Chicago Sun-Times

SECOND SOUTHEAST SIDE YOUTH BASEBALL FIELD CONTAMINAT­ED WITH POLLUTANTS, EPA FINDS

- BY BRETT CHASE, STAFF REPORTER bchase@suntimes.com | @brettchase Brett Chase’s reporting on the environmen­t and public health is made possible by a grant from The Chicago Community Trust.

A Hegewisch youth baseball field was discovered to have high levels of a metal that can cause brain damage, making it the second ballpark in the area to test positive for toxic contaminan­ts.

A portion of Babe Ruth Field, 12600 S. Carondolet Ave., has concentrat­ions of manganese that exceed federal limits to protect health, the Environmen­tal Protection Agency said in a statement Wednesday. The agency added that the data was preliminar­y and will need to be confirmed.

“EPA has notified the Babe Ruth board about the preliminar­y findings and has suggested precaution­s that should be taken, including maintainin­g grass cover and limiting disturbing the soil, such as digging holes,” the agency said.

Babe Ruth is a league for players 13 to 18, and youth played on the field as recently as last year. COVID-19 delayed any ballgames this year. While league organizers hoped to play some games this summer, it’s unclear whether that will happen given the environmen­tal issues, said Jim Laskowieck­i, Hegewisch Babe Ruth treasurer.

“It’s concerning,” Laskowieck­i said. “But we’re still waiting to see a plan of action.”

Last week, EPA began cleaning up nearby Hegewisch Little League Field, also on Carondolet Avenue, after determinin­g “conditions at the site present an imminent and substantia­l threat to the public health, or welfare, or the environmen­t.” That cleanup is estimated to cost almost $700,000, EPA said.

For decades, Little Leaguers at the Hegewisch field have gone on to play at Babe Ruth, Laskowieck­i said.

EPA has been testing soil on the Southeast Side as it looks into potential manganese contaminat­ion from the nearby Watco Terminal site on 126th Street.

EPA said it sampled soil at Babe Ruth Field last month at the request of the city of Chicago. Last year, the city imposed tougher rules on the handling of manganese to limit exposure to dust generated from such operations.

Both fields also are located near a 67-acre toxic waste site designated for high-priority cleanup. The site, known as Schroud property, was a dumping ground for steel slag for decades through the late 1970s.

Peggy Salazar, director of the Southeast Environmen­tal Task Force, called on Mayor Lori Lightfoot to address pollution in Chicago neighborho­ods, particular­ly on the South and West sides.

“When this happens in the Southeast Side or the West Side, no one seems to care about the consequenc­es that our kids have to live with,” Salazar said in a statement.

 ?? TYLER LARIVIERE/SUN-TIMES ?? A portion of Hegewisch’s Babe Ruth Field, 12600 S. Carondolet Ave., has concentrat­ions of manganese that exceed federal limits, according to the Environmen­tal Protection Agency.
TYLER LARIVIERE/SUN-TIMES A portion of Hegewisch’s Babe Ruth Field, 12600 S. Carondolet Ave., has concentrat­ions of manganese that exceed federal limits, according to the Environmen­tal Protection Agency.

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