DUARTE, Calif. (KABC) -- The cities of Duarte, Azusa, Irwindale and Baldwin Park have opposed federal plans to use Lario Park as a site for processing hazardous household debris from the Eaton Fire.
Walk into Lario Park in Irwindale and you’ll see shipping containers, heavy machinery and barrels meant to store dangerous materials all framed within fences. It’s the place where crews will ...
The cities of Duarte, Azusa, Irwindale and Baldwin Park have opposed federal plans to use Lario Park to process hazardous debris from the Eaton Fire, officials said Monday. The U.S. Environmental ...
Air quality monitoring equipment is seen at Lario Park, used temporarily by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) to process hazardous materials from the Eaton Fire, in Irwindale ...
Paint, bleach, asbestos, lithium-ion batteries and other potentially hazardous waste are being trucked 15 miles from the Altadena burn zone to Lario Park in Irwindale for sorting and storage.
The plan to open a site to process Eaton fire debris near foothill communities has prompted swift backlash from San Gabriel Valley residents and leaders.
The cities of Azusa, Baldwin Park, Duarte, and Irwindale released a joint statement on the AccessDuarte.com website which urges residents in their communities to mobilize efforts to oppose Lario ...
We are doing everything we can to stop it,” said Duarte City Councilmember Margaret Finlay about the site at Lario Park, where Eaton fire waste will go. “It seems like the wrong ...
City officials from Azusa, Duarte, Irwindale and Baldwin Park all oppose the location. Despite efforts by cities to move the site, the Lario Park collection site began taking hazardous waste from ...
The joint warning from the cities of Azusa, Irwindale, Baldwin Park, and Duarte comes as the site in Lario Park reportedly began accepting debris on Monday. It’s expected to receive lithium electric ...