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Sun Pacific Holding Corp. SNPW
(Total Views: 119)
Posted On: 04/25/2022 7:34:48 PM
Post# of 13818
Posted By: Wallstreet1234
Re: drugmanrx #1213
Inaccurate with regard to your comment “ RI-DEM found no objection to the science of the project but based their denial on a brand new illegal targeting law put in place ONE month prior to RI-DEM ruling”

Comments such as “ Uncertainty over the impacts of the proposed facility's innovative technology. This proposed system has not previously been used on medical waste.” Sure sounds to me like they had concerns.
The press release is outlined below. Again, suggesting the narrative for the denial is due exclusively to the new law and the there was no science concern is inaccurate.

Press Releases

DEM Denies Permit Application of Proposed Medical Waste Treatment Facility
PROVIDENCE – The Rhode Island Department of Environmental Management (DEM) announced today that it has denied the permit application of Medrecycler-RI Inc. to build a medical waste-to-energy plant at 1600 Division Road in West Warwick. DEM cited the following factors in denying the application:

o The proposal did not include adequate details about testing protocols, necessary for public review, as part of the permit review process for a medical waste treatment plant. o The proposal's contingency and response plans – what happens in the event of an emergency? – are incomplete. Many of the 400+ members of the public who commented during the application's comment period cited concerns about the proposal's lack of strong environmental monitoring and safety plans. DEM shares these concerns. o Related, DEM found the proposal's lack of clarity about how much and where medical waste would be safely stored to be a critical deficiency in the application. This impacts the proposed operation, monitoring requirements, contingency planning, and closure assurances. o The facility is proposed in a densely populated area close to residential neighborhoods, making the public review of the contingency plans and testing protocols even more relevant. There is no buffer between the proposed facility and other tenants located at that address and little buffer between the facility and surrounding community. o Uncertainty over the impacts of the proposed facility's innovative technology. This proposed system has not previously been used on medical waste.

Also influential in DEM's decision was the enactment of a law prohibiting new high-heat medical waste processing facilities from being sited in Rhode Island. Governor Dan McKee signed the bill into law July 9. "The Department believes that regardless of the deficiencies in the application outlined above, this law would prohibit the Department from issuing or granting a permit or license for this proposed facility," DEM wrote in its denial.

For information about DEM programs and services, visit www.dem.ri.gov. Follow us on Facebook at www.facebook.com/RhodeIslandDEM or on Twitter (@RhodeIslandDEM) for timely updates.

https://www.ri.gov/press/view/41604














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