New York Daily News

NEW FEAR AT NYCHA

B’klyn bldg. tainted by chemicals

- BY GREG B. SMITH With Elizabeth Keogh

A Brooklyn NYCHA developmen­t located next to land that’s been tainted by dry cleaning and petroleum spills recently registered alarming levels of chemicals in indoor air, the Daily News has learned.

Sensors installed inside five randomly chosen apartments throughout the 16-story Saratoga Village developmen­t in Brownsvill­e consistent­ly detected levels of volatile organic compounds far greater than those the federal government deems acceptable.

From July 16 through Wednesday, NYCHA consultant BlocPower found high chemical levels inside apartments on the fifth, 10th and 14th floors of the 125-unit building at 33 Saratoga Ave. The detected chemicals could include benzene — a compound found in petroleum — and tetrachlor­oethylene, a compound found in drycleanin­g.

The disturbing test results come as NYCHA management has been caught lying about its failure to perform required lead paint inspection­s and the revelation that more than 1,100 living in NYCHA apartments have tested positive for lead poisoning since 2012. After the exposure of this long-running cover-up, the authority in June agreed to the appointmen­t of a federal monitor.

“Why is it that families within NYCHA constantly have to bear the health burdens of mismanagem­ent and neglect?” asked Brooklyn Councilwom­an Alicka Ampry-Samuel, chairwoman of the Public Housing Committee. “Is it because families in NYCHA are people of color, and most from low economic background­s? We have constantly witnessed a lack of response and urgency when it comes to these major concerns and, unfortunat­ely, we are now seeing the consequenc­es, and families are becoming sick. We need to act now to make all the needed repairs to make public housing safe and healthy for our children and families.”

The source of the chemicals at Saratoga Village remains unknown, but The News found evidence that land next door has been found to be contaminat­ed.

Earlier this year as part of its ongoing cleanup of toxic sites, state Department of Environmen­tal Conservati­on inspectors tested a vacant city-owned lot next door to the NYCHA project, which housed a dry cleaning operation from 1949 to 1965.

The dry cleaning is long gone, but the inspectors found elevated levels of tetrachlor­oethylene and petroleum throughout the soil, records show. The state DEC told the News Monday that the results of the tests are currently under review.

And in April 2015, a city-hired contractor excavating site adjacent to the Saratoga Village building on the same lot found elevated levels of petroleum in the soil, documents obtained by the News from the Binghamton, N.Y.-based environmen­tal consultant Toxics Targeting show.

The report states that the city Department of Environmen­tal Protection was building what's called a bioswale — a pool designed to trap water runoff — at the site. During the excavation, the “contractor noted some smelly soil.” A consultant tested the soil and found it was contaminat­ed with petroleum, the records state.

The city decided not to complete the bioswale, but contacted NYCHA. The authority manager dispatched a crew to the site, and stated that the oil tank system on site hadn't been in use “for almost 10 years.” The authority tested unspecifie­d soil at the site and said they found no petroleum present, the report states.

Last month BlocPower began sharing the results of its tests at 33 Saratoga Ave. with Metro Industrial Areas Foundation, a consortium of Brooklyn churches that has long advocated for affordable housing. Metro IAF shared the results with The News.

“Lead paint, poisonous mold, contaminat­ed water tanks — and now, toxic air for families who live in public housing,” said the Rev. David Brawley, leader of Metro IAF. “Under Mayor de Blasio, half a million black and Latino New Yorkers are getting sicker and angrier.”

Brawley called on the mayor to order immediate testing of the entire building “and implement commonsens­e air filtration and circulatio­n solutions. It's time to make all the needed repairs to make public housing safe for our children, families & seniors.”

On Thursday BlocPower staffers presented NYCHA with the test results. Managers from the company declined to discuss the test results with The News.

BlocPower was hired in May to measure health and safety conditions at NYCHA developmen­ts.

 ??  ?? Chemicals that can be used in petroleum production were found in Brownsvill­e site.
Chemicals that can be used in petroleum production were found in Brownsvill­e site.
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