Date: Fri 23-Feb-1996
Date: Fri 23-Feb-1996
Publication: Bee
Author: ANDYG
Quick Words:
Trudeau-oil-spill-environment
Full Text:
with cut: Brakeless Oil Tank Truck Creates Environmental Emergency
B Y A NDREW G OROSKO
Work crews cleaned up an oily mess this week on the grounds of Fairfield Hills
Hospital where a driverless, brakeless oil tanker truck last Saturday spilled
hundreds of gallons of home heating fuel onto the ground after an accident.
American Environmental Technologies, a Bethel hazardous waste cleanup firm,
supervised workmen who lifted soil contaminated with heating fuel into large
dump trucks for eventual disposal. Clean soil will be brought to the spill
site to replace the soil which has been removed.
The comtaminated soil will be purged of its petroleum comtamination in special
incinerators that sterilize it.
Besides the soil contamination problems caused by the accident, the mishap
resulted in seven motor vehicle violations being lodged by police against its
driver and the firm he works for.
Police said Ronald Cisero, 38, of Hitfield Road was driving the tanker truck,
which is owned by Trudeau Oil Company of 49 South Main Street, when the
accident occurred.
Cisero was driving the tanker northbound on Nunnawauk Road, where the road
sharply downward near its easterly intersection with Mile Hill Road, when the
truck's brakes failed. The steep slope is approximately 1,000 feet long.
After the brakes failed, Cisero jumped out of the tanker truck, receiving
abrasions and contusions when he landed on the ground, police said.
The truck then rolled into the intersection and went across it, striking an
embankment, police said. The impact caused heavy damage to the truck's front
end and damaged an oil valve on the vehicle, causing several hundred gallons
of home heating fuel to leak out onto the ground, onto snow, and into the
roadway, police said.
When the oil first leaked out of the tanker, snow in the area acted as a
sponge, absorbing the dark red No. 2 home heating fuel, according to Police
Sgt Henry Stormer, a deputy fire marshal.
The oil truck came to rest in front of an old red barn on the property of
Fairfield Hills, the site of a former state psychiatric institution.
The spill came in the vicinity of the Pootatuck Aquifer, the major underground
water source which serves the Fairfield Hills property, Garner Correctional
Institution, Nunnawauk Meadows, and the 1,000 customers of United Water, the
privately-owned public utility which serves Newtown.
Rapid action to contain and clean up the spill prevented any apparent
pollution damage to the aquifer.
The Fairfield Hills Hospital Volunteer Fire Company, the Sandy Hook Volunteer
Fire and Rescue Company, and the United Fire Company of Botsford went to the
scene of the crash to start cleanup operations. The Hazardous Materials Spill
Unit of the state Department of Environmental Protection (DEP) went to the
accident to assess the problem.
American Environmental Technologies of Bethel, a company that specializes in
cleaning up oil spills and chemical spills, came to the site to clean up the
oily, stinking mess. AET was at the scene at least four days cleaning up the
spill.
Police closed down sections of Mile Hill Road and Nunnawauk Road for more than
eight hours Sunday to facilitate cleanup work, Sgt Stormer said.
Sgt Stormer and Fire Marshal George Lockwood agreed that had there been
traffic on Mile Hill Road when the runaway oil tanker came barreling through
the intersection, there could have been a real tragedy.
Police charged Cisero with three motor vehicle violations: operating an
unregistered motor vehicle; misuse of marker plates; and operating a
commercial vehicle without a commercial driver's license.
Police charged Trudeau Oil Company with four violations: allowing the
operation of a motor vehicle without a tax identification number; allowing the
operation of an oil tanker without an inspection by the fire marshal; failure
to post the oil company's name and place of business on the sides of the
tanker truck; and operating a vehicle with defective brakes.
Cisero and the oil company are scheduled to appear in Danbury Superior Court
on March 4 to face the charges.
Sgt Stormer estimated the cleanup work to cost at least $25,000.