JH Baxter is a 205 acre wood treatment site in West Eugene, Oregon that treated wood products like railroad ties, utility poles and crossarms for 79 years until 2022.
North of JH Baxter is the Bethel neighborhood where Eric was raised. The poverty rate is over 20% in Bethel and the median household income is $42,500, over $20,000 less than the median household income for Eugene city.
Within three miles of the facility is Kalapuya High School, a public and alternative high school for students not succeeding at traditional schools. Students at Kalapuya have come to classes with hives, rashes and asthma, said Kelly Ferguson, the high school biology teacher there.
Using student self-reported data and research from state nonprofit Beyond Toxics Waste, Ferguson teaches her students about the impact JH Baxter has on residents through a combination of biology and humanity subjects.
She also relied on the EPA's Environmental Justice Screening tool, which points out what areas in the nation are vulnerable to pollution, floods and other climate related issues. But with the Trump administration removing the tool, Ferguson said it has been difficult to show how JH Baxter impacts the surrounding area.
“We have a basic right to clean air, soil and water. That's our human right,” she said.
A 2023 report from the Oregon Department of Environmental Quality (DEQ) and the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) found that seven residential yards had soil “with dioxin concentrations over 40 parts per trillion (ppt).” This meant children under six years old in contact with bare soil for a year or longer were at high risk. DEQ found an additional four more yards with dangerous levels of dioxin concentration a year later.
“DEQ has completed residential yard cleanup at seven of the 11 yards identified,” said Dylan Darlings, a public affairs specialist at the DEQ.
The DEQ has spent about $2.6 million on cleaning up yards and all activities related to it. The agency relied on the Orphan Fund, which is used to cover the clean up costs. But JH Baxter is the responsible party for the cleanup and has been billed to pay, Darlings said. The site also owes over $350,000 in fines to the agency which increases with interest.
JH Baxter's recent case focused on none of this. The court found that JH Baxter transferred wastewater to a wood treatment retort to "boil it off” between January 2, 2019, to October 6, 2019 and would send the remaining waste to an offsite for disposal. The site did not have the permit to remove the waste which violated the Resource Conservation and Recovery Act.
Retorts are cylindrical vessels where chemicals are forced into the wood to preserve the material and make it resistant to insects.The wastewater would discharge into the air which meant the facility dismissed the Clean Air Act emissions standards for hazardous air pollutants, according to court records.
When the DEQ asked how many times JH Baxter used the retorts and requested for a documented record of the process, Baxter-Krause wrote back that "[J.H.] Baxter does not have specific dates when this practice occurred.”
The court found employees actually had "detailed daily production logs for each retort,” and the facility boiled off hazardous waste for 136 known days using multiple retorts. Baxter-Krause previously emailed only one retort was used.
After the sentencing, Baribeault walked up to Lisa and they both hugged.
"[She] cried & I cried with her," Lisa said. "Lots of anger for the weak sentence."
The EPA proposed JH Baxter to be on EPA's Superfund's National Priority List last September, a list of hazardous waste sites that are considered to be the nation's most serious uncontrolled or abandoned releases of contamination.
The agency can use federal funding called superfund for cleanup and enforcement on hazardous sites. The boundary of the superfund site can extend beyond JH Baxter but it is too early to say whether homes will be in the site boundary right now, said Alice Corcoran, a public affairs specialist with the EPA.