EPA Regional Administrator Judith A. Enck
and Congressional Representative Paul Tonko
Announce Progress on Cleaning Up
the Hudson River and Shoreline
500 Jobs Created By Hudson River
Cleanup Project
Also Tour Superfund Site in
Colonie and Guilderland
Contact: Larisa Romanowski, (518) 747-4389, cell (518) 703-0101, romanowski.larisa@epa.gov
(Albany,
NY – May 22, 2012) U.S. Environmental Protection Agency Regional Administrator
Judith Enck was joined by Congressional Representative Paul Tonko, New York
State Department of Environmental Conservation Deputy Commissioner Eugene Leff
and Troy Mayor Lou Rosamilia on the shore of the Hudson River to mark the third
season of dredging to remove PCB-contaminated sediment from a 40-mile stretch of
the river between Fort Edward and Troy, New York. From the site of a former
junkyard in Troy currently slated for cleanup and redevelopment, the officials
noted progress on the federal Superfund cleanup of the Hudson River and efforts
to restore properties along its shorelines. The group also toured the Mercury
Refining Superfund site, a former mercury reclamation facility in the towns of
Colonie and Guilderland.
The
Superfund cleanups of the Hudson River and Mercury Refining sites are being paid
for by the companies responsible for the contamination. The Superfund program
operates on the principle that polluters should pay for the cleanups, rather
than passing the costs to taxpayers. When sites are placed on the Superfund
list, the EPA looks for parties responsible for the pollution and requires them
to pay for the cleanups. Cleanups are funded by taxpayer dollars when the
responsible parties cannot be found or are not financially viable. These
cleanups also produce jobs, with the Hudson River Superfund project creating an
estimated 500 jobs. In 2011, Superfund cleanups supported an estimated 1800 jobs
across New York State.
"Superfund
cleanups are pivotal for protecting public health and the environment,” said
Judith A. Enck, EPA Regional Administrator. “The Hudson River PCB cleanup is
accomplishing just that, while also creating 500 new jobs. This project
illustrates the many benefits of the EPA's Superfund program."
“The
combined efforts of DEC and EPA have resulted in significant improvements at
contaminated sites in the Capital Region,” DEC Commissioner Joe Martens said.
“From the dredging of the Hudson River to cleaning up former manufactured gas
production facilities, the cooperative efforts of both agencies have resulted in
a better environment and increased economic opportunities for the area. DEC
looks forward to accomplishing future environmental wins in its partnership with
EPA.”
Over a
30-year period, ending in the late 1970’s, at least 1.3 million pounds of PCBs
were discharged into the Hudson River from two GE capacitor manufacturing plants
located in Fort Edward and Hudson Falls, NY. Earlier this month, dredging of the
Hudson River began south of the village of Fort Edward and will continue
approximately three miles downriver through the area of Griffin Island. The
dredging is targeted to remove 350,000 cubic yards this year. The second phase of the historic Hudson
River dredging project began in 2011 and targets 2.4 million cubic yards of
PCB-contaminated sediment. In 2011, about 363,000 cubic yards were removed from
a one and one-half mile section of river, while meeting the EPA’s strict limits
for re-suspended sediment and the amount of area allowed to be capped. The EPA
is overseeing the dredging project that is being conducted by General Electric
under the terms of a 2006 legal agreement. The New York State Department of
Environmental Conservation is supporting the EPA’s oversight of the cleanup. The
entire second phase of the project is expected to take another four to six years
to complete.
PCBs build
up in the food chain and accumulate in the fatty tissue of fish and mammals. The
primary health risk to people is from eating contaminated fish.
PCBs are likely
cancer-causing chemicals and can cause neurological damage, especially in
children.
Anglers
should consider that some fish species contain chemicals that may be harmful to
people’s health and make informed decisions by consulting fish consumption
advisories for waters such as the Hudson where chemical contamination may be a
concern. In some areas of the Hudson River, fish should not be consumed at
all.
The
first site on today’s tour was once home to a junkyard and auto repair shops. A
former manufactured gas production facility located nearby also used a
right-of-way area adjacent to the scrapyard as disposal location for its
purifier waste. That facility and the right-of-way are being cleaned up through
New York State’s Superfund program under a Consent Order between the New York
State Department of Environmental Conservation and the responsible party,
National Grid. The New York State Department of State has provided a $1 million
grant to the city of Troy to construct a boat launch and restore a portion of
the site.
On
the second leg of today’s tour, the federal and local officials visited the
Mercury Refining Superfund site, which used an industrial oven to recover
mercury from batteries, thermometers, pressure regulators and dental amalgams.
The recovered mercury was sold by the Mercury Refining Company from the mid
1950s to 1998. Prior to 1980, Mercury Refining disposed of waste contaminated
with mercury over an embankment between an old process building and the railroad
tracks to the south of the property, and mercury-contaminated rainwater drained
off the site into the unnamed tributary to the creek. Mercury is an extremely
toxic metal that can cause serious health problems, especially in children.
Exposure to mercury can harm the heart, kidneys, lungs, immune and nervous
systems.
The
EPA has finalized a cleanup plan for the site that will address soil, sediment
and ground water that is extensively contaminated with mercury and has overseen
study and design work that is needed before the cleanup can begin. That work is
expected to be completed by the spring of 2013.
Under
the cleanup plan for the Mercury Refining site, contaminated soil at the surface
and more easily accessible to people will be excavated and taken off-site.
Contaminated soil that is deeper will be treated using a solidification and
stabilization technology, which will also stabilize contaminated ground water.
This method treats the contaminated soil and ground water by locking the mercury
in a mixture of portland cement and another agent, preventing it from moving
into the surrounding soil and ground water. In addition, the cleanup plan calls
for the removal of contaminated sediment from a tributary to Patroon Creek,
which receives rainwater runoff from the Mercury Refining property. Water will
be removed from the excavated creek sediment and disposed of at an off-site
landfill. EPA is finalizing a settlement with responsible parties for the
cleanup of the site.
For more
information about the Hudson River dredging project, visit http://www.epa.gov/hudson and http://www.hudsondredgingdata.com For
more information about Mercury Refining site visit http://www.epa.gov/Region2/superfund/npl/mercuryrefining/
Follow EPA
Region 2 on Twitter at http://www.twitter.com/eparegion2 and visit our Facebook page,
http://www.facebook.com/eparegion2
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