Yolo County District Attorney Jeff Reisig, along with 35 other California district attorneys, announced this week that Yolo Superior Court Judge Samuel McAdam has ordered Tractor Supply Company Inc. and one of its subsidiaries to pay $485,400 as part of a settlement of a civil-environmental prosecution.
According to the prosecutors’ complaint, Tractor Supply and Petsense Inc. unlawfully handled and disposed of various hazardous wastes and materials throughout the state over a five-year period. These hazardous wastes and materials included pesticides, medications, batteries, ignitable liquids and other flammable, reactive, toxic and corrosive materials.
The settlement resolves the allegations made in the district attorneys’ complaint.
“Today’s settlement is another significant victory in our effort to make the environment cleaner and safer for the citizens of Yolo County and throughout California,” Reisig said Wednesday. “The terms of this settlement will require these companies to improve the training of their staff and the monitoring and management of their hazardous waste.”
Investigators from district attorney’s offices, along with environmental regulators statewide, conducted a series of undercover inspections of waste bins originating at Tractor Supply and Petsense stores.
The inspections revealed that Tractor Supply and Petsense had mishandled their hazardous wastes. Regulators also found the documentation of employee hazardous-waste training to be incomplete.
The judgment announced this week was designed to prevent Tractor Supply and Petsense from committing similar hazardous-waste violations in the future. It requires the retailers to properly label, package and store hazardous waste to minimize the risk of exposure to employees and customers, and to ensure that incompatible wastes do not combine to cause dangerous chemical reactions.
The judgment also requires the retailers to properly document their hazardous waste and dispose of it at authorized disposal facilities.
Under the settlement, Tractor Supply and Petsense must pay $195,400 in civil penalties, $170,000 to reimburse the costs of the investigation, and $35,000 to fund supplemental environmental projects furthering consumer protection and environmental enforcement in California.
Tractor Supply and Petsense also must hire an employee or a consultant to strengthen the companies’ hazardous-waste programs.
Based in Brentwood, Tenn., Tractor Supply and Petsense cooperated throughout the investigation, Reisig said, and quickly responded to enhance their policies and procedures designed to eliminate the improper disposal of hazardous waste products in California stores.