U.S. Environmental Protection
Agency, Region 7
901 N. Fifth
St., Kansas City, KS 66101
Iowa, Kansas, Missouri, Nebraska, and Nine Tribal
Nations
EPA Region 7 and Contractors Begin Removal of
Underground Storage Tank at Former Strehlow Garage in Omaha,
Neb.
Contact
Information: Chris Whitley, 816-518-2794 (Blackberry), 913-551-7394 (office),
whitley.christopher@epa.gov
Environmental News
FOR IMMEDIATE
RELEASE
(Kansas City, Kan., July
24, 2012) - EPA Region 7 and its contractors have begun work to remove an
underground storage tank from a former automotive garage in Omaha, Neb., as one
step of clearing the way for city authorities to redevelop the property as part
of a planned $5 million low-income housing project.
The former Strehlow Garage, at 2107 N. 16th Street in Omaha,
is currently owned by the Omaha Housing Authority (OHA), which plans to transfer
ownership of the property to the Omaha Economic Development Corporation (OEDC)
for inclusion in the housing project after the tank removal and related
environmental assessment work is completed. The removal work is necessary to
allow for the sampling of subsurface soil and groundwater beneath the
tank.
Funding for removal of the tank and the other site assessment work,
totaling approximately $60,000, is being provided by EPA Region 7’s Targeted
Brownfields Assessment Program. The program is designed to assist states, tribes
and local governments to minimize the uncertainties of contamination often
associated with brownfields properties.
Brownfields are those properties, the expansion, redevelopment, or
reuse of which may be complicated by the presence or potential presence of a
hazardous substance, pollutant, or contaminant. Cleaning up and reinvesting in
these properties protects the environment, reduces blight, and takes development
pressures off greenspaces and working lands.
The former Strehlow Garage property was recommended to
EPA by the Nebraska Department of Environmental Quality (NDEQ). NDEQ, along with
OHA and OEDC, applied to EPA Region 7 for funding to conduct a dual-phase
environmental site assessment. That assessment includes removal of the
underground tank, screening the garage building for asbestos, lead and other
hazards; and environmental sampling of subsurface soil and
groundwater.
EPA Region 7’s Storage Tanks and Oil Pollution branch
has worked with the region’s Targeted Brownfields Assessment Program to prepare
for the tank’s removal and facilitate with NDEQ when
necessary.
Contractors working under the supervision of EPA staff will prepare
the site today for the removal of the tank, which is presumed to have stored
gasoline, oil or other petroleum products while the automotive garage was in
operation. The process of removing the tank and conducting the environmental
assessment work at the site should be completed by the end of the
week.
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