EPA Finalizes Settlement with Companies for
Cleanup at Mercury Refining Superfund Site in Albany County;
Value of Cleanup Work
Estimated at $9 million
Contact: Larisa Romanowski, (518) 747-4389, romanowski.larisa@epa.gov
(New York, N.Y. – August 7, 2012) Five
companies considered responsible for contamination at the Mercury Refining
Superfund site have reached a settlement with the U.S. Environmental Protection
Agency to do work needed to clean up the Mercury Refining Superfund site in the
Towns of Colonie and Guilderland, New York. Under the terms of the legal
agreement, the Gillette Company, KeySpan Gas East Corp., Energizer Battery
Manufacturing, Inc., Union Carbide Corporation and Spectrum Brands, Inc. will
address soil, sediment, and ground water contaminated with mercury. Mercury is
an extremely toxic metal that can cause health problems, especially in children.
Exposure to mercury can harm the heart, kidneys, lungs, immune and nervous
systems. In addition, the settlement provides for 19 federal agencies and 46
additional entities also responsible for the contamination to make payments into
an escrow account to fund the cleanup work at the site. The current owner of the
site is also part of the settlement and will take responsibility for land use
restrictions to be put into place at the site.
“This agreement allows EPA to finish the
important work that began several years ago to clean up the site so that people
and the environment are protected,” said EPA Regional Administrator Judith A.
Enck. “The agreement also ensures that the parties responsible for the
contamination at the site will also be held accountable for cleaning it up at
their own expense, rather than at the expense of taxpayers.”
From the 1950’s until 1998, mercury from
batteries and other materials, such as thermometers, pressure regulators, and
electrical devices, was recovered, refined, and marketed by the Mercury Refining
Company. Through the reclamation process, mercury contaminated the site,
including soil and stormwater draining off the site and into an unnamed
tributary to the Patroon Creek. Mercury reclamation activities ended at the site
in 1998; however, some precious metal recovery continues today.
In 1983, the Mercury Refining site was placed
on the federal Superfund list. Until 1999, the New York State Department of
Environmental Conservation oversaw various cleanup actions at the site. The EPA
assumed the lead for the cleanup in 1999. After an extensive investigation and
evaluation of various options for cleanup of the site, the EPA selected its
final cleanup plan for the site in 2008. That plan requires a combination of
soil excavation and treatment of the soil and ground water. The design work for
that cleanup plan is underway and is expected to be completed by the spring of
2013.
Under the agreement announced today, the five
companies will conduct the cleanup work at the site. Contaminated soil at the
surface, which is more easily accessible to people, will be excavated and taken
off-site to a secure facility. Contaminated soil that is deeper will be treated
using a technology that 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. According to the agreement, the owner of the site, 26 Railroad Ave,
Inc., will be responsible for taking action to secure legal land use
restrictions to ensure that people aren’t exposed to contaminants on-site and to
ensure that the treated soil and groundwater is not disturbed. The five primary
companies will be ultimately responsible for conducting all the cleanup work
called for in EPA’s cleanup plan.
The value of the cleanup work to be performed
under the agreement is estimated at $9.3 million.
Superfund is the federal cleanup program
established in 1980 to investigate and cleanup the country’s most hazardous
sites. 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.
The proposed settlement is subject to a 30-day
public comment period, which will begin shortly, upon the publication of a
notice in the Federal Register. Comments should be addressed to the Assistant
Attorney General, Environment and Natural Resources Division, and either emailed
to pubcomment-ees.enrd@usdoj.gov or mailed to P.O.
Box 7611, U.S. Department of Justice, Washington, D.C. 20044-7611, and should
refer to United States of America v. The Gillette Company, et al., Civil
Action No. 1:12-cv-01247-MAD-TWD, D.J.
Ref. 90-11-2-07742/7. During the public comment period, the proposed Consent
Decree may be examined on the following Department of Justice website, http://www.usdoj.gov/enrd/Consent_Decrees.html. The
settlement requires approval by the United States District Court before becoming
final.
Further
information about the Mercury Refining Superfund site can be found at: http://epa.gov/region2/superfund/mercuryrefining/.
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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