIL 20, 2022 HERMISTONHERALD.COM • A9 EASTERN OREGON Lamb Weston Hermiston plant polluted groundwater BY ALEX BAUMHARDT Oregon Capital Chronicle Lamb Weston’s French fry pro- duction plant in Hermiston has been discharging too much nitrate- loaded water onto area farms, according to the Oregon Depart- ment of Environmental Quality. The wastewater fl owing from the plant has contaminated the groundwater, causing nitrate lev- els in some nearby wells to mea- sure four to seven times the safe limit set by the federal Environ- mental Protection Agency, accord- ing to DEQ. The state agency on March 31 warned the company that it faced enforcement action for contaminat- ing the groundwater. It was the second such notice issued to the company in recent months. In November, DEQ told the company it had been discharg- ing too much tainted water on area farmland and faced enforcement action for that as well. The agency doesn’t disclose such notices on its website or otherwise publicize the fi ndings until an enforcement has been made. The notices ask the company about what steps it intends to take to cure the violations. For the most recent notice, Lamb Weston has 45 DEQ seeks public comments on Port of Morrow water permit BY ALEX BAUMHARDT Oregon Capital Chronicle The Oregon Depart- ment of Environmental Quality is asking the pub- lic to weigh in on a revised water permit for the Port of Morrow after it violated its existing permit more than 1,100 times. From 2018 to 2021, the state’s second largest port dumped wastewater on farmland containing 165 tons more nitrate than the permit allowed. In January, the DEQ fi ned the port nearly $1.3 million for the violations. The port is appealing. Nitrate is a compound in fertilizer used in farm- ing. Many crops, includ- ing potatoes and wheat, are processed at the Port of Morrow before being shipped by river, rail and road. That processing puts remnants of fertilizer into the wastewater. The port’s water per- mit requires treatment of the wastewater before it is sold to nearby farms for irrigation. It is essen- tially a wastewater recy- cling program, but when that water is too high in nitrate from the fertilizer, the excess moves into the groundwater and can con- taminate aquifers that local well users and water util- ities depend on. The port produces about 3.6 bil- lion gallons of wastewater annually. Nitrate is diffi cult and expensive to remove from wells, requiring fi lters that cost thousands of dollars. If water with high levels of nitrate is consumed over long periods, it can lead to increased risk of colon and stomach cancer, accord- ing to the National Can- cer Institute. Such pollu- tion can also be harmful to babies and pregnant women, causing oxygen deprivation that can lead to miscarriages and met- hemoglobinemia or “blue baby syndrome,” accord- ing to the Oregon Health Authority. Comments regarding the revised water permit can be emailed to Patty Isaak, DEQ’s water qual- ity permit coordinator at patty.isaak@deq.oregon. gov. All comments are due by 5 p.m. Friday, May 20. After that round of com- ments, the agency will pro- pose an updated permit and possibly allow comment on that. The port’s discharge violations are the result of accumulating more water than it can store as it’s expanded over the years. The revised permit would allow the port to add about 1,600 acres to its dis- charge program. “The additional acreage spreads out the wastewater nutrients onto more crop fi elds, reducing likelihood of unused nitrate leaching to groundwater if properly managed,” the DEQ said in its permit summary. The revisions would require the port to conduct more soil and groundwater quality monitoring, reduce discharges in nongrowing seasons and devise a plan to clean existing ground- water contamination. The port is building the fi rst of three anaerobic digesters that will help treat some of the water-borne nitrate turning it to ammo- nia, which is easier for crops to take up and could lead to less nitrate leaching into the groundwater. Morrow County is the Lower Umatilla Basin, which the DEQ has deemed a Groundwater Manage- ment Area since the early 1990s due to high levels of nitrate in the water. RECYCLE! CARDBOARD • NEWSPAPER • GLASS • TIN • ALUMINUM EIGHT LOCATIONS TO SERVE YOU! 1. 2. 3. 4. Hermiston - 220 W. Harper Rd. Stanfield - W. Wood (by Grange Hall) Echo - 321 W. Main St. (next to Fire Hall) Umatilla - Hwy 730 (next to Columbia Harvest Foods) 5. Umatilla County - Hwy 395 N. (next to transfer station) 6. Umatilla County - 81144 N. Hwy 395 7. Irrigon - 198 W. Columbia Lane 8. Boardman - NW Columbia Ave INSTRUCTIONS FOR RECYCLING: Newspaper - loose or placed in grocery sacks. (no plastic sacks) Cardboard - flatten all boxes (sorry, no waxed cardboard) Bottles & Jars - Give ‘em a rinse (labels are OK to leave on). Separate them by color - clear, green or brown (sorry, no Pyrex, china or window glass) Aluminum - cans, TV trays, foil, etc. are acceptable. Please flatten cans to save space. Tin - Rinse cans. Remove both ends, flatten can. Lids also accepted. Sanitary Disposal, Inc. Hermiston/McNary Hwy • Hermiston 541-567-8842 days. The agency then will con- sider whether to require corrective action or fi ne the company, accord- ing to Laura Gleim, public aff airs specialist at DEQ. The Hermiston french fry plant is Lamb Weston’s second largest plant in the Columbia River Basin. As of 2019, the plant had more than 500 employees who made nearly 750 million pounds of frozen potato products annually, accord- ing to Lamb Weston’s website. Company offi cials could not be immediately reached Monday, April 18, for comment. The violations were discovered when the plant applied to renew its water discharge permit from DEQ. The permit allows the plant to recy- cle water used to wash and process potatoes, which come into the plant covered in soil and fertilizers. The facility distributes the wastewa- ter to nearby farms as a source of nutrient-rich water for irrigation. But Lamb Weston overap- plied the water on farms 75 times between 2016 and 2020, accord- ing to compliance reports that DEQ reviewed. During that time, 189 tons of nitrate in excess of per- mitted levels were applied in an area already deemed a vulnerable groundwater management area. Such areas receive extra resources and planning from DEQ and designated committees in the area to reduce groundwater contamination. DEQ said in its notices that wells down slope from where Lamb Weston’s nitrate-rich waste- water was applied had levels of nitrate between 36 and 79 parts per million. EPA limits for safe drink- ing water are no more than 10 parts per million. Nitrate is diffi cult and expen- sive to remove from water, and for those who rely on wells for their drinking water, getting rid of nitrate requires fi lters that cost thousands of dollars. Rodriguez selected as West Park principal Hermiston Herald West Park Elementary will have a new principal, according to the Hermiston School District. Eff ective July 1, Juan Rodriguez will step into the position. The Armand Lar- ive Middle School assistant principal, Rodriguez is the replacement for the depart- ing Kevin Headings. Hermiston school Headings is leav- system and gradu- ing West Park to take ated from Hermis- up a new job as the ton High School in superintendent of the 2005. He was hired Pendleton School in 2010 as an HHS District. teacher and moved Rodriguez According to the into administration HSD announcement, at ALMS in 2019. which was made on the dis- “Now two years through trict’s website, the incoming a global pandemic, HSD principal went through the continues to focus on the future, our students,” Tricia Mooney, Hermiston super- intendent, said. “Planning for next school year, it is critical that the building principals share the same values and passion for Hermiston students. Mr. Rodriguez is familiar with district systems and has established relationships throughout the community.” Hermiston hosts League of Cities conference Hermiston Herald For anyone wondering why Herm- iston is experiencing an infl ux of new guests, there is a reason. Offi cials from around Oregon are converging on Hermiston this week to see what they can learn from this community and from one another. Held Thursday and Friday, April 21 and 22, the LOC conference is at the Eastern Oregon Trade and Event Cen- ter in Hermiston. Registration is closed, but gov- ernment officials may still register at the event. In a video promoting the League of Oregon Cities’ Local Government Spring Conference, Hermiston Mayor David Drotzmann welcomes visiting government leaders. “I’ll see you there,” he said. Registered attendees include 153 city leaders representing 77 communi- ties from across the state, according to the press release. Participating city offi cials include mayors, city councilors, city manag- ers, city administrators, city recorders, police chiefs and fi nance directors. All of Hermiston’s city councilors said they would be among the city offi - cials who would attend the conference. Byron Smith, Hermiston city man- ager, and Mark Morgan, Hermiston assistant city manager, will be among the participants. Tours will give attendees a look at regional water projects and com- munity sites made possible through fundraising. During the two-day event, 15 training workshops will be off ered. Topics include infrastructure fund- ing, recruitment and retention, hous- ing and homelessness, cyber security; diversity, equity and inclusion; and property tax reform. HIV isn’t just a big city issue. More than half of Oregonians with HIV live outside of Portland, often in suburbs and small towns like this one. Good neighbors chip in to get the job done. And we’ve got work to do on HIV prevention. People in rural Oregon are more likely to get a late-stage diagnosis, and a lack of HIV treatment may harm your health, or your partner’s. Detected early, HIV is more easily managed and you can live a long, healthy life. Getting tested is a sign of strength, not weakness. Learn more and find free testing at endhivoregon.org