Current:Home > StocksEPA Faulted for Wasting Millions, Failing to Prevent Spread of Superfund Site Contamination -GlobalInvest
EPA Faulted for Wasting Millions, Failing to Prevent Spread of Superfund Site Contamination
View
Date:2025-04-14 02:45:54
The Environmental Protection Agency may have wasted or risked millions of dollars by failing to prevent the spread of contamination hazardous to human health at a Superfund site in Pensacola, Florida, an agency watchdog report found.
An EPA Inspector General’s report released last week said the agency failed to plug existing wells near the Superfund site that could be used by private property owners in the neighborhood to pump contaminated groundwater, and did not prevent those property owners from digging new wells and carrying out soil-disturbing activities, such as home renovations and landscaping.
The 18-acre site at issue, American Creosote Works, three blocks north of Pensacola Bay, is a former wood treatment plant that operated from 1902 to 1981, using creosote and pentachlorophenol (PCP) to treat railroad ties and telephone poles. In 2021, Inside Climate News wrote about the risks associated with the site, which is one of only a handful of Superfund sites nationwide that the EPA considers both an uncontrolled threat to human health and at risk of climate change-related events like flooding and hurricanes.
We’re hiring!
Please take a look at the new openings in our newsroom.
See jobsIn September 2020—days before Hurricane Sally dumped 30 inches of rain on Pensacola in four hours and left an oil slick-like sheen on the streets of the adjacent Sanders Beach neighborhood—the EPA found dioxin, the same compound found in Agent Orange, at levels in the soil of nearby homes that were well above Florida’s safety standard for the toxin: One sample came back 35 times higher.
Earlier in 2020, the EPA found naphthalene, which has been linked with neurological and liver disease, in one groundwater sample at more than 785 times the level of Florida’s groundwater cleanup standard.
In 1983, American Creosote Works was placed on the EPA’s Superfund list, denoting it as one of the nation’s most contaminated areas.
During its March 2023 to January 2024 investigation, the inspector general’s office identified 13 properties near the Superfund site with wells or well infrastructure that the EPA has said need remediation.
The wells and infrastructure are problematic because they could be used to pump and spread contaminated groundwater into areas where clean-up activities have taken place and increase the public’s risk of exposure to known carcinogens.
The groundwater around the site contains multiple toxins, including naphthalene, benzene and dioxin.
The U.S. government has so far expended more than $30 million on cleanup efforts at the American Creosote Works site, including the excavation and relocation of some contaminated soils and the pumping and treating of some groundwater. The plant’s former owner declared bankruptcy in 1982, discharging its obligations to pay for the clean up.
As far back as 1994, public records contain at least one instance where residents raised concerns about the use of wells that could spread contamination.
Yet, for more than a decade, from 2002 to 2013, the EPA did not evaluate the affected area for the existence of wells. When the agency did perform such evaluations, officials often relied on visual assessments without physically accessing properties. In some cases, EPA surveyors merely relied on the word of neighbors. This led to errors, the report said, with at least seven properties having well infrastructure that surveyors said had none.
The report also faulted the EPA for failing to negotiate deed and land-use restrictions with property owners to prevent soil-disturbing activities from taking place.
When it came to meeting legal requirements requiring the agency to keep the public abreast of information about the site, the EPA also fell short by providing the public with information that was “inaccurate,” “difficult to find and understand” and “vague.”
By law, the EPA is required to maintain complete and accurate records of each Superfund site’s history, but both the American Creosote Works Superfund site’s website and the physical records were incomplete.
Among other deficiencies, the EPA’s geographic information system inaccurately represents the area of contamination by excluding contaminated parcels that the report said could mislead home owners, real estate agents, contractors and state and local agencies that issue building and well permits, “causing them to believe that there is no soil contamination.”
Despite the known groundwater and soil contamination at the site, residents and other private property owners obtained legal permits for wells and groundwater irrigation from the Northwest Florida Water Management District. In one case highlighted in the report, a “private facility” obtained well permits in 1997 and 2004. Subsequently, the EPA excavated and replaced 4,000 cubic yards of contaminated soil from the next door property, but never decommissioned the wells that caused the problem. As of May 2023, those wells were still in use, the report said.
The Inspector General’s investigation was initiated to assess EPA’s implementation of $40 million in funds allocated from the 2021 Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act for final remediation of the site. The EPA “potentially wasted” $6.7 million of that funding because of the problems identified in the inspector general’s report.
EPA Administrative Region 4, which has primary responsibility for the American Creosote Works site, did not immediately respond to a request for comment but did provide direct responses to the Inspector General, which are included in the report. Region 4 officials agreed to some of the report’s recommendations, including the IG’s suggestion to seek the permission of private property owners to plug groundwells and to work with the City of Pensacola to notify construction permit applicants of dangers associated with the site. Officials contested other recommendations and findings in the report, citing among other things, that carrying out negotiations with private property owners for land title restrictions would delay remediation efforts, which remain ongoing.
Share this article
veryGood! (28823)
Related
- Woman dies after Singapore family of 3 gets into accident in Taiwan
- Rare gold coins, worth $2,000, left as donations in Salvation Army red kettles nationwide
- Biden will meet with families of Americans taken hostage by Hamas on Wednesday at the White House
- Swedish authorities say 5 people died when a construction elevator crashed to the ground
- Paula Abdul settles lawsuit with former 'So You Think You Can Dance' co
- Anderson Cooper Has the Best Reaction to BFF Andy Cohen's NSFW Bedroom Questions
- Stock market today: Asia markets rise ahead of US consumer prices update
- Israel and the US face growing isolation over Gaza as offensive grinds on with no end in sight
- All That You Wanted to Know About She’s All That
- Feel Like a Star With 58 Gift Ideas From Celebrity Brands- SKIMS, Goop, BEIS, Rhode & More
Ranking
- Megan Fox's ex Brian Austin Green tells Machine Gun Kelly to 'grow up'
- China’s Xi visits Vietnam weeks after it strengthened ties with the US and Japan
- Patrick Mahomes, Chiefs are wildly off mark in blaming NFL refs for Kadarius Toney penalty
- Bernie Madoff victims to get additional $158 million in restitution
- At site of suspected mass killings, Syrians recall horrors, hope for answers
- Cheating, a history: 10 scandals that rocked the world of sports
- Remembering Ryan O'Neal
- Secret Santa Gifts on Amazon That Understand the Assignment & They're Under $30
Recommendation
Why Sean "Diddy" Combs Is Being Given a Laptop in Jail Amid Witness Intimidation Fears
An asylum-seeker in UK has died onboard a moored barge housing migrants
Shohei Ohtani’s massive $700 million deal with Dodgers defers $680 million for 10 years
5 big promises made at annual UN climate talks and what has happened since
Jamie Foxx reps say actor was hit in face by a glass at birthday dinner, needed stitches
Scientists say AI is emerging as potential tool for athletes using banned drugs
Tricia Tuttle appointed as the next director of the annual Berlin film festival
Poor countries need trillions of dollars to go green. A long-shot effort aims to generate the cash