EPA Reaches Agreement with General Electric
Company and SI Group, Inc.
to Protect
Drinking Water at the Dewey Loeffel Landfill Superfund Site
in Nassau,
New York
Contact:
Larisa Romanowski, (518) 747-4389, romanowski.larisa@epa.gov
(New York,
N.Y. – April 11, 2012) The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency today announced
that it has entered into an agreement with the General Electric Company and SI
Group, Inc. (formerly Schenectady Chemical) to collect and properly dispose of
contaminated ground water and liquid leaching from the Dewey Loeffel landfill
that is threatening several nearby drinking water wells. The liquid seeping from
the landfill, called leachate, and the ground water are contaminated with
volatile organic compounds, which can cause cancer in people. The extent and
nature of potential health effects depend on many factors, including the level
and how long people are exposed to the contaminants.
The EPA is
currently collecting the contaminated liquid waste and sending it off-site for
disposal. Under the agreement, General Electric and SI will take on the
collection and removal of the waste and the construction of a treatment plant
adjacent to the landfill, all with EPA oversight. The waste will continue to be
sent off-site until the construction of the treatment plant is completed.
Treated water from the new system will be discharged to surface water only after
the EPA verifies that sampling data shows that the treatment system is working
effectively and is capable of meeting stringent state discharge limits. GE and
SI Group have agreed to reimburse EPA for certain costs, including an upfront
payment of $800,000.
“The
EPA has determined that treating the contaminated ground water and liquid at the
site is an effective way to protect people’s drinking water wells while the EPA
investigation of the site continues,” said Judith A. Enck, EPA Regional
Administrator. “The treatment system that will be constructed near the landfill
will alleviate the impacts of the hundreds of truck trips needed to dispose of
the waste off-site.”
The
treatment system to be constructed will address potential threats from the
contaminated ground water and leachate and community concerns about trucking the
contaminated liquid off-site. A comprehensive long-term study is underway, which
will identify permanent cleanup options, called remedial actions, for the
contaminated ground water, surface water and sediment associated with the site.
The permanent cleanup plan may include changes to the leachate collection,
ground water extraction and treatment systems.
The
Dewey Loeffel Landfill site is located in southern Rensselaer County,
approximately four miles northeast of the village of Nassau. From 1952 until
1968, the site was used for the disposal of an estimated 46,000 tons of waste
materials generated by several Capital District companies. The waste included
industrial solvents, waste oils, polychlorinated biphenyls, scrap materials,
sludge and solids. Volatile
organic compounds and other hazardous substances have seeped out of the landfill
and contaminated the ground water. PCBs have also moved downstream, causing
contamination of sediment and several species of fish in and near Nassau
Lake.
From 1980
until the site was added to the federal Superfund list in May 2011, numerous
investigations and cleanup actions were performed at the site under the New York
State Department of Environmental Conservation’s Superfund program. In the fall
2011, the EPA took responsibility for operating ground water and leachate
collection systems that had been installed by the state.
The EPA
has a web page about the site at: http://www.epa.gov/region2/superfund/npl/dewey.
Follow
the EPA Region 2 on Twitter at http://twitter.com/eparegion2 and visit our Facebook page, http://www.facebook.com/eparegion2.
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