EPA Completes 1,000th Superfund Site
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The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency has reached a major
milestone: the completion of construction at the 1,000th site under
Superfund, the federal government program that cleans up abandoned
hazardous waste sites.
"The Superfund program has accomplished a great deal over its
25-year-history," stated Susan Bodine, EPA's assistant
administrator for the Office of Solid Waste and Emergency Response.
"Today, we celebrate Superfund's progress and impacts on
environmental practices, economic vitality, and the good that comes
when communities are meaningfully involved in cleanup
decisions."
Today, at 95 percent of all Superfund sites listed by the agency,
construction is complete or construction is in progress. Five
hundred fifty sites are ready to be or have already been returned
to communities for productive uses.
Protecting human health and the environment and restoring
contaminated properties to environmental and economic vitality are
EPA priorities. EPA is working with communities to transform
contaminated sites into community assets. Locations that once
pulled local economies down are now generating new tax revenues and
serving as catalysts for broader revitalization. Redevelopment at
Superfund sites has resulted in more than 80,000 on-site jobs and
$2.7 billion in annual income.
To mark the 1000th construction completion, EPA officials joined
South Carolina state and local government officials, and
representatives of the Magnolia Development LLC and Cherokee
Investment Partners at the Macalloy Corporation Site celebration.
The Macalloy Corporation Site exemplifies EPA's commitment to
environmental and economic revitalization. By integrating
remediation and redevelopment plans, EPA and its partners completed
work at the site in six years and several million dollars less than
original estimates. Existing commercial and industrial businesses
along the Ashley River will be relocated onto about 30 acres of the
site, and the Charleston area is expected to benefit from a new
port facility at the remaining roughly 115 acres of the site.
Superfund was created in 1980 when Congress enacted the
Comprehensive Environmental Response, Compensation, and Liability
Act (CERCLA) to clean up the nation's uncontrolled hazardous waste
sites. Under the Superfund program, abandoned, accidentally
spilled, or illegally dumped hazardous wastes that pose a current
or future threat to human health or the environment are cleaned up.
EPA works closely with communities, potentially responsible
parties, scientists, researchers, contractors, and state, local,
tribal, and federal authorities on site cleanup. Together with
these groups, EPA identifies hazardous waste sites, tests the
conditions of the sites, develops cleanup plans, and cleans up the
sites.
For information about the Superfund Program, click
here.
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© 2012 Penton Media Inc.
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