The Register Citizen (Torrington, CT)

EPA orders cleanup at flooded toxic site

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WASHINGTON — The Trump administra­tion has handed a rare victory to environmen­talists, ordering two big corporatio­ns this week to pay $115 million to clean up a Texas toxic waste site that may have spread dangerous levels of pollution during flooding from Hurricane Harvey.

Environmen­tal Protection Agency Administra­tor Scott Pruitt signed a directive Wednesday requiring Internatio­nal Paper and McGinnis Industrial Maintenanc­e Corp., a subsidiary of Waste Management Inc., to excavate 212,000 cubic yards of contaminat­ed sediments from the San Jacinto River Waste Pits site.

Pruitt visited the Superfund site outside Houston last month following historic rains and flooding from the storm, meeting with local environmen­tal activists who had campaigned for years for approval of a cleanup plan.

Pruitt has said cleaning Superfund sites is among his top priorities, even as he has worked to delay and rollback a wide array of environmen­tal regulation­s that would reduce air and water pollution. Often Pruitt has done so directly at the behest of industries that petitioned him for relief from what they characteri­ze as overly burdensome and costly regulation­s.

At the San Jacinto Pits, both companies opposed the expensive cleanup, arguing that a fabric and stone cap covering the 16-acre site was sufficient. The former site of a demolished paper mill that operated in the 1960s, the island in the middle of the San Jacinto River is heavily contaminat­ed with dioxins - chemicals linked to cancer and birth defects.

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