The Register Citizen (Torrington, CT)

BROWNFIELD­S DISCUSSED

Officials: Old sites pose health, safety hazards

- By Amanda Webster awebster@registerci­tizen.com @AmandaaaWe­bster on Twitter

TORRINGTON >> U.S. Sen. Chris Murphy and U.S. Rep. Elizabeth Esty held a roundtable discussion at City Hall on Friday to talk about the health and safety hazards that brownfield sites pose for the community.

The discussion was held in wake of a fire that tore through an abandoned factory building in Waterbury, known as the Bristol Co. factory. The fire broke out on Aug. 13 and took firefighte­rs about 12 hours to extinguish, according to several news sources.

Several city representa­tives gathered at City Hall to discuss ideas on how to combat not only the economic impact of brownfield sites but also the safety risks faced by first responders in case of an emergency, like the incident in Waterbury.

“There are so many ways to talk about brownfield­s,” Murphy said. “There are so many cases to be made for why the remediatio­n of these sites are so critical to Connecticu­t’s future.”

The immediate case to be made, according to Murphy, is the case of public safety.

“We’ve seen a disturbing

“There are so many cases to be made for why the remediatio­n of these sites are so critical to Connecticu­t’s future.” — U.S. Sen. Chris Murphy, speaking at a roundtable discussion at City Hall

trend line of major fires in big, old, dangerous, polluted factories up and down this corridor,” he said.

Deputy Fire Chief Christophe­r Pepler said that when he looks at old, abandoned buildings he looks from a firefighti­ng perspectiv­e as opposed to an economic perspectiv­e.

“I look at risk assessment,” he said.

Part of the problem with the abandoned buildings is that they become a refuge for the growing homeless population in Torrington, according to Pepler, and that many fires are caused by those living inside the buildings. Because some of the old buildings are occupied by homeless individual­s, should a fire break out, firefighte­rs may need to enter the buildings and expose themselves to health and safety risks, he said.

The major obstacle faced by municipali­ties in the clean-up of these sites is finding the property owner and then making that owner accept responsibi­lity for clean-up efforts, officials said.

State Rep. Michelle Cook, D-65, questioned the implementa­tion of a timeline that would allow municipali­ties to act on a property after a certain amount of time has gone by with no action on the part of the property owner.

“I just think that it’s absolutely ridiculous that as a taxpayer in this municipali­ty, that I can drive up and down the street and I’m responsibl­e for maintainin­g everything I have on my property, but this guy is not and we have no recourse,” she said, referring to absentee-owners. “And he can not be for 40 or 50 years.”

Cost is also a factor that prevents immediate resolve for blighted and dangerous properties.

“Right now, clean-up costs are pretty considerab­le,” said Esty. “We want to get some urgency around this. There hasn’t been sufficient funding.”

 ?? AMANDA WEBSTER — THE REGISTER CITIZEN ?? Deputy Fire Marshal Jarred Howe, Director of Economic Developmen­t Erin Wilson, state Rep. Michelle Cook and U.S. Rep. Elizabeth Esty partake in a discussion on brownfield cleanup in Torrington on Friday.
AMANDA WEBSTER — THE REGISTER CITIZEN Deputy Fire Marshal Jarred Howe, Director of Economic Developmen­t Erin Wilson, state Rep. Michelle Cook and U.S. Rep. Elizabeth Esty partake in a discussion on brownfield cleanup in Torrington on Friday.
 ?? CONTRIBUTE­D PHOTO ?? U.S. Sen. Chris Murphy attended a roundtable discussion in Torrington to talk about the safety hazards of brownfield properties.
CONTRIBUTE­D PHOTO U.S. Sen. Chris Murphy attended a roundtable discussion in Torrington to talk about the safety hazards of brownfield properties.

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