Date: Sun 10-Nov-1996
Date: Sun 10-Nov-1996
Publication: Bee
Author: ANDYG
Quick Words:
EPA-environment-Bee
Full Text:
GENNEWS
EPA Concludes No Further Remedial Action Needed At Bee Site
The US Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) has recategorized a hazardous
waste problem at The Bee Publishing Company at 5 Church Hill Road, deciding
that contamination there requires no further remedial action.
In an October 23 letter to The Bee, Daria Till, the EPA's pollution site
assessment manager for Connecticut, writes the EPA has completed its site
assessment of the pollution and has determined that a "No Further Remedial
Action Planned" (NFRAP) designation is appropriate for the site.
"Sites assigned NFRAP decisions are now being removed from EPA's Comprehensive
Environmental Response, Compensation and Liability Information System
(CERCLIS) database, and archived as historical records to ensure EPA does not
needlessly repeat the investigations in the future," according to Ms Till.
"NFRAP decisions may be changed based upon new information or other
considerations which make a recommendation for NPL [National Priorities List]
listing appropriate at a later time," she adds.
In December 1995, the state Department of Environmental Protection (DEP) made
a final inspection of the Bee Publishing Company property, describing
conditions at the site. The chemical pollution problem had to do with
industrial waste storage, including inks, oils, and photogrpahic chemicals.
In Newtown, EPA has listed ten hazardous waste sites, placing them in various
categories based on the severity of the problems.
EPA stores information on hazardous waste sites nationwide in its CERCLIS
database. At one point, the database held information on approximately 40,000
potentially hazardous waste sites, but in 1995 EPA decided to reduce the
number of sites which are of real concern to the federal government. Today,
CIRCLIS contains information on approximately 16,000 sites nationally,
according to EPA.
