ROANOKE TIMES

                         Roanoke Times
                 Copyright (c) 1995, Landmark Communications, Inc.

DATE: SATURDAY, May 19, 1990                   TAG: 9005190335
SECTION: VIRGINIA                    PAGE: A-5   EDITION: METRO 
SOURCE: DAVID M. POOLE STAFF WRITER
DATELINE: ROCKY MOUNT                                LENGTH: Medium


BOAT COMPANY FINED $5,000 FOR SOLVENT LEAK

Authorities investigating complaints about a Martinsville boat manufacturer in February found three dozen 55-gallon drums scattered across land the company owns in Franklin County.

David Laurrell, Franklin emergency services coordinator, testified Thursday that some of the drums were lying on their sides with cleaning solvent leaking into the soil.

An aerial photograph of the site was enough to persuade Franklin Circuit Judge B.A. Davis III to find Raven Boatworks Inc. guilty of illegally transporting and storing hazardous materials.

"Nothing on God's green Earth gives . . . anybody the right to desecrate the Earth like this," Davis said, holding the photo in his hand. "They make a mess in Henry County and bring it into Franklin County and dump it."

Davis fined the company $5,000.

Raven Boatworks, a maker of fiberglass pleasure boats, still faces possible civil sanctions by the state Department of Waste Management.

John Ely, the department's director of enforcement, said the company has been under scrutiny by waste management officials since June 1989.

Ely, who attended Thursday's trial, said the state had begun enforcement action in December to force Raven Boatworks to dispose of toxic materials generated by the company's central manufacturing plant in Martinsville.

Ely said the company's solution involved trucking solvents and other materials classified as hazardous waste to its Snow Creek facility in eastern Franklin County.

"We were sitting on them and they committed a crime" by not hiring a licensed disposal company, Ely said outside the courtroom.

Eric Ferguson, a Rocky Mount lawyer representing Raven Boatworks, asked Davis to not fine the company because the chemicals never posed a health hazard.

"This is not something on the scale of Kim-Stan," said Ferguson, referring to the Alleghany County landfill closed by the state for numerous environmental violations.

Ferguson also noted that Raven Boatworks had spent nearly $40,000 to clean up the Snow Creek site.

But Franklin Commonwealth's Attorney Cliff Hapgood argued that the company waited several weeks to take corrective action after being notified of the problem. Hapgood said making an example of Raven Boatworks might deter others who may try to skirt hazardous-waste laws.

Ferguson said Raven Boatworks does not plan to appeal.



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