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In Housatonic River Deal With GE, Towns Agree To Toxic Waste Dump In The Berkshires

Updated at 11:00 p.m.

After more than a year and a half of mediation, the U.S. EPA New England office, General Electric and cities and towns along the Housatonic River have agreed to dispose some toxic PCB sediment at a site near the Lee-Lenox line, about 1,000 feet from the river. But not all participants in the mediated settlement agree with the decision. 

An event marking the announcement took place Monday afternoon in Lenox, right next to the Housatonic River and Woods Pond – which has high volumes of sediment contaminated with PCBs.

GE polluted the river with PCBs for decades from its former transformer plant in Pittsfield. The EPA now says PCBs can cause a “multitude of serious adverse health effects” in the reproductive, endocrine, immune and nervous systems. The agency classifies PCBs as a probable human carcinogen.

The agreement calls for the “most contaminated waste” dug up from the river, its banks and floodplains to be disposed of out of state. GE will choose from about a dozen regulated facilities, all of which are outside Massachusetts. 

Material with “lower levels of waste” would be dumped in a disposal facility to be built by GE on the site of a former gravel pit on the Lee-Lenox line. 

This disposal plan, which the EPA is calling a "hybrid" approach, marks a reversal for the agency and the towns. The EPA had previously argued that all PCB-laden waste should be shipped out of state. GE, which is on the hook for the cleanup costs, objected.

In 2016, the EPA wrote in its response to comments on its cleanup plan that the proposed site on the Lee-Lenox line does not meet Toxic Substances Control Act requirements for soil or hydrological characteristics, meaning the soil is too permeable and the location is too close to the water table. 

But under the agreement announced Monday, that site has been chosen to store “lower levels of waste.” 

Roger Martella, General Electric's director of environmental health and safety speaking at the announcement of a mediated settlement to clean up the Housatonic River. A now-closed GE plant in Pittsfield contaminated the river with PCBs.
Credit Nancy Eve Cohen / NEPR
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NEPR
Roger Martella, General Electric's director of environmental health and safety speaking at the announcement of a mediated settlement to clean up the Housatonic River. A now-closed GE plant in Pittsfield contaminated the river with PCBs.

According to the EPA, the ”average concentrations of PCBs” in the proposed landfill in the Berkshires will be 20-25 parts per million, well below the threshold for PCB waste regulated by the toxic substances act.

"We are basically building a TSCA landfill — a Toxic Substances Control Act landfill — even though the material that's going in there...is lower than that standard," said Bryan Olson of the EPA.

The EPA said GE will build a “state-of-the-art” facility with a double liner on the bottom, a leachate collection system and groundwater monitoring. 

The agreement also calls for removing more sediment containing PCBs than the EPA originally proposed. And GE's Roger Martella said the cleanup will begin sooner that expected.

"I am sincere in that. We are going to start that design immediately," Martella said. "This is a far better alternative to more years of protracted litigation which would delay the cleanup and extend the uncertainty."

As part of the settlement, GE agrees to pay Lenox, Lee, Great Barrington, Stockbridge and Sheffield a total of $55 million. Pittsfield will get $8 million. 

Those municipalities are part of the group that reached the agreement. It also includes the state of Connecticut, Massachusetts Audubon Society, C. Jeffrey Cook—a Pittsfield resident whose property is next to the river, and the Berkshire Environmental Action Team. The state of Massachusetts did not participate in the mediation. 

Clare Lahey of Lee, Massachusetts, protests at the announcement of an agreement to clean up the Housatonic River, which includes a toxic waste dump in her town.
Credit Nancy Eve Cohen / NEPR
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NEPR
Clare Lahey of Lee, Massachusetts, protests at the announcement of an agreement to clean up the Housatonic River, which includes a toxic waste dump in her town.

Another environmental group, The Housatonic River Initiative, is against the agreement.

The group's Dave Gibbs, a Pittsfield resident, said his group agreed with a lot of the settlement, but not disposing more toxic waste in the Berkshires.

"My mission is to get rid of it and while we would have liked to have signed it we can't go along with the toxic dumps period," Gibbs said.

The settlement includes some property transfers. GE will donate the woodland above Rising Pond to Great Barrington, and is giving a building and a parking lot to the city of Pittsfield.

The settlement modifies the cleanup plan proposed by the EPA in October 2016. Five parties filed appeals with the EPA’s Environmental Appeals Board, including General Electric and environmental groups. In 2018, the appeals board approved most of the cleanup plan, but did not issue a decision on EPA’s proposal to send the waste to a regulated facility outside of Massachusetts. 

That issue became the main focus of the mediation. 

Another question before the mediation was GE’s long-term responsibility for PCB waste if there are future projects on the river, such as work on dams or docks. This was of particular concern to the state of Connecticut. As part of the new agreement, GE will be responsible for removing PCBs if there is future work in the river downstream of the former plant.

The agreement also includes the removal of two mill dams on the river, the Columbia Mill Dam and Eagle Mill Dam, both in Lee.

The EPA plans to hold three public meetings on the settlement agreement in Lee, Great Barrington and Pittsfield in February and March. In addition, the agency will open a 45-day public comment period. The EPA said it will consider public comments, and possibly revise the plan, before the end of this year.

This is the third phase of cleanup from the GE plant. The original settlement, reached in October 1999, focused on the first two miles of the river downstream of the GE plant. It also included land-based cleanup of PCBs outside of the Housatonic River, and an analysis of this third phase — removing PCBs from about 30 miles of the river from Pittsfield to Great Barrington, known as “Rest of River.”  

Under the 1999 deal, Pittsfield agreed to have sediment containing PCBs buried in two disposal sites in the city, one of which is next to Allendale Elementary School. GE gave Pittsfield $10 million over ten years and another $15.3 million to the Pittsfield Economic Development Authority. GE also transferred about 50 acres of its former plant site to the city. 

The “Rest of River” cleanup has long been delayed. In a press release dated October 7, 1999,the EPA said it would decide on final cleanup plan by 2002. The settlement announced Monday is another step towards a final plan.

Correction: An earlier version of this report incorrectly spelled Clare Lahey's name in a caption.

Staffers from the New England office of the U.S. EPA listen as a new cleanup plan for the Housatonic River is announced in Lenox, Mass. (from L to R) Tim Conway, Bob Cianciarulo, Dean Tagliaferro, Kelsey Dumville and Bryan Olson.
Nancy Eve Cohen / NEPR
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NEPR
Staffers from the New England office of the U.S. EPA listen as a new cleanup plan for the Housatonic River is announced in Lenox, Mass. (from L to R) Tim Conway, Bob Cianciarulo, Dean Tagliaferro, Kelsey Dumville and Bryan Olson.

Copyright 2020 New England Public Media

Nancy Eve Cohen is a senior reporter focusing on Berkshire County. Previously she served as the editor of the Northeast Environmental Hub, a collaborative of public radio stations. Earlier in her career she was the Midwest editor for NPR in Washington, D.C. Before working in radio, she recorded sound as part of a camera crew for network television news, with assignments in Russia, Guatemala, Mexico, Cuba and in Sarajevo during the war in 1992.

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