Responsible parties to pay $29.8 million in
cleanup costs for Big John’s Salvage-Hoult Road Superfund Site
PHILADELPHIA (August 20,
2012) -- In settlement papers
filed in federal district court, three companies have agreed to pay about $29.8
million in cleanup costs for a Superfund site in Fairmont, Marion County, W.
Va., the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency
(EPA)announced today.
The three companies --
Exxon Mobil Corp., Vertellus Specialties Inc., and CBS Corp.-- will perform
cleanup work and reimburse the EPA and the state of West Virginia $11 million
for past cleanup costs at the Big John’s Salvage-Hoult Road Superfund Site. The
companies have agreed to do the cleanup at the site at an estimated cost of
$17.8 million. The companies will also reimburse EPA and the state for all
future costs associated with overseeing the cleanup, and these are estimated to
be $1 million.
The 38-acre Big John’s site, located near the
east bank of the Monongahela River in Fairmont, was
designated a Superfund site in 2000, making it eligible for federal cleanup
funds. The site became contaminated with hazardous wastes from decades of
industrial activity.
Under the federal Superfund
law, landowners, waste generators and waste transporters that are responsible
for the contamination of a Superfund site must either clean up the site, or
reimburse the government or other parties for cleanup activities.
Cleanup
actions will include constructing an impermeable cap to contain contaminated
soil and enhancing an existing ground water containment system to help prevent
contaminants from migrating. Additionally, about 5,500 cubic yards of tar wastes
coating a one-acre area along the bottom of the Monongahela River will be
removed and sent to a certified disposal facility.
Between 1932 and 1973, the site was owned by a
predecessor of Vertellus Specialities, including the Reilly Tar and Chemical
Corp., which operated a tar processing and refining facility. Domestic Coke, a
predecessor of ExxonMobil operated a coke production plant adjacent to the Big
John’s site and sold and delivered crude coal tar to the Reilly facility for
refining. From 1973 to 1984, Big John Salvage owned the property, and operated a
metal, glass, and oil salvaging operation. During this period, Big John’s
accepted hazardous waste materials from Westinghouse Electric Co., a predecessor
of CBS Corp., including mercury-containing fluorescent light bulbs, lead dust
and mercury-tainted waste oil.
Work is currently ongoing at the site to prevent
the release of tar seeps to surface water and the Monongahela River. Since 2001,
more than 11 million gallons of contaminated water have been captured in a
collection system and cleansed in a series of water treatment systems before
they could enter the river. Additional information on
the site is available at: http://cumulis.epa.gov/supercpad/cursites/csitinfo.cfm?id=0302947.
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