E.P.A. Completes Cleanup of Former Lead Smelter Location in Pilsen
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Category: Hazardous WasteType: News
Source: EPA
Date: Thursday, November 7th, 2013
Chicago - E.P.A. (EPA) Administrator Gina McCarthy today announced that E.P.A. has finished cleaning up Loewenthal Metals, a former lead smelter location in Chicago's Pilsen neighborhood. In response to community concerns, E.P.A. removed high concentrations of lead in the soil to ensure that the property is safe for residential use in the future.
Last June, E.P.A. began the removal of 4,800 tons of contaminated soil and debris from the Loewenthal site. Today, E.P.A. announced that the contaminated soil has been replaced with clean soil that is seeded to prevent erosion.
"I'm proud of EPA's work, partnering with city and state officials, to clean up the former Loewenthal Metals site," said McCarthy. "Cleaning up dangerous levels of lead in Pilsen is just one example of how E.P.A. is making a real difference for families and communities across the country-especially those most vulnerable to environmental hazards."
Earlier, Administrator McCarthy toured the Pilsen and Little Village neighborhoods to see first-hand the progress of E.P.A. efforts to reduce pollution in the area.
"The example of the Loewenthal cleanup shows why EPA's work is so important to all working communities," said Rosalie Mancera, Board President,Pilsen Alliance. "We hope we keep addressing Pilsen's industrial footprint."
"Over the past couple of years PERRO has developed a good working relationship with the U.S. EPA," said Jerry Mead-Lucero, Pilsen Environmental Rights and Reform Organization (PERRO.) "We have regular meetings with U.S. E.P.A. staff to stay on top of multiple sites of concern in the community. The increased cooperation between U.S. E.P.A. and PERRO has already resulted in the remediation of contaminated sites in the neighborhood and we expect more sites to be addressed in the near future."
"It is a great day when a toxic location such as Loewenthal no longer poses a threat to a frontline community like Pilsen," said Antonio Lopez, Executive Director, Little Village Environmental Justice Organization. "LVEJO congratulates PERRO for their steady commitment to Environmental Justice in Pilsen and the E.P.A. Region five for the remediation work they performed. We look forward to seeing this and other former industrial sites transform and contribute to the surrounding community's health and wellness through green infrastructure projects, and to the economic strength of the area through living-wage renewable energy jobs."
Loewenthal Metals is a half-acre location in a largely residential part of Chicago. Historical records indicate that the facility operated as a lead and zinc smelter, as well as a scrap metal dealer during the 1940s. In December 2011, the Illinois E.P.A. referred the location to U.S. E.P.A. for potential cleanup. After obtaining a warrant to access the site, E.P.A. began sampling soil for lead in November 2012 and started the cleanup last June.
More information about EPA's activities in the Little Village and Pilsen neighborhoods is accessible on the E.P.A. Web site: http://epa.gov/region5/littlevillagepilsen/.
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