Conflict over Gowanus Canal Superfund Status
Add the Gowanus Canal clean-up to the long list of the things the city and the state can’t seem to agree upon. The announcement by the EPA last week that it was considering making the Gowanus Canal a Superfund site at the behest of the state’s Department of Environmental Conservation has the Bloomberg administration up…

Add the Gowanus Canal clean-up to the long list of the things the city and the state can’t seem to agree upon. The announcement by the EPA last week that it was considering making the Gowanus Canal a Superfund site at the behest of the state’s Department of Environmental Conservation has the Bloomberg administration up in arms. The city, which has made reclaiming and rezoning the land along the canal a priority in recent years, says that the litigious Superfund process could take decades to play out given the long list of parties that is potentially liable. A comprehensive approach to the remediation of the canal is required, one that will not only cut off all upland sources to the canal but also will include an overall remedy to the canal itself, said a spokesperson for the state. “Of the 1,500 federal Superfund sites to date, no river cleanup has been successfully completed,” countered Daniel Walsh, the director of the Mayor’s Office of Environmental Remediation, at a public forum at PS 32 in Carroll Gardens last night. “This is not the EPA’s fault, but it does speak to the enormous complexity of identifying responsible parties and suggests that a cleanup could very likely take more than two decades.” Council Member David Yassky supports the involvement of the Feds, telling WNYC, “If [the canal]’s cleaned up, we can then have housing and restaurants and the whole waterfront life right alongside it. But first we gotta clean it up.” Toll Brothers has already threatened to walk away from its 577-unit project should the EPA step in; Hudson Companies, which is slated to develop the other large development project, is similarly frustrated by the 11th-hour curveball. One of Hudson’s principals, Alan Ball, provided us with this comment:
If the feds are not bringing any money, what do they add to solving the problem?Who are these deep pocket private responsible parties (PRPs) they think are out there? A GE, a Honeywell, an Exxon Mobil? If not, they are only looking at National Grid (Keyspan) and the City of New York and ultimately the tax payers and energy consumers of NYC. And why is this happening NOW after the City has finally after decades of delay – committed the funds to repairing the flushing tunnel and prepared a plan for addressing CSO events, the Army Corps is prepared to start dredging, and National Grid has committed to cleaning up the uplands areas through the NYS Brownfields Program.
The 60-day comment period has now begun. The Observer notes that sites that make it to the comment period “more often than not” end up getting designated.
Gowanus Plan Panned [NY Post]
Developers: Gowanus to Build or Not? [NY Observer]
Photo by emptysquare
Gowanusdog: Thanks so much!
gemini10 – I do not have a “goal” per-se; but frankly the area is and was working as a light manufacturing/distribution zone for some time – and could continue to do so if the properties were getting flipped on speculation that they can support housing.
In terms of cleanup – how about we deal with the raw sewage dumping in there (when the processing plants get overloaded in heavy rains) first – fix that (nothing is even currently planned) and then we can discuss the necessity of dredging and ensuring proper water flow.
So, for you folk who think that designating it as a Superfund site will tie the area up in a hell of bureaucracy ensuring that the canal will not get clean:
What’s the best way to get it clean? Any ideas? Even though I live in the area, I can honestly say I more than likely won’t get down there to start scrubbing myself, but I do recognize that it needs to be thoroughly cleaned…
jwendell,
Here you go.
http://www.regulations.gov/fdmspublic/component/main?main=SubmitComment&o=090000648094b7d2
Yes, the canal really looks like that.
Is there a link that could have been provided so that we can actually make our public comment? I’d love to have something on record, but I have no idea where to send my comment.
I live on 3rd avenue and Carroll St, about 2 blocks away from the canal. It’s pretty nasty. I went to the city planning committee’s hearing on zoning a couple months ago and heard people describing the environmental craziness of the area and thought to myself “wow, that sounds like a Superfund site.”
Gemini10: A lot of the people that live in my area have either lived in the area for decades or are renting rent-stabilized apartments. Personally, I can’t afford to move. So that’s why I stay there. I haven’t grown any extra extremities, though, I do realize that if I start to glow, I’ll be much easier to find in the dark.
On a more serious note, because a lot of people that live in this area live in rent stabilized buildings that could have been destroyed for major high rises, and because the area is probably in need of an environmental overhaul, I don’t feel too badly about the possibility of this being classified as a Superfund site.
I’m with Feral on the City’s take on this. Also, the fact that no river clean up of this magnitude has been successful is not even a halfway decent excuse for not attempting to do so. I would really hope that the city and developers would see that once the canal is cleaned up it’ll be a much more lucrative place to build on. It’d even be nice if someone saw that as some sort of incentive…
There’s no doubt Gowanus needs to be cleaned up. There’s also no doubt that the developers will do their best to manage PR. But if anyone thinks that involving the Feds is going to lead to progress within the next 20 years, they’re out of their minds. As much as Bloomberg and his nanny-state, holier-than-thou, I’m-above-the-law ways tick me off, probably best to let him handle it … and the MTA … and Ground Zero (the latter of two being PERFECT examples of what happens when you ADD layers of government).
FSRG – ok got it!
So then what is yours and Gowanusdog’s goal for that area?
Do you want someone to clean it up enough so we can see parks,cafes and housing or do you want it clean enough so at least the present warehouses/homes don’t get further polluted
if it was left alone – would it get worse?
geminin10 – I have no idea about the nipples of the current canal zone residents or their health – I am not even saying that living above, within, on top of will have a material effect on peoples health (I have no idea) – but I do know that as long as there is (or even mostly was) real toxic substances in the soil and canal, people (i.e Media and Lawyers) will blame all illnesses (real and imagined) on them and they will drum up hysteria (necessary or not) which will result in millions upon millions (if not billions) to deal with (either in cleanup, legal fees, or lost equity).
The point is, it is irrelevant what the effect the presence of things like lead, asbestos, mercury, PCB, crude oil, distillates, sulfur and sewage actually has…in any scenario, developing housing makes no economic sense (unless it is the Government paying – in which case economics doesn’t enter into it (but sound policy should)
Rob,
And I mean this with all due respect, before you claim “it really isn’t that bad” why don’t you find it first. I recommend a warm summer day for your stroll or immediately after a good rainfall. Then tell us it isn’t that bad.