140 likes | 259 Views
EPA CLEANING UP NEW ENGLAND. Bryan Olson Chief, Superfund Remedial Cleanup Program Office of Site Remediation & Restoration US EPA – REGION 1 ACEC-NH Environmental Breakfast January 15, 2014. EPA Administrator’s Priorities.
E N D
EPA CLEANING UP NEW ENGLAND Bryan OlsonChief, Superfund Remedial Cleanup ProgramOffice of Site Remediation & RestorationUS EPA – REGION 1ACEC-NH Environmental Breakfast January 15, 2014
EPA Administrator’s Priorities Making a Visible Difference in Communities across the Country Addressing Climate Change and Improving Air Quality Taking Action on Toxics and Chemical Safety Protecting Water: A Precious, Limited Resource Launching a New Era of State, Tribal and Local Partnerships Embracing EPA as a High Performing Organization Working Toward a Sustainable Future
EPA R1 Cleanup Programs Brownfields and Land Revitalization Emergency Response and Removal RCRA Corrective Action Underground Storage Tank Program Superfund Remedial Cleanups Former Lawrence Metals, Chelsea, MA
Brownfields & Land Revitalization • New England has robust State and EPA Brownfields and Superfund Redevelopment Programs • Contributing factors • EPA-NE commitment to operating a “customer-focused “ Brownfields Program • Strong EPA and State partnerships • Well-developed state voluntary cleanup programs • High property values, limited available space, and large number of sites due to early industrial heritage Source: Evaluation of the Brownfields Program, EPA, 2012
Brownfields & Land Revitalization • All New England states have benefited significantly from EPA Brownfields funding • Brownfields helps to leverage public and private resources • Approximately $1.7 billion of investment leveraged to date at EPA-supported Brownfields sites in New England (as reported by grantees) • Example: Former Essex Mill Property • Superfund NPL Site Redevelopment
Emergency Response and Removals Program • Evaluate approximately 800 oil and chemical release notifications per year. • Respond to about 24 spills or ESF10 activations per year, average about 4 FTE. • Conduct 12 removals, about $8-9M per year, leveraging an additional ~ $4M of partnering agency cleanup funds or in-kind services. • Perform oil facility plan reviews and inspections [Facility Response Plans (FRP) and Spill (SPCC) plans]. • Perform Government Initiated Unannounced Exercises (GUIEs) in accordance with the National Preparedness for Response Exercise Program (PREP). EPA Command Tent
Examples of Recent Removal Activity in NH • Strontium 90 (Wolfeboro)Removed strontium contaminated soil. (FY13) • Granite State Plating (Rochester)Plating chemicals in a box truck and building removed. (FY12) • UNH Campus Ministry (Durham)Naturally-occurring anthrax released from African drums. (FY10) Granite State Plating (plating waste)
Superfund Progress in New England 87% of New England Superfund Sites have cleanup underway or have been completed. The Superfund program has spent over $2 billion on New England NPL sites. EPA has spent over $364 million on non-NPL sites in New England. Responsible Party contributions to site investigation and cleanup in New England exceed $3.3 billion.
NPL Pipeline in New England Recent additions to the NPL • Collins & Aikman, Farmington, NH (December 2013) • Creese & Cooke, Danvers, MA (May 2013) • Walton & Lonsbury, Attleboro, MA (May 2013) • Leeds Metals, Leeds, ME (September 2012) Currently proposed to the NPL • Keddy Mills, Windham, ME(December 2013) Future sites • Additional sites in Region 1 will be considered for future inclusion.
New Hampshire NPL Sites Overview • 22 Final or Proposed NPL sites in New Hampshire • 86% of NH’s 22 Superfund sites have cleanup underway or have been completed. • ~1/2 of the NPL sites are Fund/State lead and ~1/2 are PRP lead • State of NH has full O&M/financial responsibility at ~ 5 sites • Expect to propose delisting the first NH site this year (Town Garage in Londonderry) • Pease Air Force Base- a cleanup and redevelopment success story Beede Waste Oil, Plaistow, NH
New Hampshire NPL Site Activity • Significant remedial design and construction work ongoingBeede Waste Oil (Plaistow)South Municipal Well (Peterborough) • Waterline construction completed Beede Waste Oil (Plaistow)Mottolo Pig Farm (Raymond) • Upcoming RODsChlor-Alkali(Berlin)Savage Municipal Water Supply Well (Milford) • Significant Community Involvement
Areas of Focus • Groundwater restoration • 5 year review process changes • Renewable Energy and Greener Remediation • Emerging contaminants • Institutional Controls • Climate Change/Adaptation Planning
Bryan OlsonBranch Chief, Superfund Remedial Cleanup BranchU.S. EPA, Region 1olson.bryan@epa.gov For more information:http://www.epa.gov/region1/cleanup/index.html