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  • 25 Aug 2024 11:21 AM | Michael Lazo (Administrator)

    HARRISBURG — The Department of Environmental Protection has made nearly $1 million available for projects that will promote environmental education and stewardship across Pennsylvania. Many of last year’s awardees also supported people in environmental justice communities, communities composed of Pennsylvanians that are more threatened by climate change, air pollution, and water pollution.

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  • 23 Aug 2024 11:24 AM | Michael Lazo (Administrator)

    Harrisburg, PA – The Department of Environmental Protection (DEP) has made nearly $1 million available for projects that will promote environmental education and stewardship across Pennsylvania. Many of last year’s awardees also supported people in environmental justice communities, communities composed of Pennsylvanians that are more threatened by climate change, air pollution, and water pollution.

    DEP’s 2025 Environmental Education Grants Program is accepting applications through November 15, 2024.  Up to $1,000,000 worth of grants may be awarded for environmental education projects that engage people about clean water and climate change, especially projects that focus on environmental justice areas. Eligible applicants include schools, colleges, nonprofit community and environmental organizations, county conservation districts, and businesses. 

    “Environmental Education grants are some of the best ways to teach people about the water they drink and the air they breathe. The projects that these grants support strengthen the bonds between people and their environment so they are able to make informed decisions and take responsible actions for their communities,” said DEP Acting Secretary Jessica Shirley. “These projects are especially important to communities that have been disproportionately impacted by pollution.”

    A free 2025 Environmental Education Grants Program webinar will be held on October 10, 2024, from 11:30 AM - 1:00 PM.  DEP staff will provide proposal tips and instructions for completing required application forms. The program will conclude with a Q&A session. Registration by September 30, 2024, is required: 2025 EE Grants Program Webinar RegistrationOpens In A New Window.  

    Projects with a local focus may receive up to $5,000 and regional or statewide initiatives may receive up to $30,000. Projects that engage students and teachers from at least 60 Pennsylvania counties at three levels, local, state, and national, may be awarded up to $65,000.

    Funding is provided on a reimbursement basis. Projects must be implemented during the period July 1, 2025-June 30, 2026.  

    Information about the grants program is available at Environmental Education Grants. Electronic applications must be submitted through the Keystone Login (first-time users will need to register). 

    The Environmental Education Grants Program has supported a wide range of activities from tours and workshops to hands-on field experiences and action projects. Go to 2024 EE Grant Awards for a listing of projects that were awarded funding in Spring 2024.

    The Environmental Education Grants program was established by the Environmental Education Act of 1993, which mandates setting aside 5% of the pollution fines and penalties DEP collects annually for environmental education in Pennsylvania. Since the program began, more than 2,200 projects, totaling over $14 million, have been awarded grant funds.

  • 20 Aug 2024 11:45 AM | Michael Lazo (Administrator)

    he Pennsylvania Department of Environmental Protection (DEP) and Arxada, LLC have entered into a proposed consent decree in U.S. District Court to recoup costs associated with DEP’s 2019-2020 remediation of the former Pool Doctor-Beaver Alkali Products site in Rochester, Beaver County. Arxada has agreed to pay $1.3 million to resolve DEP’s claims that its predecessor, Lonza, Inc., arranged for the disposal at the site of approximately 140 tons of hydantoin, a hazardous substance, under the guise of a sale.

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  • 20 Aug 2024 11:44 AM | Michael Lazo (Administrator)

    Breon Peace, United States Attorney for the Eastern District of New York, and Lisa F. Garcia, Regional Administrator, Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), today announced a settlement with Gershow Recycling Corporation (Gershow) for its alleged violation of the Clean Air Act (CAA) at the company’s metal shredding facility in Medford, New York. Under the Consent Judgment, Gershow will install and operate technology to reduce the facility’s emission of volatile organic compounds (VOCs). The settlement also requires Gershow to pay a civil penalty of $555,000.

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  • 14 Aug 2024 11:25 AM | Michael Lazo (Administrator)

    New York State Department of Environmental Conservation (DEC) Interim Commissioner Sean Mahar today announced a $7 million settlement with Avnet, Inc., for costs associated with the remediation of the C&D Power Systems (C&D Batteries) State Superfund Site in the town of Deerpark, Orange County. As part of a recent Order on Consent and Administrative Settlement negotiated by DEC in partnership with the Office of the New York State Attorney General, the former owner and operator of the site will pay $6.3 million towards the cost of remediation activities already underway and $700,000 for Natural Resource Damages (NRD). 

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  • 01 Aug 2024 1:09 PM | Michael Lazo (Administrator)

    The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) is seeking public input on a proposed draft update to the 2008 cleanup plan for the Emmell’s Septic Landfill Superfund Site in Galloway Township, New Jersey.

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  • 30 Jul 2024 1:10 PM | Michael Lazo (Administrator)

    July 30, 2024

    Contact Information

    Stephen McBay (mcbay.stephen@epa.gov)

    (212)-637-3672

    NEW YORK (July 30, 2024) - The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency is seeking public input on a proposed draft update to the 2008 cleanup plan for the Emmell’s Septic Landfill Superfund Site in Galloway Township, Atlantic County, New Jersey. Based on scientific study and new information, EPA is updating its cleanup plan to address soil contamination at the site that continues to impact groundwater quality.

    The 30-day public comment period begins on July 30, 2024. EPA will host a virtual public meeting on August 7, 2024, at 6:00 p.m. to discuss the proposed plan, which will not be finalized until the agency considers public comments. You can register for the meeting by signing up at this link.

    “The EPA encourages people to provide input on its proposal to use several cleanup methods at the Superfund site to further protect the Galloway Township community,” said EPA Regional Administrator Lisa F. Garcia. “This updated plan will allow us to effectively tackle the remaining sources of pollution in the soil and ensure the continued protection of the local community.”

    The proposed update to the cleanup plan includes several key steps. The EPA will remove soil down to 5 feet and dispose of soil with elevated levels of contamination at a licensed facility off-site. For the remaining deeper soil, which is contaminated with volatile organic compounds (VOCs), the EPA will use treatments that either bind or break down the contaminants and help prevent the contamination from moving off-site. After treatment, the excavated area will be filled with clean soil and replanted.

    Additionally, the cleanup update proposes to eliminate the installation of specialized wells that were required under the original cleanup. These wells, called biosparging wells, were designed to inject air into the groundwater, aiding naturally occurring bacteria in breaking down vinyl chloride, a harmful contaminant. However, recent sampling shows that vinyl chloride levels have decreased naturally and because of other remediation efforts at the site, making the biosparging wells unnecessary.

    This updated plan builds on earlier efforts by EPA to control groundwater contamination at the site, including the construction of a groundwater pump and treatment system completed in 2010, followed by an expansion of the system in 2012. In 2017, the EPA further refined its cleanup plan by replacing drinking water wells that had been impacted by site-related contamination, and this project was completed in 2022.

    Written comments on the proposed plan may be submitted to Joseph Gowers, Remedial Project Manager, U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 290 Broadway – 19th Floor, New York, NY 10007 or via email: gowers.joe@epa.gov.

    For additional background and to see the proposed cleanup plan, visit the Emmell’s Septic Landfill Superfund site profile page.

  • 15 Jul 2024 1:42 PM | Michael Lazo (Administrator)

    July 15, 2024

    Contact Information

    Jo Anne Kittrell (kittrell.joanne@epa.gov)

    (857) 262-3789

    BOSTON, MASS (July 15, 2024) – The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) has proposed a plan to clean up the Collins & Aikman Plant (former) Superfund Site in Farmington, NH. EPA will hold a public meeting to update the community on the proposed remediation plan and a public hearing to accept verbal comments. The deadline to submit written public comments is August 30, 2024.

    EPA's proposed plan summarizes risks posed by contamination at the site and presents an evaluation of cleanup options. The proposed plan also includes the Agency's preferred cleanup alternative along with the other cleanup options it considered.

    The community is invited to attend the public meeting and hearing in person: 

    When: July 16, 2024 - 6 p.m. - 8 p.m.  

    Where: Old Town Hall located at 531 Main St in Farmington, NH  

    Those interested in attending virtually can register at: www.epa.gov/superfund/collins. One must register before the meeting in order to attend virtually.

    EPA has also extended the comment period from 30 to 60 days. EPA will now accept written public comments from July 1, 2024 – August 30, 2024. 

    No later than August 30, 2024, please email comments to Hull.Richard@epa.gov, or mail comments to:  

    Richard Hull 

    EPA Region 1 New England 

    5 Post Office Square, Suite 100 

    Mail Code: 07-1 

    Boston, MA 02109-3912 

    Additionally, verbal comments may be made during the formal public hearing immediately following the informational meeting on July 16, 2024.  

    Links to Proposed Plan and Administrative Record:

    Proposed Plan, 6/26/2024 (pdf) (9.3 MB)

    Administrative Record for Proposed Plan

    Additional information about the Collins & Aikman Plant (former) Superfund Site can be found at: www.epa.gov/superfund/collins.   

    Background

    The Collins & Aikman Plant (former) Superfund Site (the Site) is comprised of the former Collins & Aikman facility and property, located on two parcels south of NH Route 11 in Farmington, NH: (i) a 96-acre parcel on Davidson Drive; and (ii) a 10-acre parcel located at 56 Davidson Drive (collectively, the Property). The Site also extends into and includes an approximate 152-acre area north of NH Route 11 affected by Site-related contamination, including a groundwater plume. The affected area north of NH Route 11 is roughly bounded by NH Route 11, Pokamoonshine Brook to the north/northwest, and the boundaries of several properties containing the plume to the east.

    Most of the 106-acre Property consists of undeveloped wooded areas and contains the concrete foundation/floor of the former 267,000 square foot (ft2) (6.1 acres) manufacturing building, which was demolished in 2010, and the surrounding paved parking areas and driveways for the building. The former actively used area of the Property reportedly occupied approximately 33 acres, and included the manufacturing building, a 60,000-ft2 warehouse, and paved areas.

    From 1966 to 2006, operations included the manufacture of instrumentation panel pads bumpers, fascias, and other parts for automobiles and trucks. Manufacturing processes conducted at the facility included polyurethane foam molding, construction of polyvinyl chloride (PVC) shells, and the assembly of the finished panels. Painting operations were also conducted at the facility. The manufacturing processes involved the use of solvents, some of which were released to groundwater, soil, and surface water at the facility. Solvents used at the facility reportedly included: acetone, isopropyl alcohol (IPA), methylene chloride, methyl isobutyl ketone (MIBK), methyl ethyl ketone (MEK), tetrachloroethene (PCE), toluene, trichloroethene (TCE), and xylene.

    The Site has been the subject of numerous investigations and remedial activities since 1983 when low concentrations of chlorinated volatile organic compounds (CVOCs) were detected in a Town of Farmington municipal drinking water supply well located approximately 3,500 feet northeast and downgradient of the former manufacturing facility. In December 2013, EPA added the Site to the National Priorities List (NPL). Between 2014 and 2024, EPA conducted a remedial investigation of the nature and extent of contamination at the Site, and a feasibility study of remedial options to address the contamination.

  • 12 Jul 2024 1:46 PM | Michael Lazo (Administrator)

    For your information:

    The Environmental Quality Board (Board) published the above-referenced regulation in the Pennsylvania Bulletin on July 13, 2024.

    The proposed regulation is available on the Pennsylvania Bulletin website at the following link.

    Pa Bulletin (pacodeandbulletin.gov)

    The proposed regulation is also available on our website at the following link.

    https://www.irrc.state.pa.us/regulations/RegSrchRslts.cfm?ID=3424

    The Board is inviting the public to submit written comments on the proposal. Please reference Regulation #7-575 (IRRC #3409) on the correspondence. The deadline for submitting comments to the Board is September 11, 2024.

    Please note that all correspondence, public comments, and documents submitted relating to a regulation are a matter of public record and will appear on IRRC’s website – www.irrc.state.pa.us.

    If you have any questions, please feel free to contact me.

    Thank you. 

    Michelle L. Elliott

    Regulatory Analyst

    717.787.8491 direct line

    melliott@irrc.state.pa.us


    Independent Regulatory Review Commission

    333 Market Street, 14th Floor

    Harrisburg, PA 17101

    717.783.5417 main line

    www.irrc.state.pa.us

  • 02 Jul 2024 1:48 PM | Michael Lazo (Administrator)

    Households on public water systems are willing to pay an average of $13.07 a month, or $156.84 annually, on their monthly bills to protect themselves from PFAS — potentially cancer-causing chemicals — according to new research from the University of New Hampshire.  

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