Viv Tolson Wayne rang the large dinner bell on her front porch along Britt Road in St. Pauls. The crowd on her front lawn hushed their conversations and turned toward the 75-year-old, who wore a red T-shirt and white cowboy hat.

On that April day, Tolson Wayne gathered dozens of her sisters from the Lumberton Alumnae Chapter of the Delta Sigma Theta sorority to protest pollutants in the Robeson County Landfill, which has an entrance about a half-mile from Tolson Wayne’s front door. 

“We are here to let people know that they have a voice,” Tolson Wayne said from her porch, “so environmental injustice turns to environmental justice.”

Tolson Wayne is a member of the St. Pauls Community Association for Progress. The group and the Southern Environmental Law Center are suing Robeson County over what it describes as contamination that seeps into drinking water. 

Viv Tolson Wayne rallies protesters from her front porch in St. Pauls in April. (Photo by Morgan Casey)

The lawsuit, filed in the U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of North Carolina on June 16, alleges that the county is causing “an imminent and substantial endangerment to health or the environment” by knowingly allowing the landfill to leach per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances, a class of “forever chemicals” commonly called PFAS, since at least 2023. It accuses the county of violating the Resource Conservation and Recovery Act, which governs the treatment, storage, and disposal of solid and hazardous waste. 

PFAS exposure is linked to an increased risk of cancer, thyroid disease, reproductive problems, and developmental delays in children, according to the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency.

The lawsuit comes as the Robeson County Board of Commissioners consider expanding the landfill in rural St. Pauls, home to about 2,700 residents. It would be the seventh expansion in 30 years, adding about 35 acres to the 537-acre site.

Commissioners delayed voting on the expansion last year after Tolson Wayne and other community members raised concerns about pollution.

“I believe that the county is beginning to wake up, because we are not going to stop talking about it,” Tolson Wayne told the Border Belt Independent

PFAS Contamination

The landfill’s leachate—the water that runs through the trash—contains significantly higher amounts of several types of PFAS, including PFOS and PFOA, than most of North Carolina’s landfills. 

One sample collected on November 5, 2025, contained 1,060 parts per trillion of PFOS and 4,100 ppt of PFOA, according to a sampling report released this year by Hunt Environmental Associates. The environmental field services company conducted the sampling on behalf of the landfill and prepared the results for the state Department of Environmental Quality. 

The result was over five times the average amount of PFOS and four times the average amount of PFOA in landfills across the state, according to a 2020 study by the environmental consulting agency Hart & Hickman that sampled nine landfills in central and southeastern North Carolina.

Similar concentrations of PFOA were found in leachate samples that were part of the landfill’s 2024 water quality analysis. That year, the N.C. Department of Environmental Quality’s Division of Solid Waste Management sent a letter to Robeson County Solid Waste Director Gene Walters to alert him that the landfill’s groundwater exceeded the state’s limits for various types of PFAS.

In a letter to Walters last March, the division said that “further assessment efforts are warranted for a more thorough understanding of site conditions, extent of PFAS contamination associated with the facility, and possible contributing source(s).”

Some St. Pauls residents are urging Robeson County commissioners to reject a plan to expand the landfill. (Photo by Morgan Casey)

The lawsuit alleges the PFAS contamination is spreading to the county water through the Rocco Water Treatment Plant, which pulls water from wells as close as 2,089 feet from the landfill.

In November 2025, the Southern Environmental Law Center tested the county water from taps in more than a dozen homes, including Tolson Wayne’s, within two miles of the landfill. Results showed the highest level of PFAS found in finished drinking water from any treatment plant in North Carolina, according to the center’s lawsuit. 

“Comparable PFAS levels in Wilmington’s public water were considered a public health emergency,” said Maia Hutt, a lawyer with the center who initiated its complaint with the county. “So why isn’t this a public health emergency?”

Specific types of PFAS were found at alarming levels, Hutt said. Residents’ tap water contained almost 25 parts per trillion of GenX, the highest amount found in any water treatment system in the country. Two years ago, the Environmental Protection Agency set a maximum contaminant level of 10 ppt for GenX, but President Donald Trump’s administration is eliminating that standard.

Chemours’ Fayetteville Works plant, nine miles northeast of St. Pauls, is the only source of GenX in North Carolina. Testing shows dozens of private drinking water wells in Robeson County contain GenX above 10 ppt, according to documents from the N.C. Department of Environmental Quality.  

“We are here to let people know that they have a voice, so environmental injustice turns to environmental justice.”

Viv Tolson Wayne, St. Pauls resident

Many wells likely became contaminated through air deposition, according to a state Department of Environmental Quality presentation in 2020. Some compounds are emitted through Fayetteville Works’ stacks, travel with the wind, mix with rain and other moisture, then fall to the earth, where they contaminate groundwater, the source for the drinking water wells.

PFOA was found on average at 30.3 parts per trillion in the residents’ tap water, according to the center’s testing, over seven times higher than the EPA’s maximum contaminant level of 4 parts per trillion. Tolson Wayne’s tap water contained the second-highest amount of PFOA among the tested households at over 35 parts per trillion.

“We just want clean water,” Tolson Wayne said. “I might not see it in my lifetime, but for my child and my grandchildren, we want it to be an environment that they can live and grow in.”

Landfill Expansions

Tolson Wayne said the land her home sits on has been in her family for a century. She recalled a childhood spent running around the property and catching catfish in nearby streams. 

Her mother and father were gardeners, Tolson Wayne said, growing much of the corn, peas, and other produce on her dinner table. After a hot day working on the land, she said, her father would pump a mason jar of water from their well and say how refreshing it was.

Now, Tolson Wayne says she has to use a whistle to shoo off buzzards that roost in the tall pine trees in her front yard. While she still grows produce and catches fish, she worries about the  PFAS they might contain. 

“If it’s in my water, then it’s in the air that I breathe,” she said. “And if it’s in the air that I breathe, it’s also in the vegetables that I grow. And if it’s in the vegetables that I grow, it’s also in the fish that I fish from the ponds and lakes around Robeson County.”

The Robeson County Landfill started accepting municipal trash in 1985, according to historical records with the N.C. Department of Environmental Quality. Its first expansion was in 1996, when it added nine acres. County officials have agreed at least twice since 2017 to expand the landfill, including one time when they grew its footprint by almost 12 acres.

Robeson County officials have expanded the landfill several times over the past four decades. (Photo by Heidi Perez-Moreno)

Over the past four decades, the landfill has accepted over 2.5 million tons of waste from Bladen, Robeson, Scotland, Cumberland, and Columbus counties, according to its most recent annual facility report.

Some of that waste came from known PFAS polluters, including Chemours’ Fayetteville Works Plant, according to the Southern Environmental Law Center. Elevated levels of GenX from Chemours are in samples from the landfill’s surface water, groundwater, and leachate, according to the sampling report released this year.

The landfill has received 4.8 million pounds of debris, pallets, and waste from Chemours’ offices, kitchen, and bathroom areas since 2017, according to shipping manifests between the landfill and the company. Since this is considered household waste, it is not generally tested before Chemours sends it to a landfill, according to a company spokesperson.

Robeson County made about $3 million from the landfill during the 2024-2025 fiscal year, according to a county audit. Tolson Wayne called the revenue “blood money,” and said the county needs to use some of it to address PFAS. She said the county gave nearby residents water pitchers with filters, but she wants officials to install filtration at the county’s water treatment plants.

The Southern Environmental Law Center called on the county to install a carbon or reverse osmosis system at its Rocco Water Treatment Plant in a January notice of intent to sue

Rob Davis, Robeson County’s attorney, said in an email in March to the Border Belt Independent that the county obtained a seven-acre tract of land to house a carbon filtration system. County officials met with a company that “has a system that would be installed at the landfill to mitigate any PFAS that may get into the landfill,” he wrote.

“Our team and our commissioners are taking this issue seriously and are making sure we keep moving forward to a solution that is in the best interest of the health and welfare of our citizens and residents,” Davis wrote.

In the lawsuit, St. Pauls Community Association for Progress and the Southern Environmental Law Center ask the court to force Robeson County to stop using the water treatment plant “until treatment technology capable of consistently and effectively eliminating PFAS is operational and regular sampling confirms that PFAS are no longer present.”

‘You Can’t Wait’

The signs advertising Mexican restaurants and stores along West Broad Street are a sign of St. Pauls’ growing Hispanic population. Over half of residents identify as non-white, according to data from the 2020 census.

Many of St. Pauls’ residents, over 37%, live in poverty, census data shows. That’s triple the state average.

Sibyl Farr, executive director of the St. Pauls Community Association for Progress, said the neighborhood near the proposed landfill expansion is especially underrepresented. The area within one mile of the site is 73% non-white, according to an environmental justice report compiled by LaBella Associates, a consulting firm hired by Robeson County. Additionally, 62% of residents near the site are considered low-income.

“I’m tired of people walking over us,” Farr said. “I’m tired of people assuming that the underrepresented don’t have a voice, that it is OK to do whatever to them.”

“Our team and our commissioners are taking this issue seriously and are making sure we keep moving forward to a solution that is in the best interest of the health and welfare of our citizens and residents.”

Rob Davis, attorney for Robeson County

Farr, 70, said the community association didn’t want to sue the county. She said members would prefer “money wasted on lawyers” to go toward a filtration system. However, she felt the county wasn’t moving fast enough. 

Robeson County developed a PFAS Assessment Work Plan for further sampling of surface and groundwater at the landfill, along with its leachate. It submitted the plan to the N.C Department of Environmental Quality in April for review. The department approved the plan with some revisions in May, telling the county to implement it immediately. 

The state says the county must have a PFAS mitigation plan by 2027, according to Farr and Davis. They said the plan needs to be implemented by 2029.

In his email, Davis said the county started its PFAS mitigation processes “very early and will be in a position to implement them well before any deadline mandated by the state.”

“You can’t wait,” Farr said of the county’s projected timeline. “Are we supposed to sit here and drink polluted water until they decide to send something to the state?”

Viv Tolson Wayne, center, marches along Britt Road in St. Pauls after turning away a trash truck from the Robeson County Landfill during a protest in April. (Photo by Morgan Casey)

Julia Odom isn’t waiting for the county to act. Last year, the 73-year-old said she took out a $6,000 loan to install a water purification system in her St. Pauls home two miles from the landfill. 

Odom said she can notice the difference in the water. It doesn’t stink or come out yellow anymore, she said, and it’s no longer slick like oil. 

“My life is worth it,” Odom said. “I’m just going to have to do whatever I can do to get this loan paid off.”

Still, Odom said she worries about her neighbors who can’t afford a filtration system. Robeson County is already one of the least healthy in North Carolina and has some of the highest rates of obesity and death by heart disease in the state. People born in the county have the second-lowest average life expectancy in the state at 67.3 years.

A Threatened River

The Lumber River is America’s fourth most threatened river this year because of the landfill’s PFAS pollution, according to the nonprofit advocacy organization American Rivers. (The Southern Environmental Law Center and the Winyah Rivers Alliance helped make the determination.)

In its intent to sue, the Southern Environmental Law Center raised concerns that the landfill is leaching PFAS into Big Marsh Swamp, a tributary of the Lumber River. Stormwater samples taken in 2023 and 2024 from the landfill’s five outfalls—the final discharge point from the landfill into the swamp—contain anywhere from over 600 parts per trillion to almost 12,000 parts per trillion of total PFAS, according to public records obtained by the law center.

St. Pauls is home to about 2,700 people in northern Robeson County. (Photo by Morgan Casey)

South Carolina’s Department of Environmental Services issued a fish consumption advisory for some species in the Lumber River because of exposure to PFAS. North Carolina has issued an advisory for PFOS in fish in part of the Cape Fear River near East Arcadia in Bladen County, but none for the Lumber River, according to its advisory website

The primary source of PFAS exposure for many people is eating fish and shellfish, according to Penn State Extension. Hutt, the Southern Environmental Law Center lawyer, said many residents in St. Pauls rely on fish caught in the river for their next meal.

“I’m not trying to be scary, but we are talking about significant potential public health impacts,” Hutt said.

Tolson Wayne loves catfish and said she is still eating the ones she catches from her local fishing hole. After years of fighting the landfill’s pollution, she said she hopes to live to see the day when the county has water free of the forever chemicals that are slow to break down in the environment and the body. 

“If you plant a tree today, I might not sit under that tree, but my son or my grandchild might sit under it and enjoy the shade,” she said. “That’s my mindset.”

Lisa Sorg, the North Carolina reporter for Inside Climate News, contributed to this report.

Morgan Casey covers health care in southeastern North Carolina for The Assembly Network. She is a Report for America corps member and holds a master's degree in investigative journalism from Arizona State University. You can contact her at morgancasey@borderbelt.org.