PHILADELPHIA - U.S. District
Judge Robert F. Kelly has approved the government's settlement with 22 parties involved in
a lawsuit over the cleanup of the Douglassville Disposal Superfund Site in Berks County,
Pa. The settling parties have agreed to complete an
EPA-approved cleanup plan, costing an estimated $14 to $18 million, reimburse EPA $13.85
million for past activities at the 50-acre Superfund site, and set aside $1.1 million for
future operation and maintenance costs. The consent decree, filed by the Justice
Department on behalf of the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, resolves the
government's cleanup claims against 14 private companies and eight federal agencies.
EPA Acting Regional Administrator Thomas Voltaggio hailed the
settlement, which largely concludes the Superfund case filed in 1991. "This
settlement avoids the cost and delay of further litigation, and allows EPA and the
settling companies to concentrate on finishing the cleanup at Douglassville," said
Voltaggio.
The Douglassville Disposal Superfund Site, located approximately 11
miles southeast of Reading, is a former waste oil recycling facility operated by Berks
Associates, Inc. from 1941 until 1985. Berks disposed of several million gallons of waste
oil sludge in lagoons and waste pits on the property. Contaminants at the site include
volatile organic compounds, polychlorinated biphenyls ("PCBs") and lead.
Periodic flooding of the adjoining Schuylkill River resulted in wastes from the on-site
sludge lagoons entering the river.
Under the Superfund law, the landowners, waste generators and waste
transporters responsible for creating a hazardous waste site are responsible for cleaning
up the site, or reimbursing the government or other parties for cleanup activities.
The site was placed on the Superfund list of the nation's most
hazardous waste sites in 1983. In 1990, EPA completed the decontamination and dismantling
of the site's waste oil processing facility, and removed liquids and sludge from on-site
tanks and trucks. In 1989, the agency issued a decision which called for the excavation
and on-site incineration of certain wastes. Technological advances in soil stabilization
remedies, at a substantial cost savings, prompted the agency to reconsider the
incineration plan. EPA approved an alternative remedial plan in 1999, including an
innovative lime-based stabilization process, which converts oily waste into solid,
soil-like material. The stabilized material will be landfilled and covered at the site.
EPA estimates that the parties involved in the settlement announced
today are responsible for sending approximately 21 million gallons of waste oil for
treatment or storage at this site. The settling parties include the site owners (H. Lester
Schurr and Berks Associates, Inc.) 12 parties that allegedly generated the waste oil and
other hazardous substances at the site (Cabot Corporation, Consolidated Rail Corporation,
CSXT, The Glidden Company, Lehigh Valley Railroad, Penn Central Transportation, Scott
Paper, Southeastern Pennsylvania Transportation Authority, USX, Chevron Environmental
Management Company, Shell Oil, A & A Waste Oil) and eight federal agencies (Department
of Defense, U.S. Army, U.S. Air Force, U.S. Navy, U.S. Coast Guard, U.S. Mint, U.S. Postal
Service, and the U.S. Printing Office.)
This is the government's third settlement with parties involved in
the Douglassville Superfund litigation. In July 1999, the court approved a $9 million
settlement with 144 parties that contributed minimal amounts of hazardous substances to
the site. In February 1994, the bankruptcy court also approved a $450,000 settlement with
Farley Industries.
The government is continuing to negotiate with several parties that
allegedly contributed small amounts of hazardous waste to this site. ~EPA press
release |