Press release:
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
August 22,
2012
Clean Water Act Settlement Ensures That Boston
Racetrack Addresses Wastewater and Stormwater Discharges
WASHINGTON – U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA)
and the U.S. Department of Justice announced that Sterling Suffolk Racecourse
LLC will pay a civil penalty of $1.25 million to resolve violations of the Clean
Water Act (CWA) at its Suffolk Downs racetrack facility in Revere and East
Boston, Mass. The company is also spending more than $3 million to prevent
polluted water from entering nearby waterways and will perform three
environmental projects worth approximately $742,000 that will provide water
quality monitoring and protection efforts for more than 123 square miles of
watershed. The terms of the settlement are contained in a consent decree lodged
in federal court in Boston today.
The federal complaint alleges that
Suffolk allowed polluted wastewater, including horse manure, urine and bedding
material, to discharge into Sales Creek, a tributary of Belle Isle Inlet and
Boston Harbor. In addition, the federal complaint alleges that Suffolk operated
its concentrated animal feeding operation (CAFO), which stables race horses from
March through November, without a permit under the CWA.
“This settlement
reduces a major source of pollution into Boston Harbor,” said Cynthia Giles,
assistant administrator for EPA’s Office of Enforcement and Compliance
Assurance. “In addition, the settlement’s environmental projects include
monitoring water quality in the harbor’s watershed, helping to protect a
valuable urban waterway for the use and enjoyment of Boston area residents and
visitors.”
“Today’s agreement will prevent further discharges of
wastewater from Suffolk Downs into local waterways and will bring the racetrack
into compliance with the Clean Water Act, which protects America’s streams,
wetlands and rivers from the impacts of Concentrated Animal Feeding Operations,”
said Ignacia S. Moreno, assistant attorney general of the Environment and
Natural Resources Division of the Department of Justice. “The settlement also
brings lasting benefits to residents and the environment by requiring water
quality monitoring in the Mystic and Saugus river watersheds and a salt marsh
habitat protection project near the racetrack.”
In response to EPA’s
enforcement at this facility, Suffolk is completing construction of a wastewater
collection system, is making improvements to its stormwater collection system
and has applied for a National Pollutant Discharge Elimination System (NPDES)
permit. Suffolk will minimize the volume of and properly manage the wastewater
it produces, which will now be collected in a detention pond and discharged
during non-peak hours to the sanitary sewer system. Suffolk will also implement
green infrastructure and low impact development techniques to address stormwater
discharges from the racetrack and maintenance areas of the facility. These
techniques involve the use of natural or engineered systems to direct stormwater
to areas where it can be stored, infiltrated, evapotranspirated, or reused.
EPA inspections revealed that Suffolk Down’s process wastewater
discharged from the facility to Sales Creek during dry and wet weather. EPA
inspectors observed stormwater contaminated with manure and turbid, brown runoff
being discharged from the facility to Sales Creek. Sampling conducted at various
outfalls discharging from the Suffolk Downs facility indicated elevated levels
of pollutants, including ammonia, suspended solids and bacteria. Animal wastes
contain excessive levels of nutrients and pathogens, which produce adverse
environmental impacts including reduction of oxygen in the water, which affects
aquatic life.
Suffolk will undertake three supplemental environmental
projects under this settlement, including two water quality monitoring projects
and one habitat protection project. Suffolk will work with the Mystic River
Watershed Association (MyRWA) to conduct monthly baseline and targeted water
quality sampling throughout the Mystic River watershed and will work with the
Saugus River Watershed Council (SRWC) to conduct a Saugus River watershed
sampling program. Both the Mystic River watershed and Saugus River watershed
data will be available to the public for free on the MyRWA and SRWC websites.
Suffolk will also construct a habitat protection boardwalk in the Belle Isle
Marsh, which is immediately downstream of the Suffolk Downs facility and
represents one of the largest remaining areas of salt marsh in Boston Harbor.
The Belle Isle Marsh encompasses 275 acres of salt marsh, salt meadow, and tidal
flats, and is part of the Rumney Marsh Area of Critical Environmental Concern
(ACEC).
Preventing animal waste from contaminating surface and ground
waters of the United States is one of EPA’s National Enforcement Initiatives for
2011-2013.The initiative focuses on large and medium sized CAFOs that are
discharging pollution without or in violation of a permit.
The consent
decree is subject to a 30-day public comment period and approval by the federal
court.
More information: http://www.epa.gov/compliance/resources/cases/civil/cwa/sterlingsuffolk.html
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