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Council OKs Stipend, Anticipates Further Legal, Financial Fallout Over Contaminated Water

The Fairbanks City Council approved an ordinance Monday that’s intended to help provide drinking water for property owners in an area on the city’s south side who’ve lost the use of their wells due to groundwater contamination. Mayor Jim Matherly says it’s only the first step toward addressing the mounting costs of the contamination problem.

The council voted 5-to-1 to approve an amended ordinance that would provide a $2,500 stipend for two years to help pay water bills for property owners along 30th Avenue near the Regional Fire Training Center, who until recently had used their wells for drinking water.

Councilwoman Valerie Therrien said she voted no because she didn’t believe the ordinance would do enough to compensate those residents fairly for the loss of their drinking water supply.

“Twenty-five hundred dollars just isn’t enough to me,” she said.

Therrien proposed paying the water bills for property owners who were most affected by the contamination for five years. The other council members rejected that motion over a concern it would cost the city too much, but agreed to her amendment to set the stipend at $2,500 – not up to $2,500.

Credit Alaska Department of Environmental Conservation
Fairbanks City Engineer Jackson Fox says the city has tested more than 160 wells around the city-operated Regional Fire Training Center, and in areas downgradient from the RFTC, for the presence of perflourinated compounds. Many have shown levels of PFCs that exceed the federal Environmental Protection Agency's Lifetime Health Advisory level, which can harm human health.

Councilman Jerry Cleworth said the city had to draw a line somewhere.

“All I can say is it’s a compromise,” he said, “It probably won’t make very many people happy.”

The ordinance authorizes appropriating a hundred thousand dollars for the stipends. Councilman David Pruhs, who along with June Rogers cosponsored the ordinance, said the city in part modeled the stipend after the system North Pole set up earlier this year to help its residents deal with groundwater contamination caused by a chemical substance that leaked from an oil refinery in that city.

“Their stipend was $2,000 over a two-year period,” he said, “so we took their stipend and increased it.”

City Engineer Jackson Fox told Pruhs that since the Fairbanks officials learned about the contamination last year, the city has paid more than $3 million to survey the problem and clean up around the training facility. That amount also covered the cost of connecting 20 properties with the area water system operated by Golden Heart Utilities, and for providing drinking water to those and another 20 properties in the area that have yet to be hooked up.

Credit ADEC
Tests show most of the PFC contamination at the RFTC site stems from a burn pit, where fires were set using petroleum products such as gasoline as an accelerant. Fox said a liner at the base of the pit kept soil underneath relatively clean. But PFC-laden foam sprayed by firefighters to extinguish fires in the pit slopped onto soil around it and migrated into the groundwater.

“We could be looking at connecting another 25 or so homes next summer,” he said.

Fox told the council that each hookup will cost the city $35,000. Pruhs used that figure to estimate the total amount the city will have pay in the coming year to mitigate the problem.

“So we’re looking at basically 65 to 70 homes, not including a water stipend at $35,000, added on to the three million (dollars) that we’ve already spent,” Pruhs said. “So we’re looking at (a total of) five-and-a-half million dollars.”

Cleworth said that equates to about a mill-and-a-half increase in the city’s property tax. And he said that’s why the council must move quickly to limit payouts and other costs and to recover compensation from the manufacturer of the firefighting foam and other parties.

“We need to get something done by next May,” he said, “or else the residents are going to be hit with a mill-and-a-half of property tax increase.”

Credit City of Fairbanks
After tests conducted in 2015 showed contamination around the fire-training center, show in background, the city began providing drinking water to area residents and developed a plan to help them pay for water from an area utility. In August, the city pumped standing water in the 30-foot burn pit and excavated soil underneath in an attempt to remove most of the contaminants.

Therrien asked City Attorney Paul Ewers whether he’s been notified of any legal claims filed against the city over the contamination issue.

“We don’t have any lawsuits that were filed,” Ewers said. “We’ve had basically claims inquiries, and (we’re) just starting those discussions.”

Mayor Jim Matherly told council member the city must talk with officials from other agencies that have used the training center about their possible liability. He says he talked about that with Gov. Bill Walker last week while he was in town.

Tim has worked in the news business for over three decades, mainly as a newspaper reporter and editor in southern Arizona. Tim first came to Alaska with his family in 1967, and grew up in Delta Junction before emigrating to the Lower 48 in 1977 to get a college education and see the world.