News
Release
U.S. Environmental
Protection Agency
New England Regional
Office
September 18, 2012
September 18, 2012
Contact:
EPA Public Affairs, (617) 918-1010
EPA
Proposes Two Massachusetts Sites to be Added to National Superfund
List
(Boston, Mass. – Sept. 18, 2012) The U.S.
Environmental Protection Agency has proposed two additions to the National
Priorities List (NPL) – commonly referred to as Superfund – in Massachusetts.
The NPL is a national list of sites that require further investigation and
potential cleanup in order to protect human health and the environment in the
long term. The sites being proposed to the NPL are the former Walton &
Lonsbury Inc. facility in Attleboro, Mass. and the former Creese & Cook
Tannery in Danvers, Mass. Both sites have received
letters of concurrence from state officials supporting the NPL
listing.
“Proposing to add
these two sites to the national Superfund list is a first-step toward helping
these communities to address contamination issues on these parcels. Superfund
has been very effective cleaning contaminated lands across the country, ensuring
cleaner and healthier communities,” said Curt Spalding, regional administrator
of EPA’s New England office.
In the Fall of 2010,
at the request of the Massachusetts Department of Environmental Protection
(MassDEP), EPA began a removal action at the Walton and Lonsbury Inc. facility.
The site housed a chrome plating facility, formerly operated by Walton and
Lonsbury, Inc. While in operation from 1940-2007, the facility was used to
chrome plate oversized objects such as pistons for large hydraulic equipment or
rollers for paper mills. A number of chemicals and chemical compounds were used
and left as waste in the operations process. The contaminants of concern on the
site include total chromium, hexavalent chromium, lead and volatile organic
compounds.
Since 2010, EPA and
MassDEP have done significant sampling beyond the original site boundaries, and
discovered that the contamination has migrated beyond the facility boundaries.
This is why EPA, with the recommendation of the State of Massachusetts, has
proposed this site for listing on the NPL.
The former Creese
& Cook Tannery property is comprised of three parcels and a portion of a
fourth parcel (a railroad right-of-way) totaling approximately 17 acres of land
situated along opposite banks of the Crane River in Danvers, Massachusetts. At
one time, the four parcels were owned by the Creese & Cook Company being
used as a leather tanning and finishing operation from 1903 until 1981, when the
company went bankrupt. The former Creese & Cook Tannery property was later
subdivided and one of the three parcels (33 Water Street) on the east bank has
been redeveloped into a condominium complex. Solid wastes from the manufacturing
process were disposed of in two onsite landfills. Liquid effluent was discharged
directly to the Crane River and later to sewers, while sludge waste was
deposited in an on-site lagoon system.
The State of
Massachusetts referred the site to EPA because the property owner of the 55
Clinton Avenue parcel, the largest and most heavily contaminated portion of the
site, is unwilling to perform additional site characterization or to undertake
response actions to address the known contamination in compliance with the State
of Massachusetts program requirements. As the State lacks the sufficient
resources to address the environmental and human health risks posed by this
hazardous waste disposal site using its enforcement authorities, listing the
site on the NPL is the best option to ensure a complete site investigation and
cleanup.
For all NPL sites,
EPA works to identify companies or people responsible for the contamination and
to require them to conduct or pay for the investigation and cleanup. For newly
listed sites without viable potentially responsible parties, EPA will
investigate the full extent of the contamination before starting significant
cleanup at the site.
More information on
these proposed additions to the NPL, and other actions taken today by EPA on all
final and proposed sites: http://www.epa.gov/superfund/sites/npl/current.htm
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