By Logan Bagett on Monday, September 30th, 2024 in Eastern/Southeast Oregon News More Top Stories
DAYVILLE – The City of Dayville is being fined thousands of dollars for wastewater violations, according to the latest release from the Oregon Department of Environmental Quality.
DEQ reports that the city has exceeded the permitted effluent limits, as well as submitted incomplete and inaccurate monitoring reports, and failed to conduct required monitoring. The city is being fined $12,600, in which it must pay or file an appeal within 20 days of receiving the notice.
The DEQ reports that the environmental impacts of the violation include fish and aquatic life, human health, transparency, and accountability, as well as wildlife. Find the full DEQ press release below:
(Press Release from the Oregon Department of Environmental Quality)
The Oregon Department of Environmental Quality issued 16 penalties totaling $445,620 in August for various environmental violations. A detailed list of violations and resulting penalties is at https://ordeq.org/enforcement.
Fines ranged from $1,100 to $138,458. Alleged violations included a brewery failing to contain and cleanup building materials and cans from the Columbia River, a general contractor and disaster restoration business performing unlicensed asbestos abatement and a solid waste landfill that failed to manage leachate.
DEQ issued civil penalties to the following organizations:
Recipients of DEQ civil penalties must either pay the fines to the state treasury or file an appeal within 20 days of receiving notice of the penalty. They may be able to offset a portion of a penalty by funding a supplemental environmental project that improves Oregon’s environment. Learn more about these projects at https://ordeq.org/sep.
Penalties may also include orders requiring specific tasks to prevent ongoing violations or additional environmental harm.
DEQ works with thousands of organizations and individuals to help them comply with laws that protect Oregon’s air, land and water. DEQ uses education, technical assistance, warnings and penalties to change behavior and deter future violations.