MEDCALJ oOPONr^ cnonex4 BREVARD PLANT #PU> FOTOFAX ONEX Vol. 5, No. 2 E. I. Du Pont De Nemours & Company, Inc., Brevard, N. C. March—April, 1972 The Trend . . . Environmental Protection The national trend is toward improved protection of our natural environment. “Stop Pollution” is the watchword. We see evidence of this in newspaper headlines, grade school textbooks, and new anti-pollution laws. The reason for this emphasis? . . . The problems of earth, air, and water pollution have become increas ingly serious due to more and more people generating more and more substances to contaminate the natural environment. Refuse, smoke, and sewage have reached a saturation point in many population centers. The stench and unsightliness has started to back fire. The effect is on many people, not just some. They’re tired of seeing it, breathing it, and tasting it. As a result of this situation, local, state, and national governments have been asked to set down rules and pass laws to control it. They have responded to this request. How have these new regula tions affected industry and cities? How have they affected individuals such as you and me? How have they affected Du Pont? Effect On Industry And Cities Industry and cities have been asked to “stop smoking”. In fact, they’ve been told if they don’t control the amount of harmful substances such as SO2 (sulfur dioxide) or visi ble particulates (smoke-like particles). IIM THIS ISSUE Foto People 2 Environment Testing and Control. . . 3 What’s Happening Around Plant. ... 4 Insurance Liberalization 5 Trio Spreads Gospel 6 Basketball Winners 7 Foto Events 8 emitted, they are subject to a $25,000 per day fine on the first offense. This goes up to $50,000 per day on the second. Water going into industrial plants to help perform process func tions must eventually come out into a natural stream or river. When it does, it can’t be too warm, have too little dissolved oxygen, or contain substances harmful to aquatic life. The same is true for city sewage. Tight controls have been placed on wastewater treatment to only allow discharge of acceptable effluent (wastewater outflow). When the industrial or munici pal waste can gets full, it must be emptied . . . somewhere. That “some where” must now be below ground level in a “sanitary landfill” where no open burning is permitted. Burn ing can be used for trash disposal but only in high temperature incin erators where decomposition ap proaches 100 per cent. Strict enforcement of these re quirements can have crippling effects. (Continued on page 3) iF-.- Rich Okie Tells About Environmental Control Rich Okie, Brevard Plant En vironmental Control Engineer, works full time keeping one eye on the plant and the other on the immediate en vironment. His job is to hold the pro cesses of man and nature in harmony with one another as economically as possible. To do this, he maintains a close tab on 12 million gallons of waste treatment water. This plant liquid waste is filtered, aerated, and im pounded so effluent entering the Little River is at an acceptable qual ity level. He also coordinates registra tion and approval of any plant emis sions to the atmosphere and the land fill for solid wastes as well as the waste water system. According to Rich, there are certain considerations we should keep in mind under an overall program of environmental control. He said, “First, environmental control is necessary. It affects the way we live. Second, the cost is high and in industry it’s an in vestment usually without any profit return. Some firms will find the cost too high and go out of business. Jobs will be lost.” (Continued on page 6) Eyeing the Environment