Former Milton School
Fact Sheet #1 January 2007
Milton, Illinois
Introduction
Based on the human health threat from exposure posed by the dilapidated, asbestos-containing school located on South Mill Street in Milton, the Illinois Environmental Protection Agency (Illinois EPA) will abate the asbestos where safe to do so and remove the building using State funds. Due to the condition of this former school, it is highly likely that asbestos fibers are being released to the environment and coming in contact with trespassers. Health concerns for human exposure warrants corrective action at this location.
Site History and Background
This once functional and prospering school has become not only an eyesore, but
also a threat to the community it once served. The school served as East Pike High
School and then Milton Elementary School before closing in the mid 1980s due to
consolidations in the County. Since closing, private owners have further neglected
to perform any repairs or secure the building.
The imminent threat from the former Milton School is the potential for asbestos
exposure and the physical hazards to trespassers and nearby residents. Currently
collapsed floors, roofs and walls make it impossible to secure or abate this building;
therefore removal is the only option for eliminating the threat.
The Threat of Asbestos
Asbestos is a group of naturally occurring minerals that contain indestructible
fibers that can occur in several forms. Because of its remarkable fire resistant
properties and excellent insulating capabilities, it has been used in thousands
of common building materials.
Any level of exposure to asbestos involves some health risk, although the exact
degree of risk is difficult to estimate. The relationship between exposure level
and health risk is complex. When the fibers enter the air, individuals may be exposed
and inhale the fibers. Those fibers retained by the lungs will remain indefinitely.
Exposure to high levels of airborne asbestos is associated with a debilitating
lung disease called asbestosis; a rare cancer of the chest and abdominal lining
called mesothelioma; and cancers of the lung, esophagus, stomach, colon, and other
organs.
Children and young adults who are exposed to asbestos have a greater chance than
older adults of developing certain asbestos-related diseases due to a longer remaining
lifespan during which disease may develop. Children and young adults are most often
those involved in the trespassing and vandalism at the former school, and therefore
are at greater risk for exposure.
Corrective Action: Using State Funds
- The Illinois EPA has confirmed the presence of various asbestos-containing
materials within the building through laboratory analysis.
- The corrective
actions to be completed by State contractors, REACT Environmental Engineers and
their subcontractor Midwest Asbestos Abatement involve:
- abatement of asbestos-containing material, where safe;
- wet demolition which requires wetting of the building material throughout
the demolition activity;
- sealing of asbestos-containing materials in leak tight containers;
and
- air monitoring (which counts fibers suspended in the air) during the
demolition.
- All
asbestos material will be disposed of at an asbestos permitted landfill.
At the landfill, the material is buried and covered immediately with six
inches of compacted soil to prevent further disruption of the material.
- All work will be
done in accordance to the National Emission Standards for Hazardous Air Pollutants
(a Federal regulation under the Clean Air Act), Occupational Safety and Health
Association Standards, and Illinois EPA regulations.
- The cost to abate and dispose of the building remains is estimated at $354,000.
- It is anticipated that work will begin in March and be
completed within approximately two months.
The Village of Milton is the current owner
of the property. The work to be done by Illinois EPA will enable the Village of
Milton to benefit in the following ways:
- a physical and environmental threat
is removed from the community;
- property values can increase; and
- the
property can be utilized by the community for the residents of Milton.
For More Information
Jody Kershaw
Illinois EPA
Remedial
Project Manager
217- 524-3285 |
Michelle Tebrugge
Illinois EPA
Community Relations Coordinator
217-524-4825 |
Village of Milton
Mayor Phillip McEuen
217-723-4057 |
|
|