Date: Fri 06-Jun-1997
Date: Fri 06-Jun-1997
Publication: Bee
Author: STEVEB
Quick Words:
gas-spill-clean-up
Full Text:
Town Leases Land For Long-Term Gas Spill Clean-Up
BY STEVE BIGHAM
A long-term project to clean up gasoline pollutants from groundwater is
expected to begin soon in an area of Dodgingtown hit hard by a fiery gas truck
spill last October.
The Board of Selectmen Monday approved the lease of a small plot of town-owned
land on Cemetery Road for a 15- by 20-foot testing station. The building will
house part of a permanent water treatment system that will include eight
bedrock wells that will pump water out of the ground for filtering at a rate
of 20-25 gallons per minute, according to William Warzecha of the state's
Department of Environmental Protection (DEP).
More than 9,000 gallons of gasoline gushed out of a fuel truck that careened
off Route 302 into the parking lot of George's Pizza & Restaurant October 7.
The truck exploded, killing driver David Wagnblas, 28, of Stratford, who
worked for the truck company Island Transportation of North Haven. Fuel poured
across the restaurant parking lot, down an embankment and into the Dodgingtown
Cemetery.
Last November, the Mr Warzecha told residents of the area that the disaster's
impact may be felt into the next century. It is hoped that clean-up work will
keep the environmental damage to a minimum.
Anderson Mulholland Associates, Inc, the catastrophic insurance company, has
been overseeing the multi-million dollar clean-up project. The insurance
company must now receive a variance from the town's Zoning Board of Appeals
(ZBA) before the filtration system can be put in.
According to Mr Warzecha, the bedrock wells extract groundwater, which is
treated to remove traces of the chemical MTBE and discharged into nearby Lime
Kiln Brook. Mr Warzecha said the plume of the gasoline has been moving in a
downward gradient since the spill.
The project could take as little as two years or as much as seven to ten
years, he said.
Attorney David Grogins said he reviewed the lease and has asked that a
requirement be included for removal of the concrete pad and piping once the
building is no longer needed and removed. He also called for the adding of a
provision that the property be restored to its original condition, and an
indemnity provision be put in to ensure that the company would be responsible
for any further contamination caused by the clean-up.
