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‘Mountain’ of coal mixture at Ypsilanti-area business raises concerns for


WASHTENAW COUNTY, MI – A massive pile of a black, coal-like substance mounded behind a fence on an Ypsilanti-area trucking company’s property is ringing alarm bells for township officials, who have taken legal action and raised environmental concerns.

“The issue here has been one that is totally unacceptable. Right now, nobody can tell us where this mountain of coal, whatever it is, came from,” said Ypsilanti Township Attorney Doug Winters, who called the operation an “illegal transfer station” lacking property authorization.

Sediment in nearby storm drains has been tested at the township’s request, showing alarming levels of toxic substances like arsenic and chromium, the attorney said.

The mound, which was being trucked away in the days before the New Year’s holiday weekend, is located on property off East Michigan Avenue and Wiard Road home to OKD Transport, a materials hauling company that also does some snow removal and landscaping, according to its owner Ahmad Dari.

OKD and property owner Dari Holding, LLC, also owned by Dari, face legal action from the township initiated on Dec. 4. Officials assert the business is running in violation of the township zoning code on Michigan Avenue and at a separate trucking yard at 850 Minion St.

“I am very disheartened and disappointed by the township’s approach towards a small, local business. I have deep roots here, and giving back to my community is a core part of my business mission statement,” Dari said in a statement.

The samples taken from the drainage structures on nearby public roads would contain substances from a number of sources, Dari added. The material on his property— a mixture of coal, topsoil and clay — was tested prior to transport and had “absolutely no hazardous or harmful components,” he said.

The company began relocating the stockpile once the township brought the alleged violations to its attention, Dan said.

But the township’s requests date back to July, and the pile had grown by the time officials issued a formal violation notice on Oct. 25, far exceeding the height of nearby buildings, township officials said in legal filings.

A photo taken by an Ypsilanti Township official on Friday, Oct. 27, 2023 shows a mount of black coal-like substance at the OKD Transport property at 2402 E. Michigan Ave. in Ypsilanti Township.

On Dec. 11, a Washtenaw County judge granted Ypsilanti Township’s request for a temporary restraining order prohibiting uses of the OKD properties that violate the township zoning code, but Winters said the operations have continued.

“We don’t have a clue as to what this means in terms of the impact to the environment, beyond the fact that number one it’s illegal to begin with to have the material on site and number two they’re supposed to have truck manifests that can verify where it came from and where they’re taking it to,” Winters said.

The township commissioned testing on sediment in drains on Wiard Road near the entrance to the East Michigan Avenue site, carried out by the Washtenaw County Water Resources Commissioner’s Office beginning in early November.

It is “clearly evident” that anytime it rains, material from the stockpile is being transported to the public drainage system, with black staining leading to the mound, according to a letter from Water Resources Commissioner Evan Pratt summarizing the sampling.

Samples from the northern drain found elevated levels of arsenic, zinc, chromium and phosphorus as well as hydrocarbons and polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons. Most of the substances were also detected in the southern drain, which also had elevated levels of lead and copper. The detected levels appear to exceed regulatory thresholds, according to the letter.

Still, the testing hasn’t proven the contaminants came from the stockpile, Pratt said in an interview, noting that research indicates automobiles can contribute to a variety of hazardous substances that make their way into drainage systems via road runoff.

After being briefed on the testing on Dec. 19, the Ypsilanti Township board voted to authorize their attorneys to expedite the process of involving state and federal environmental regulators, as well as congressional and state representatives, to halt activity at the site.

The OKD Transport property at 2416 E. Michigan Ave. in Ypsilanti Township on Thursday, Dec. 28, 2023.

Lucas Smolcic Larson | MLive.com

The Michigan Department of Environment, Great Lakes and Energy visited OKD on East Michigan Avenue on Dec. 21, and state regulators are communicating with the trucking company to determine the origin of the substance and request a waste characterization to compare it to the drain sampling, according to EGLE spokesperson Jill Greenberg.

OKD Transport is not currently…



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