Thursday, June 9, 2016

Proposed EPA Cleanup Plan will make Portland Harbor safer and healthier for all


Proposed EPA Cleanup Plan will make Portland Harbor safer and healthier for all
Agency sets 60-day comment period and schedules four public meetings -- public encouraged to provide comment
06/09/2016
Contact Information:
Judy Smith (smith.judy@epa.gov)
503-326-6994

(Portland – June 8, 2016) The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency has released its Proposed Plan to clean up the in-water portion of the Portland Harbor Superfund Site, an industrial waterway covering approximately 10 miles of the Lower Willamette River, from Broadway Bridge to the Columbia Slough. EPA proposes to dredge and cap the most contaminated sediment throughout the 10-mile stretch of the Lower Willamette, in areas where concentrations pose the highest risk to people, fish, and wildlife.

Other, less contaminated areas will be monitored and allowed to recover naturally. At the end of construction, EPA estimates that cancer and other serious risks posed by contamination will be greatly reduced – in many places up to 100 times lower than it is now. Natural recovery will further reduce these risks to levels deemed acceptable under Superfund and Oregon Department of Environmental Quality (ODEQ) cleanup programs, but will not eliminate all risks. Active cleanup work under the selected Alternative I is estimated to take seven years and cost approximately $750 million.

Release of the proposed cleanup plan starts a 60-day public comment period, which EPA extended from the required 30 days in response to public requests for a longer comment period. The public is encouraged to provide formal comments on the plan to EPA by August 8, either in person at public meetings, online or in writing. (Comment period information below)

“The time has come to clean up the Lower Willamette, the lifeblood of Portland’s environment and economy,” said EPA Regional Administrator Dennis McLerran “Our proposed cleanup plan is based on the best science and most effective cleanup technologies. Our aim is to make Portland Harbor healthier and safer for all who treasure and rely on it. We also expect our cleanup to serve as an engine for local economic development by generating construction jobs while the project is underway, and leading to an important economic revival by providing certainty for future development.”

McLerran’s sentiments were echoed by Jim Woolford, Director of the Office of Superfund and Remediation and Technology Innovation in EPA’s Headquarters Office in Washington, D.C.

“Release of this plan is a significant milestone in the path to cleaning up the Portland Harbor Site,” said Woolford, Director of EPA’s Office of Superfund Remediation and Technology Innovation in Washington, D.C. “My office has been working with EPA Region 10 and we believe the proposed alternative is a sound cleanup approach that is consistent with national regulations and policies.”

The Agency engaged and closely consulted with the ODEQ, six federally recognized tribes and a wide variety of public and private stakeholders while developing the Remedial Investigation and Feasibility Study, which are the basis for the Proposed Plan. Under a 2001 agreement with ODEQ, EPA manages the cleanup of the in-water cleanup portion of the site and ODEQ is responsible for the upland portion of the site. ODEQ’s ongoing pollution source control work will complement EPA’s cleanup work in the harbor.

“DEQ appreciates the extensive work performed by the many businesses and state and local governments who partnered with DEQ over the past 15 years to investigate and cleanup the upland and upriver sources of contamination that could potentially re contaminate Portland Harbor,” said Joni Hammond, ODEQ’s Deputy Director. “We now look forward to focusing our efforts on reviewing EPA’s Proposed Plan and working with EPA to implement the cleanup in a timely manner.”

More than 40 contaminants were found in river sediment at concentrations that pose a risk to people, fish and wildlife. Some of the contaminants include: polychlorinated bi-phenyls (PCBs), dioxins/furans, pesticides (DDT and its byproducts), and poly aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs). Resident fish and shellfish accumulate contaminants that are harmful to people and wildlife. People who eat resident fish are most at risk from contaminants at the site. The main goal of the cleanup is to reduce levels of contaminants in fish to allow for human consumption. In addition, productive re-use of valuable commercial property is also another important benefit of cleanups, according to EPA’s Regional Administrator.

EPA’s proposed cleanup addresses contaminated sediments through dredging, capping, armoring or enhanced natural recovery, including removal of over 1,400,000 cubic yards of contaminated sediments. Approximately 1,900 acres of the site with lower contaminant levels are expected to recover naturally over time.

EPA has increased outreach to the greater Portland community, offering information sessions, webinars and open houses to help the public understand what the contamination is, where it is and why cleanup is needed. The public is encouraged to provide formal comments on the plan by August 8.

Four public meetings will be held in and around Portland where EPA will explain the Proposed Plan and where public comments will be accepted and recorded.

These public meetings are scheduled for the following dates, times & locations:
June 24, 2016, 11:30am-8pm, City of Portland Building, 1120 SW 5th Ave.
June 29, 2016, 11:30am-8pm, EXPO Center, 2060 N Marine Dr.
July 11, 2016, 11:30am-8pm, University Place Conference Center, 310 SW Lincoln St.
July 20, 2016, 11:30am-8pm, Ambridge Center, 1333 NE Martin Luther King Jr. Blvd

EPA will offer two presentations on the Proposed Plan during each public meeting at the following times: 12noon-12:30pm and 6pm-6:30pm.

All locations are easily accessible via MAX trains and bus lines.

Russian, Spanish, Vietnamese, and Chinese interpreters will be available during the June 24th meeting. Please notify Laura Knudsen (knudsen.laura@epa.gov) or 503-326-3280, no later than two weeks prior to a public meeting to request language interpretation assistance.

Comments can be submitted to EPA via:
Online: Portland Harbor Proposed Plan comment form
Email: harborcomments@epa.gov (form letters and petitions should be submitted to this e-mail address)
Postal mail: Attn: Harbor Comments, U.S. EPA, 805 SW Broadway St., Suite 500, Portland, OR 97205
In-person at an official EPA public meeting: We will accept oral and written comments on the Proposed Plan at the public meetings listed above.

All Comments must be postmarked by midnight, August 8, 2016.

All comments will be recorded, considered and responded to in a document that will accompany the final cleanup plan or “Record of Decision,” expected in late 2016.

EPA encourages the public to review the Proposed Plan, fact sheet and other documents at:
EPA’s Portland Harbor website
Multnomah County Central Library, 801 SW 10th Avenue, Portland, Or
St. Johns Library, 7510 N Charleston Avenue, Portland, OR
Kenton Library, 8226 N Denver Ave, Portland, OR
EPA Region 10 Oregon Operations Office, 805 SW Broadway St., Suite 500, Portland, OR, 503-326-3250 (please call for an appointment)
EPA Region 10 Superfund Records Center, 1200 Sixth Avenue, Seattle, WA, 206-553-4494 (please call for an appointment)


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