HURRICANE UNIFIED COMMAND Lafourche Parish August 2006 Completion Report ACCOMPLISHMENTS ATAGUNCE 3 Drinking Water Plant Assessments 99 Wastewater Facility Assessments 32 Industiy Damage Assessments 34.496 Hazardous Materials Containers Collected 179 Electronic Items Collected 4,041 White Goods Collected 603 # of Appliances from which Freon was Extracted 160.665 Pounds of Cumulative Waste Disposed 34 School Lab Assessments LaFourche Parish were addressed established that employees could ing in accordance with federal and Since September 2005, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) and the Louisi- ana Department of Environ- mental Quality (LDEQ) have worked together to address environmental hazards from Hurricanes Katrina and Rita to help LaFourche Parish recover. One of EPA and LDEQ's first priorities was to ensure residents returning to all the cities affected by the hurri- canes had safe drinking water. Throughout Lafourche Parish 3 assessments were con- ducted at drinking water Facilities. Similarly, 99 wastewater treatment plants were assessed for damage. Next, EPA and LDEQ turned to federally permitted facilities. The agencies conducted interviews and site visits at hazardous waste storage, transfer or disposal facilities through March 2006. During this time 32 facilities in . The site visits and interviews return to work at facilities operat- state regulations. St. Tammany Parish St. Bernard Plaquemines going to Louisiana's municipal landfills, EPA and LDEQ collected 38,716 units consisting of appliances, hazardous waste containers, and home electronics. The hazardous materials were recycled or disposed in landfills designed to handle them safely. In LaFourche Parish, EPA and LDEQ have disposed of 160,665 pounds of waste. Because of concerns that damaged chemicals in school biology and chemistry laboratories could cause a health hazard, EPA and LDEQ conducted assessments at schools in southern Louisiana. Some chemical containers were found to be damaged by the hurricanes, by flood waters and/or from heat exposure. EPA and LDEQ, in coordi- nation with the Louisiana State Police and local fire departments, removed dangerous chemicals from schools in southern Louisiana. Thirty-four schools in LaFourche Parish were assessed; chemicals were removed from six of them. Paint, computers, washing machines, and refrigerators in homes under normal circumstances are not usually considered hazardous. However, when hundreds of thousands of these items become waste products at the same time, the hazardous components in them could create problems. To help remove these materials from the waste Above; EPA prepares a collection site for further packing of hazardous materials for disposal. ------- |