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Stay Informed

EPA invites the public to attend an open house-style information session on the Hudson River PCB dredging project in Moreau, New York on May 6.

Project information will be displayed and project experts will be on hand to answer questions between 6-8 p.m.

The open house will take place at:

Moreau Community Center
144 Main Street
South Glens Falls, NY, 12803.

 

Community Advisory Group Exit EPA disclaimer
The next CAG meeting is May 28 at the Fort Edward fire station, from 1-4 p.m.

General Electric’s website for the Dredging Project Exit EPA disclaimer

Hudson River PCB Superfund Site Project Roadmap

Hudson River Listserv
Subscribe to EPA's Hudson River Listserv to automatically receive notices of public meetings, news releases, etc. in your e-mail

Contact Us

EPA's Hudson River Community Involvement Coordinators is:

Kristen Skopeck
skopeck.kristen@epa.gov
Hudson River Field Office
421 Lower Main Street
Hudson Falls, NY 12839
(518) 747-4389
(866) 615-6490 Toll-Free
HRFO@roadrunner.com

Related Links

 

 

The Hudson River PCBs Site encompasses a nearly 200-mile stretch of the Hudson River in eastern New York State from Hudson Falls, New York to the Battery in New York City and includes communities in fourteen New York counties and two counties in New Jersey. The site is divided into the Upper Hudson River, which runs from Hudson Falls to the Federal Dam at Troy (a distance of approximately 40 miles), and the Lower Hudson River, which runs from the Federal Dam at Troy to the southern tip of Manhattan at the Battery in New York City. For purposes of this project, EPA further divided the Upper Hudson River area into three main sections known as River Section 1, River Section 2, and River Section 3.

Hudson River LocksFrom approximately 1947 to 1977, the General Electric Company (GE) discharged as much as 1.3 million pounds of polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs) from its capacitor manufacturing plants at the Hudson Falls and Fort Edward facilities into the Hudson River.

The primary health risk associated with the site is the accumulation of PCBs in the human body through eating contaminated fish. Since 1976, high levels of PCBs in fish have led New York State to close various recreational and commercial fisheries and to issue advisories restricting the consumption of fish caught in the Hudson River. PCBs are considered probable human carcinogens and are linked to other adverse health effects such as low birth weight, thyroid disease, and learning, memory, and immune system disorders. PCBs in the river sediment also affect fish and wildlife.

EPA’s February 2002 Record of Decision (ROD) for the Hudson River PCBs Superfund Site addresses the risks to people and ecological receptors associated with PCBs in the in-place sediments of the Upper Hudson River.

EPA is the lead agency for cleanup of the Hudson River PCBs Superfund site. The New York State Department of Environmental Conservation (NYSDEC) Exit EPA disclaimer is the support agency for this project. The United States Department of Interior (Fish and Wildlife Service) Exit EPA disclaimer and the United States Department of Commerce (National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration) Exit EPA disclaimer are federal trustees of natural resources.

Current Issues

Phase 1 Remedial Action Community Health and Safety Plan

February 5, 2009 - The revised Phase 1 Remedial Action Community Health and Safety Plan (Phase 1 CHASP) for the Hudson River dredging project will ensure that the work associated with the cleanup is performed in a manner that protects the public and the environment. It also will ensure, in the case of an accident, a prompt and effective response. A 30-day public comment period on the Phase 1 CHASP will run from Feb. 5 to March 9. Hard copies of the Phase 1 CHASP are available at information repositories in Glens Falls, Fort Edward (EPA Hudson River Field Office), Ballston Spa, Albany, Poughkeepsie, New York City (EPA Region 2 offices, and in Edgewater, New Jersey.

CHASP [PDF 2.5 MB, 130 pp]

EPA & General Electric Update Hudson Dredging Agreement

January 26, 2009 - The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) today announced that the federal government has reached an agreement with the General Electric Company (GE) to modify a November 2, 2006 consent decree requiring the company to dredge portions of the Hudson River. The modification of the 2006 consent decree requires GE to pay a portion of the costs of protecting the Waterford, Halfmoon, and Stillwater, New York water supplies during dredging, and to improve its program for monitoring water quality and further protect the Waterford and Halfmoon water supplies.

Press Release | Attachment to Consent Decree Modification No. 1 [PDF 196K, 37 pp] | Consent Decree Modification No.1 [PDF 5 MB, 12 pp] | Consent Decree Fact Sheet [PDF 80K, 2 pp]

EPA Begins Construction of Water Line for Upper Hudson Communities

October 8, 2008 - EPA announced today that a subcontract has been awarded to W.M. Schultz Construction, Inc, to build a four-and-a-half mile long water line from Troy, New York to the towns of Waterford and Halfmoon. The water line will be used, if needed, as an alternate water source during the Hudson River dredging project.

Press Release

EPA and GE Sign Agreement on Upper Hudson Floodplain Sampling

September 11, 2008 -- EPA and GE have reached agreement on carrying out the Upper Hudson floodplain sampling program. The agreement, effective today and embodied in an Administrative Order on Consent (AOC), provides for soil sampling at approximately 350 properties within the Upper Hudson floodplain. It is the first phase of a floodplains remedial investigation initially described in a letter to residents from EPA dated August 4, 2008. The agreement also requires GE to map human use and ecological use areas in those floodplain areas to identify areas where removal of contaminated soils may be needed. GE will pay for costs incurred by EPA in overseeing the work performed under this agreement.

Floodplain Agreement [PDF 1.5 MB, 30 pp] | Field Sampling Plan [PDF 194K, 50 pp] | Appendix A [PDF 9K, 1 pp] | Tables [PDF 21K, 5 pp]

Figures are Available Upon Request by Contacting Kris Skopeck at skopeck.kristen@epa.gov

Letter August 4, 2008 [PDF 167K,1 pp]

Final Floodplains Factsheet [PDF 36K, 3 pp]

EPA Orders Access To Construct Alternate Water Line for Hudson Dredging Project

September, 5 2008 - To ensure that contingencies are in place to protect drinking water supplies during Hudson River dredging, EPA today issued orders to the town of Halfmoon, New York and the Water Commissioners of the town of Waterford to gain access needed to construct a water line that will carry drinking water from Troy to Halfmoon and to the town of Waterford, New York. When constructed, the new water line will provide the towns with an alternate water source that would be available in the unlikely event that dredging causes violations of the health-based drinking water standard in the river.

Order Issued to The Town of Halfmoon [PDF 475K, 11 pp] | Order Issued to The Water Commissioners of the Town of Waterford [PDF 586K, 13 pp] | Press Release

 


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