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Navy dumps equivalent of 50 truckloads of hazardous material into Puget Sound, Washington state AG says

The Nimitz-class aircraft carrier USS Nimitz (CVN 68) arrives pierside at Naval Base Kitsap Bremerton on Jan. 13, 2015. Nimitz was undergoing a planned incremental availability at Puget Sound Naval Shipyard and Intermediate Maintenance Facility. (U.S. Navy photo by Mass Communication Specialist 2nd Class Ryan J. Mayes)

The U.S. Navy dumped the equivalent of 50 truckloads of highly toxic hazardous waste into Puget Sound and must be stopped before it does so again, according to Washington state Attorney General Bob Ferguson.

The Navy provides dock space at Naval Base Kitsap for decommissioned, nonoperational vessels to be dismantled, recycled and disposed of. While cleaning the ship Independence at the yard in January 2017 before shipment to Texas for disposal, the Navy dumped the scraped-off paint into Sinclair Inlet, in violation of state and federal laws, according to a news release issued by Ferguson.

“You would think we would be at the stage where everybody, but especially the federal government, understands you can’t just scrape a vessel into Puget Sound. It is the equivalent of dumping 50 dump trucks of hazardous material into the inlet. It’s insane,” Ferguson said in an interview Thursday.

Ferguson’s office notified the Navy on Thursday of the state’s intent to join a suit in federal court to ask the Navy to clean up the mess and to require the Navy to stop scraping ships at Navy Base Kitsap and dumping the material in Sinclair Inlet.

“People have this idea that we are past the days that there isn’t just open dumping into our waters, but this demonstrates all too clearly that is not true,” Ferguson said. Marine life, including salmon, is at risk because of the Navy’s illegal practice of releasing highly toxic pollutants including copper and zinc, Ferguson said.

The Navy was scraping antifouling paint to remove possible invasive species before moving the ship. The Navy still has not contained the paint chips, which continue to leach pollutants into Puget Sound, according to Ferguson’s office.

“What we are doing is making sure the Navy follows environmental laws,” Ferguson said. “What they have done has resulted in significant damage to Puget Sound and we need to solve that problem and keep them from doing it again.”

No one at the naval base returned a call and email for comment Thursday.

The problem first came to light in a suit filed in June 2017 in federal court by Puget Soundkeeper, the Washington Environmental Council and the Suquamish Tribe.

In their suit the tribe and nonprofits allege multiple violations of the state Clean Water Act by the Navy by releasing toxic substances into the inlet without a permit while cleaning a decommissioned aircraft carrier, the Independence.

Ferguson said his office decided to advise the Navy the state intends to join the suit after the Navy produced a report last October about what was in the materials scraped off the ship into the Sound. Another ship is also due for similar treatment, Ferguson said.

“There’s more trouble ahead,” Ferguson said.

The Navy has several months to reply to his letter.

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© 2019 The Seattle Times

Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.