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Wednesday, March 30, 2011
Hofstra is Hosting an Information Session on EPA's Lead RRP Law.
Tuesday, March 29, 2011
Jury Selection Begins in the Deutsche Bank Building Fire Trial
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- Trial stemming from deadly Deutsche Bank fire begins (reuters.com)
- Finally Gone, Ground Zero Tower In Focus At Trial (newyork.cbslocal.com)
- Tower damaged on 9/11 finally coming down (msnbc.msn.com)
- Almost 10 Years Later, Old Deutsche Bank Tower Is Down (newyork.cbslocal.com)
Monday, March 28, 2011
EPA Proposes to Add Area Near Hicksville, New Cassel, Westbury, Hempstead and Salisbury, N.Y. to the Federal Superfund List
With the proposal of this site to the Superfund List, a 60-day comment period will begin during which EPA solicits public input regarding this action. For instructions on how to submit comments, go to http://www.epa.gov/superfund/sites/npl/pubcom.htm or contact Dennis Munhall at (212) 637-4343 or munhall.dennis@epa.gov.
VOCs are often used as ingredients in paint, solvents, aerosol sprays, cleaners, disinfectants, automotive products and dry cleaning fluids. Repeated and direct exposure to VOCs can cause serious health effects including damage to the liver, kidneys and central nervous system.
“By placing the site on the federal Superfund list, EPA can do the extensive sampling needed to determine the best ways to address the widespread ground water contamination in this area of Long Island,” said EPA Regional Administrator Judith Enck. “Residents of Long Island rely on ground water as their source of drinking water. It is imperative that Long Island’s drinking water is protected from toxic contamination. Placing these areas on the federal Superfund list is an essential step to cleaning up this water contamination. EPA needs to take a more comprehensive look at the contamination and any potential health and environmental threats it poses.”
New York State had been examining a number of areas contained in the newly proposed site individually, and determined that the contamination would be better addressed as one large site. Ground water testing by EPA in 2010 confirmed the presence of elevated levels of VOCs in 11 public water supply wells, six in Hicksville, four in Hempstead and one on Westbury. The impacted towns have installed treatment systems to remove VOCs from the contaminated ground water before it goes into the water distribution systems, and to monitor water quality and the treatment systems regularly.
A variety of past industrial and commercial activities in the area may have caused the ground water contamination, although investigations by the New York State Department of Environmental Protection (NYSDEC) have yet to identify the specific sources contaminating the wells. NYSDEC has investigated 17 facilities in the New Cassel industrial area between Frost St. in New Cassel and Swalm Ave. in North Hempstead. NYSDEC and some of the entities in the New Cassel industrial area potentially responsible for the contamination have already installed systems to remove contaminants from the ground water at and near some of the sites. The New Cassel industrial area is just north of the four contaminated wells – the Bowling Green wells – in Hempstead.
With all Superfund sites, EPA does an extensive search to identify and locate the parties potentially responsible for the contamination and make them pay or perform the cleanup work. The majority of Superfund cleanups are performed by or paid for ny polluters, not tax dollars. Superfund money s used for EPA oversight costs and when no responsible party can be identified.
Related articles
- EPA adds 2 wells in Puerto Rico to Superfund list (seattletimes.nwsource.com)
- BRIEF: Eight more defendants in Superfund suit pay to settle claims (newdayunderwriting.wordpress.com)
- EPA, NYC Brace for Grueling Cleanups of 2 Industrial Waterways (nytimes.com)
- Appeals court upholds Utah Superfund listing (seattletimes.nwsource.com)
- The $500 Million Superfund Cleanup (huffingtonpost.com)
Friday, March 25, 2011
Engineering News Record of New York Interviews William Rapetti
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Tower Crane in Venice, Italy |
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- Rigger Acquitted in Deadly '08 NYC Crane Collapse (abcnews.go.com)
- Crane rigger found not guilty in 2008 East Side crane collapse (nydailynews.com)
- Rigging contractor found not guilty in New York crane collapse (cnn.com)
- NYC crane rigger cleared in fatal collapse (cbc.ca)
Thursday, March 24, 2011
Successful PACNY Conference Gets Even Better The Second Day - Part 2
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Roundtable Participants - Mr. Alonge, Mr. Yehl, Mr. Garcia, & Mr. Hart |
Unfortunately, due to the need to check-out of the hotel before 11 AM, we missed Paul Watson's, of ATC Associates, "A Discussion about Mercury." That brought the conference to the main event, Christopher Alonge, PE, of New York State Department of Labor (NYSDOL) discussing "Code Rule 56 Update." As in previous presentations, Mr. Alonge was nice enough to provide his presentation to the attendees at this link: http://www.pacny.org/docs/2011-ICR-56-Changes.pdf. The attached presentation includes changes made by NY Department of State regarding the Fire/Life Safety proposed changes we have seen in Mr. Alonge's previous presentations. Examples include changing the requirement of a code compliance technician to a code compliance officer for notification/variance sign-off, requirements for required exists, emergency lighting, and portable fire extinguishers. NYSDOL will also be creating a code compliance course for code enforcement officials that will be 4-hours of in-service training. Mr. Alonge is anticipating a schedule of June 2011 for publishing and October 2011 for finalizing. Still not sure if there will be a adoption period. The biggest uproar and most questions during the Q&A period was regarding the proposed NYSDOL change that all asbestos has to be removed before any demolition, renovation, or remodel. This change brought about the most questions and concerns from the audience. After Mr Alonge's presentation an industry roundtable Q&A was moderated by Mr. Sean Hart, of AECOM Environment, and consisted of Mr. Alonge; Mr. Joe Cantone, of Colden Corporation; Mr. Peter DeLucia, of AAC Contracting; Mr. Darren Yehl, of LeChase Construction Services; and Angelo Garcia, III, of FED.
I was honored to be selected on the panel again this year. I enjoyed meeting people that I've met year after year and unfortunately only get to meet at this conference. It seems to me the PACNY organization seems to be getting better and better each year, and I look forward to seeing it continue its growth well into the future.
Related articles
- 15th Annual PACNY Environmental Conference (futureenv.blogspot.com)
- Save The Date For PACNY's 15th Annual Environmental Conference (futureenv.blogspot.com)
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