JPMorgan Chase Bank to
Reimburse Government $1.28 Million
for Cleanup of
Boone County, W.Va. Superfund Site
PHILADELPHIA
(Sept. 5, 2012) - In a settlement
announced today by the
U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, JPMorgan Chase Bank has reimbursed the federal government $1.28 million for costs incurred by EPA in cleaning up the Browning Lumber Company Superfund Site in rural Bald Knob, Boone County, W.Va. Under the Superfund law, past and current owners and operators of a Superfund site are responsible for the cleanup costs.
U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, JPMorgan Chase Bank has reimbursed the federal government $1.28 million for costs incurred by EPA in cleaning up the Browning Lumber Company Superfund Site in rural Bald Knob, Boone County, W.Va. Under the Superfund law, past and current owners and operators of a Superfund site are responsible for the cleanup costs.
Cleanup of the Browning Lumber Co. site was completed
earlier this year and included extensive cleanup by EPA prior to cleanup work
performed by JPMorgan Chase -- the corporate successor to a former site owner.
The site will be eligible for appropriate re-use as part of West Virginia’s
voluntary cleanup program, which encourages voluntary
clean-ups of contaminated sites as well as redevelopments of abandoned and
under-utilized properties.
Starting in 1976, Charleston National Bank, owner of the
site as trustee of the Shepard Trust, leased the property to the Browning Lumber
Co., which harvested timber and used part of the property for wood-treatment.
Charleston National is now merged with JPMorgan Chase.
The site became
contaminated after decades-long wood-treating activities using chromated copper
arsenate (CCA). CCA contains the hazardous substances chromium, copper and
arsenic. Although the facility ceased operations by 1998, hazardous substances,
primarily arsenic in soil, continued to pose a threat to human health and the
environment.
Following a fire, EPA first investigated the site in late
2005 and later conducted a cleanup in 2006 and 2007 that included
decontamination of the old wood-treatment facility, stabilization of a large
area of contaminated soil, and proper disposal of 100
cubic yard of soil contaminated with arsenic and chromium and 43 drums of liquid
and solid hazardous wastes.
For more information on this site, visit
http://www.epaosc.org/site/site_profile.aspx?site_id=1961
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