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Susquehanna River group sues Hanover Foods Corporation over alleged waterway pollution

PENNSYLVANIA RECORD

Thursday, November 21, 2024

Susquehanna River group sues Hanover Foods Corporation over alleged waterway pollution

Federal Court
Lisawhallowell

Hallowell | Environmental Integrity Project

HARRISBURG – A Pennsylvania waterway environmental group has launched litigation against a food processing company, charging it with having polluted Oil Creek and the Susquehanna River and violating the state Clean Streams Law and the federal Clean Water Act in the process.

Lower Susquehanna Riverkeeper Association of Wrightsville filed suit in the U.S. District Court for the Middle District of Pennsylvania on Sept. 24 versus Hanover Foods Corporation, of Hanover.

“Defendant has discharged, and continues to discharge, through Outfall 001, industrial wastewater containing pollutants at levels that exceed effluent limitations into Oil Creek, a tributary to Codorus Creek, which flows into the Susquehanna River. Defendant has discharged and, upon information and belief, continues to discharge, substances that result in observed deposits in Oil Creek and substances that produce an observed change in the color and turbidity of Oil Creek,” the suit says.

“Defendant’s discharges of pollutants through Outfall 001 to Oil Creek in excess of the 2015 National Pollutant Discharge Elimination System Permit effluent limits and failures to comply with other permit limits and conditions violate the 2015 NPDES Permit and also constitute violations of the CWA and the CSL.”

The suit says the defendant has discharged and continues to discharge pollutants in violation of the numeric limitations contained in the 2015 NPDES Permit and is failing to adhere to other permit conditions and limitations, in violation of the CWA and the CSL.

The plaintiff said in July that Hanover Foods had violated state Department of Environmental Protection rules in the past.

Hanover Foods was subject to a 2013 consent order agreement with a civil penalty of $20,000, per filings from the state DEP. The company also paid $1,600 to fully resolve fecal coliform effluent violations from May 1, 2016, through Sept. 30, 2016.

In 2017, Hanover Foods entered into a consent order agreement with the state DEP after an inspection determined that the company started construction of a new wastewater facility without permit authorization and fined the company $6,200.

Before facing suit from the plaintiff, Hanover Foods was served with a letter of intent to sue and was given 60 days to respond, beginning in July.

For violations of effluent concentration limitations, effluent load limitations, temperature effluent limitations and failure to properly operate and maintain facilities of the 2015 NPDES permit, unauthorized discharge of substances, violations of effluent load limitations and flow limitations of the 2016 pre-treatment permit and flow limitations of the 2021 pre-treatment permit, the plaintiff is seeking the following reliefs:

• A declaration that the defendant is in violation of its permits, the CWA, and the CSL;

• Enjoining the defendant from further violating its permits, the CWA, and the CSL;

• Ordering the defendant to assess and remediate the harm caused by its violations;

• Assessing civil penalties against the defendant;

• Awarding the plaintiff the cost of litigation, including reasonable attorney’s fees, costs, and expert fees and expenses, including future oversight costs;

• Retaining jurisdiction to ensure compliance with the Court’s decree; and

• Granting such other relief as the Court deems just and proper.

The plaintiff is represented by Lisa Widawsky Hallowell and Natalia Cabrera of the Environmental Integrity Project, in Washington, D.C.

The defendant has not yet obtained legal counsel.

U.S. District Court for the Middle District of Pennsylvania case 1:21-cv-01600

From the Pennsylvania Record: Reach Courts Reporter Nicholas Malfitano at nick.malfitano@therecordinc.com

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