EPA Releases Ground Water Samples from the
Lehigh Valley Site
Agency Plans Further Testing to
Pinpoint Eastern Edge of Contamination
Contact:
Elias Rodriguez, 212-637-3664, rodriguez.elias@epa.gov
(New York,
N.Y. – April 12, 2012) The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency made available
today the results of ground water sampling taken in December 2011 at the Lehigh
Valley Railroad Derailment Superfund site in LeRoy, New York. This sampling is
part of an ongoing investigation of the nature and extent of the contamination
from that site. The results, currently available online, are consistent with
previous results from quarterly sampling. These results continue to show that
the heaviest contamination is in the western end of the plume area, the source
area, with concentrations tailing off as the area moves to the east toward
Spring Creek. In previous work, the EPA installed granulated activated carbon
treatment systems on 35 private wells affected by the contamination. The EPA
also sampled for contaminated vapors in nearby homes and installed vapor
intrusion mitigation systems in eleven homes that needed them based on the
testing. The mitigation systems have been effective in controlling the
vapors.
This
sampling data, along with previous data already publicly available, is being
analyzed as part of an overall investigation that will allow the EPA to
determine the extent and concentration of contamination and what actions may be
needed to control or cleanup the contamination. A report detailing all of the
testing and summarizing all of the results is expected this summer. As part of
the ongoing investigation, the EPA is working to develop plans to conduct
further sampling to more specifically identify the eastern edge of the
contamination to ensure that the contamination is not impacting areas east of
Spring Creek.
“Protecting
the health of people who live and work near the Lehigh Valley Superfund site is
our highest priority,” said Judith A. Enck, EPA Regional Administrator. “We are
working with local residents and business owners to ensure that the
contamination is not entering their homes and businesses. The work at the Lehigh
Valley site is being done under the Superfund law, which operates on the
principle that polluters bear the full costs of hazardous waste cleanups, rather
than passing the expenses to taxpayers.”
Levels of
trichloroethene (TCE) in the ground water range from 6,000 parts per billion in
the immediate spill area on the western end of the plume to 14 parts per billion
toward the eastern edge. The EPA continues its work to ensure that the vapors
from this contamination are not seeping into homes or buildings, similar to the
way that radon gas can, and causing vapors at unacceptable levels.
The Lehigh
Valley Derailment Superfund site is the location of a December 6, 1970 train
derailment, where approximately one ton of cyanide crystals and approximately
30,000 to 35,000 gallons of TCE spilled on to the railroad right-of-way. The
spilled TCE contaminated soil and the ground water beneath the site. The plume
of contaminated ground water extends approximately four miles to the east and
southeast of the site. Exposure to TCE can have serious health impacts,
including liver damage and increased risk of cancer. The Lehigh Valley Railroad
will pay the cost of the cleanup, not tax payers.
For the
ground water sampling results, visit: http://www.epa.gov/region2/superfund/npl/lehighvalley/relateddocs.htm.
For more
information about the site, visit: http://www.epa.gov/region2/superfund/npl/lehighvalley/.
Follow EPA Region 2 on Twitter at http://www.twitter.com/eparegion2 and Facebook at http://www.facebook.com/eparegion2.
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