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E.P.A. Enters 5th Season of PCB Dredging in New Bedford Harbor

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Category: Pesticides/Toxic Chemicals
Type: News
Source: EPA
Date: Friday, August 8th, 2008

(Boston, Massachusetts - August 8, 2008) - In the coming weeks E.P.A. will once again conduct full scale dredging operations to clean up PCB-contaminated sediment in New Bedford Harbor.

This year's dredging will take place in the cove between Sawyer Street and Coffin Avenue in New Bedford. Work is expected to last for approximately 8 weeks, through October 2008. Similar to dredging results in recent years, E.P.A. expects to remove about 25,000 cubic yards of contaminated harbor bottom sediment.

The dredged material from the harbor bottom is pumped directly into a floating pipeline that connects the dredge to EPA's de-sanding building located at Sawyer Street. At the de-sanding facility, coarse material is separated from the finer sediment that, by its nature, has more PCB contamination adhering to it. The separated coarse material will be stored in a lined holding cell next the de-sanding facility.
From there, a submerged pipeline will carry the finer sediment 1.4 miles south to the de-watering facility located at Hervey Tichon Avenue and Herman Melville Boulevard. Inside the de-watering facility, specialized presses will squeeze the excess water out of the dredged sediment before it is loaded onto wrapped and sealed train cars before leaving the facility for offsite disposal. E.P.A. anticipates that the dredging operations will generate approximately 20 million gallons of water that will require stringent treatment to meet high water quality requirements before being released back into the harbor. The water filtration and treatment processes also take place within EPA's de-watering facility.

About 16,000 tons of dredged and de-watered sediment will be transported off-site by train and disposed of into a licensed PCB-landfill in Michigan.
During this season's dredging in the cove, E.P.A. will be conducting air monitoring in all 4 wind directions from the dredge location. This is a routine and precautionary measure. In the thousands of air samples that E.P.A. has taken before, during, and after dredging operations in New Bedford Harbor none have shown any increased risk to public health from cleanup activities.

In addition to the 4 prior seasons of full-scale harbor dredging, many other areas of PCB contaminated sediment have been cleaned up to date throughout New Bedford Harbor, including:
- 8,500 cubic yards of contaminated sediment was removed from the shoreline along the vacant Aerovox mill this past June and July 2008
- 19 acres capped in 2005 south of the hurricane barrier;
- 7 acres cleaned north of Wood Street in 2002-2003;
- 2 acres dredged in 2002 for a business relocation;
- 5 acres of the most highly contaminated sediment in the vicinity of the Aerovox mill were dredged in 1994-1995.

The New Bedford Harbor Superfund location includes all of New Bedford Harbor and parts of the Acushnet River and Buzzards Bay. The harbor is contaminated with PCBs as the result of past waste disposal practices at 2 capacitor manufacturing plants, one on the Acushnet River, the 2nd on the outer harbor. PCB wastes were discharged directly into the harbor, as well as indirectly through the city's sewer system. E.P.A. added the Harbor location to its Countrywide Priorities List (known as the Superfund list) in 1983, making the location eligible for federal Superfund cleanup funds.

Since 1983, E.P.A. has spent in excess of $250 million in planning, engineering and construction costs for the harbor cleanup. Roughly 880,000 cubic yards of contaminated harbor sediment have required cleanup, of which about 118,000 cubic yards have been cleaned up to date. With EPA's current backing level and ongoing cleanup approach, E.P.A. could potentially be working to clean the harbor for another 38 years. In light of this timeframe E.P.A. has been working to evaluate the effectiveness, feasibility and costs associated with other cleanup approaches. E.P.A. is already working to keep the public informed and encourages community participation as all local, state and federal agencies continue to work to find the safest and most effective cleanup solution. E.P.A. expects to hold public informational sessions every 3 to 6 months to provide updates, the next of which is planned for the October/ November timeframe. Informal walk-in meetings are also held at ten a.m. during the last Thursday of every month at EPA's Sawyer Street trailer.
While seafood is part of a healthy diet, fish, lobster and quahogs from the Acushnet River and New Bedford Harbor contain high levels of PCBs. Illness and harm to your health could result if they are eaten regularly, especially to women who are pregnant or of childbearing age. In 1979, the Massachusetts Department of Public Health issued restrictions on fishing and lobstering based on health risks from consumption of fish and lobster from the 18,000-acre New Bedford Harbor and Acushnet River estuary. Please take caution and notice of these restrictions.

For the most up to date information on New Bedford Harbor please visit: www.epa.gov/ne/nbh

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