Las Vegas Review-Journal

EPA to eliminate toxic waste sites

$1B in funding to tackle 22 locations

- By Matthew Daly

WASHINGTON — 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, Florida.

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 Friday, 60 percent are in low-income or minority communitie­s that are chronicall­y overpollut­ed, 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, Massachuse­tts, and a former metal stamping and tool and die shop near St. Louis.

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

About $50 million will go to clean up lead contaminat­ion in a residentia­l neighborho­od in Atlanta. The Westside project has been waiting for years to access federal funds. Experts say it’s unclear exactly where the lead came from, but it is likely from metal foundries that were once common on Atlanta’s Westside.

The cleanup money “couldn’t come soon enough,” Sen. Raphael Warnock, D-GA., said on a conference call Friday with Regan and other officials. “This accelerate­d timeline would not be possible without this historic investment.”

Similarly, a project in Tampa was identified as a Superfund site in 1999 but remains contaminat­ed, said Rep. Kathy Castor, D-fla.

The site is near where she and her husband got married, Castor said. In an apparent nod to Warnock’s status as a pastor, Castor said that while “it’s important to have faith, there’s nothing like having resources” to clean up pollution.

 ?? Patrick Semansky The Associated Press ?? EPA administra­tor Michael Regan says a $1 billion initiative to clean up 22 toxic waste sites ensures that communitie­s “finally get the investment­s and protection­s they deserve.”
Patrick Semansky The Associated Press EPA administra­tor Michael Regan says a $1 billion initiative to clean up 22 toxic waste sites ensures that communitie­s “finally get the investment­s and protection­s they deserve.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States