San Diego Union-Tribune

EPA AWARDS $1B TO CLEAN UP 22 WASTE SITES

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Projects to clean up 22 toxic waste sites across the country will receive $1 billion from the federal Superfund program to help clear a backlog of hazardous sites such as landfills, mines and manufactur­ing facilities, the Environmen­tal Protection Agency said Friday.

The money is the second installmen­t in $3.5 billion appropriat­ed under the 2021 infrastruc­ture law signed by President Joe Biden. Sites targeted for cleanup include a lead-contaminat­ed neighborho­od on Atlanta’s Westside and a former dry cleaning solvents distributo­r in Tampa, Fla.

The money also will be used to speed cleanup of 100 ongoing Superfund projects across the United States, the EPA said. The agency has vowed to clear a longtime backlog in the Superfund program, which was establishe­d in 1980 to clean up sites contaminat­ed with hazardous substances. The program has languished for years because of a lack of funding.

The EPA announced an initial $1 billion in funding from the infrastruc­ture law in December 2021.

While the agency is moving faster to clean up contaminat­ed sites in communitie­s across the country, “our work is not yet finished,” EPA Administra­tor Michael Regan said in a statement Friday. “We’re continuing to build on this momentum to ensure that communitie­s living near many of the most serious uncontroll­ed or abandoned releases of contaminat­ion finally get the investment­s and protection­s they deserve.”

Of the new cleanup sites announced on Friday, 60 percent are in low-income or minority communitie­s that are chronicall­y over-polluted, Regan said.

Thousands of contaminat­ed sites exist across the country as a result of hazardous waste being dumped — often illegally — left out in the open, or otherwise improperly managed, including in manufactur­ing facilities, processing plants, landfills and mining sites.

Superfund cleanups help transform contaminat­ed properties and create jobs in overburden­ed communitie­s, while repurposin­g these sites for a wide range of uses, including public parks, retail businesses, office space, homes and solar power generation, EPA said.

Besides the Atlanta and Tampa projects, money also will go to a groundwate­r contaminat­ion site in Indianapol­is, a former tannery in Danvers, Mass., and a former metal stamping and tool and die shop near St. Louis. The funding also includes new cleanup of a former General Motors foundry in Upstate New York that has been on the Superfund list since 1984. The site in Massena has long been contaminat­ed by toxic chemicals known as PCBs and other pollutants.

In all, new projects in 14 states and Puerto Rico will receive funding, EPA said.

 ?? WAYNE PARRY AP FILE ?? A gate at the entrance to the former Ciba Geigy chemical plant in Toms River, N.J., is filled with warnings regarding contaminat­ion in the area, which is on the Superfund list of the nation’s worst toxic waste sites.
WAYNE PARRY AP FILE A gate at the entrance to the former Ciba Geigy chemical plant in Toms River, N.J., is filled with warnings regarding contaminat­ion in the area, which is on the Superfund list of the nation’s worst toxic waste sites.

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