
Hundreds rallied in Werribee,聽Victoria, against a proposal to dump toxic soil nearby on March 4. This is not the first time Werribee has been threatened with a toxic dump.
In 1996, building products company CSR intended to dump toxic chemicals there until residents began a campaign, leading聽to a 15,000-strong public rally聽at聽Werribee Racecourse.
Two years later, CSR withdrew its proposal and sold the site.
The proposed site is close to houses and Werribee River. Down聽the river, 85% of the state鈥檚 cauliflower and聽55% of its broccoli, as well as 70% of the country鈥檚 lettuce.
Environmental engineer Morley Muse pointed out at the rally that聽toxic perfluoralkyl (PFA) chemicals, a that have been linked to cancers in firefighters, take about聽80 years to break down.
Wyndham Council opposes the toxic dump. Speaking at the rally, mayor Josh Gilligan said the council was 鈥8000 tonnes a day of the soil鈥. Some will come from the West Gate Tunnel鈥檚 most-polluted site.
on March 6 that this soil 鈥渋s hundreds of times worse than a threshold set by Victoria鈥檚 environmental watchdog鈥.聽
Tests reveal that聽PFA聽soil contamination near Coode Island is severe, with contamination levels at between 112 and 2000 times higher than is acceptable. There are fears that contamination could leach into the water table.
Rail Tram and Bus Union representative told the rally the community will not tolerate being used as a 鈥渢oxic waste dump鈥. She said the Wyndham railyard, a future workplace, is right next door to the proposed dump.
鈥淚t is every worker鈥檚 right to a safe workplace鈥, Sharma said.
Meanwhile, on March 10, about 1500 people rallied in Bacchus Marsh against toxic soil from Transurban鈥檚 West Gate Road Tunnel being dumped in the area.聽
Bacchus Marsh is another big producer of broccoli.
According to the , Maddingley Brown Coal (MBC) wants to 鈥渕anage鈥 soil from its West Gate Tunnel Project there.
The site is less than 2 kilometres from town and 500 metres from Bacchus Marsh Grammar School.
Parwan Creek flows through the site and onto the Werribee River.聽Any contamination of these waterways would pose a significant risk to Victoria鈥檚 food bowl.
MBC states only low levels of PFAs are expected to be found in the soil earmarked to be dumped. However, The Age exposed that showed PFA levels at one point in the tunnel to be between 112 and 2000 times the acceptable amount in drinking water.
Campaigner Colleen Hartland told the Bacchus Marsh rally that Transurban cannot claim it did not know about the West Gate contamination because 鈥渢he site has been an industrial site for 100 years鈥.
Kate Barlow from the Bacchus Marsh Community Coalition told the Star Weekly: 鈥淚f the soil is contaminated enough to stop them digging and they have everyone in Hazmat suits, it can鈥檛 possibly be the low levels they are describing.
鈥淸Victorian Labor Premier] Dan Andrews鈥 silence means he is complicit in the destruction of an entire community. We don鈥檛 want [the toxic site] to go to Wyndham either; we are working together to ensure the soil doesn鈥檛 destroy a community.鈥
The (CFMEU) has also warned about the danger of asbestos for workers on the West Gate Tunnel. But, every time workers dig up asbestos, the joint venture operator John Holland-CPB describes the incident as an 鈥渦nexpected find鈥.
In project documents obtained by the CFMEU, these 鈥渦nexpected finds鈥 keep happening time and again.
[Another protest against the toxic soil dump in Wyndham will take place on March 15 at 2pm, Stabling Yard, Hobbs Road, Wyndham Vale.]