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Colusa trucking company fined $48,000 for fish kill

A Colusa businessman has been fined $48,000 for his company's role in a chemical spill that polluted a drainage canal last year.

The Central Valley Regional Water Quality Control Board levied the administrative civil liability penalty against Frank A. Rogers and his Rogers Trucking Co.

Multiple phone calls to Rogers' office and home were not returned.

Rogers has until Dec. 17 to pay the fine or request a hearing before the board.

Wendy Wyels, program manager for the water board, said the fine stems from an April 2007 incident near Tule Road.

"It's a fairly small fine for the magnitude of the impact, but under the water code, it was the maximum we could assess," Wyels said.

A driver working for Rogers accidentally caused a spill of about 6,800 gallons of aqua ammonia, commonly used in fertilizer, into an irrigation ditch connected to the Reclamation District 108 canal system, Wyels said.

Officials learned of the contamination about two days later when dead fish surfaced in the canal system, Wyels said.

The board estimated more than 3,500 fish and other aquatic organisms died as a result of the spill.

"The spill was an accident," Wyels said, "but (Rogers) had a responsibility to report it to authorities and didn't."

Wyels said the impact of the spill could have been significantly reduced, had authorities been immediately notified.

The district could have turned off its pumps near the spill point, which would have confined the spill to a smaller area, Wyels said.

Lewis Bair, general manager for the district, said the driver damaged a valve on a storage tank, which was located in a field about 30 feet from the drainage canal.

The tank leaked onto the field and into the drainage canal, which directly feeds the Sacramento
River, Bair said.

"It's an unfortunate situation where a driver made a mistake," Bair said. "But they're not biologists. There was no malicious intent."

Bair said Rogers was forthcoming when contacted and voluntarily reimbursed the district its cleanup costs.

Rogers paid $5,992.52, according to the district.

Bair said the dead fish, mostly carp and suckerfish, were transported to a Sacramento rendering facility. He said the board's estimate of 3,500 dead fish seemed too high.

There has been no long-term affect to the canal waters and said the fish population is still thriving in the area, he said.

The board said Rogers received financial benefit by not training his drivers on chemical spill procedures and by not supplying his trucks with spill containment kits.

"We hope other trucking companies will take notice and train their drivers to report spills when they happen," Wyels said.

Contact Rob Parsons at 458-2121 or rparsons@tcnpress.com.

 


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Reader's comments




now come on everybody, are we really surprised that this has happened, the rogers brothers are usually behind this kind of stuff. drugs, chasing money to cover bills, what is a surprise is that the authorities and OSHA havent stopped him for good. who is in who's pocket.

out of state - Nov 28, 2008 01:42:12 PM Remove Comment

 
what else has Frank Rogers not repoted. he should not be able to be in the trucking buss any more. take his puc away from him.

slick - Nov 26, 2008 02:01:45 PM Remove Comment

 
Imagine that FRANK ROGERS doing something against the law, Must have been having another fun NOSE filled snow day in his pickup. That a boy Fat frank

The Blow man - Nov 26, 2008 01:28:36 PM Remove Comment

 
To Fat Frank, yes, that is the Rogers boys for you. Bigshots. Big fish in a little pond. I'm glad he got fined. He better pay up.

Lucy - Nov 26, 2008 01:03:11 PM Remove Comment

 
this is sad

Frank Rodriguez - Nov 25, 2008 11:34:06 AM Remove Comment

 
As they say, "Don't cry over spilt aqua ammonia".

Cletus Frank - Nov 23, 2008 07:32:14 PM Remove Comment

 
I wondered when this would happen. His trucks have always scared me and Fred. Bandit and I always paid alot of attention to our safety program. One time on a back haul from Texarkana and facing a stiff deadline we made sure our load was secured before heading east bound and down.

cletus snow - Nov 21, 2008 07:33:50 PM Remove Comment

 
I remember when I was a kid and pickup phones first came out that us kids would watch Fat Frank drive by the Union 76 station and he always had the phone stuck to his ear. He would drive up and down Market Street playing a bigshot. Us kids would just laugh our fool heads off at him.

Fat Frank - Nov 21, 2008 05:50:05 PM Remove Comment
 

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