EPA to Hold Public Meetings to Discuss
Proposed Plan
for
Cleaning Up the Gowanus Canal
Public Encouraged to Attend Public Meetings on January 23 and January 24
Contact: Elias Rodriguez, (212) 637-3664, rodriguez.elias@epa.gov
(New York, N.Y. – Jan. 16, 2013) On December
27, 2012, the EPA announced a proposed cleanup plan for the Gowanus Canal, which
includes removing some of the contaminated sediment and capping dredged areas.
The proposed plan also includes controls to prevent raw sewage overflows and
other land-based sources of contamination from compromising the cleanup. The
cost of the cleanup plan is expected to be between $467 and $504
million.
The EPA will accept public comments on its
proposed plan until March 28,
2013 and will hold public meetings on January 23 and January 24, 2013 to discuss the plan
and answer questions. The January
23 meeting will be at 6:30 p.m. at Public School 58 (the Carroll School),
330 Smith Street, Brooklyn. The meeting was originally scheduled for 7:00 p.m.
The January 24 meeting will start at 7:00 p.m. at the Joseph Miccio Community
Center, 110 West 9th Street, Brooklyn.
More than a dozen contaminants, including
polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs), polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs) and
heavy metals, including mercury, lead and copper, were found at high levels in
the sediment in the Gowanus Canal. PAHs and heavy metals were also found in the
canal water. PAHs are a group of chemicals that are formed during the incomplete
burning of coal, oil, gas, wood, garbage or other organic substances. PCBs were
used as coolants and lubricants in transformers, capacitors and other electrical
equipment and their manufacture was banned in 1979. PCBs and PAHs are suspected
to be cancer-causing and PCBs can have neurological effects as well. Consumption
of fish from the canal continues to this day notwithstanding fish advisories.
Completed in the mid-1800s, the Gowanus Canal
was once a major industrial transportation route. Manufactured gas plants, paper
mills, tanneries and chemical plants are among the many facilities that operated
along the canal. As a result of years of discharges, stormwater runoff, raw
sewage overflows from sewer systems that carry sanitary waste from homes and
rainwater from storm drains and industrial pollutants, the Gowanus Canal has
become one of the nation's most seriously contaminated water bodies. In 2010,
the Gowanus Canal was added to the Superfund list of the nation’s most
contaminated hazardous waste sites. The EPA has identified numerous parties that
are potentially responsible for the contamination including National Grid and
the city of New York.
The
evaluation of the alternatives for cleaning up the Gowanus Canal was divided
into three segments that correspond to the upper, middle and lower portions of
the canal. The first segment, which runs from the top of the canal to 3rd
Street, and the 2nd segment, which runs from 3rd Street to just south of the
Hamilton Avenue Bridge, contain the most heavily-contaminated sediment. In the
third segment, which runs from the Hamilton Avenue Bridge to the mouth of the
canal, the sediment is less contaminated than sediment in the other
segments.
For the first and second segments of the
canal, the EPA is proposing to dredge approximately 307,000 cubic yards of
highly contaminated sediment. In some areas where the sediment is contaminated
with liquid coal tar, the EPA is proposing to stabilize the sediment by mixing
it with concrete or similar materials. The stabilized areas would then be
covered with multiple layers of clean material, including an “active” layer made
of a specific type of clay that will remove PAH contamination that could well up
from below, an “isolation” layer of sand and gravel that will ensure that the
contaminants are not exposed, and an “armor” layer of heavier gravel and stone
to prevent erosion of the underlying layers from boat traffic and currents.
Finally, clean sand would be placed on top of the “armor” layer to restore the
canal bottom as a habitat. The plan also calls for removing contaminated
material placed in the 1st Street Turning Basin decades ago.
For
the third segment, the EPA is proposing to dredge 281,000 cubic yards of
contaminated sediment and cap the area with an armor layer and a layer of sand
to help restore habitat.
The proposed plan includes various methods for
managing the contaminated sediment after dredging, depending on the levels of
contamination. The proposed methods include transporting the dredged sediment to
an off-site permitted disposal facility, transporting it to a location where the
sediment can be treated and the possible beneficial reuse of some of the
sediment after treatment.
In addition, the proposed plan calls for
additional controls to significantly reduce combined sewer overflows into the
canal. The EPA is concerned that such overflows would contribute to the
recontamination of the canal after its cleanup. The EPA is proposing that
combined sewer overflow discharges from two major outfalls in the upper portion
of the canal be outfitted with controls to reduce the total volume of discharges
from those outfalls by 58% to 74%.
Contaminated
land sites along the canal, including three former manufactured gas plants, are
being addressed by the New York State Department of Environmental Conservation.
Other potential sources of continuing contaminant discharges to the canal have
been referred to the state of New York and will be investigated and addressed as
necessary.
Written
comments on the proposed plan should be addressed to:
Christos
Tsiamis
Project
Manager
Central
New York Remediation Section
U.S.
Environmental Protection Agency
290
Broadway, 20th Floor
New
York, New York 10007-1866
OR, contact Natalie Loney, Community
Involvement Coordinator, at 212-637-3639, loney.natalie@epa.gov
To
read EPA’s proposed plan for the Gowanus Canal site or for more information on
the canal, visit http://www.epa.gov/region02/superfund/npl/gowanus
or visit the EPA’s document repositories at the Carroll Gardens Library at 396
Clinton St. in Brooklyn or the Joseph Miccio Community Center, 110 West 9th
Street, Brooklyn. The documents will be available in the repositories on
December 28, 2012.
For a Google Earth aerial view of the Gowanus
Canal, visit http://www.epa.gov/region2/kml/gowanus_creek_and_gowanus_canal.kmz.
(Please note that you must have Google Earth installed on your computer to view
the map. To download Google Earth, visit http://earth.google.com/download-earth.html).
Follow EPA Region 2 on Twitter at http://twitter.com/eparegion2
and visit our Facebook page, http://www.facebook.com/eparegion2.
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