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Environment


EPA has new plan to address decades of toxic chemicals
Dry cleaners left pools behind
Story by By Holly Schoenstein


 
After 15 years, the U.S. EPA is still trying to figure out what to do about toxic chemicals dumped in a west Akron neighborhood for decades. The EPA discovered that a series of drycleaners at Copley Square Plaza had dumped wastewater with the chemicals into pits in the ground, polluting nearby water up to 20 feet under the ground. Today, the mess remains, and the EPA is asking community members for feedback on a proposed clean-up plan. The EPA project lead, Sam Chummar says the agency wants the cleanup to come in two stages.
Chummar on phase 1 cleanup

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Chummar says the second step will be to treat deeper ground water.
He says eight or nine homes are affected by the groundwater contamination, but 18 have harmful gases rising up through the ground and into the homes.  The public meeting on the cleanup is July 22nd at the Copley Community Center. 

 

Listener Comments:

Dr. Paul Edmiston has developed a form of glass which captures and remediates PCE and TCE in groundwater.

Not sure who actually owns this problem, but will look into it with Ohio EPA.

Any community member can read about the material at

www.absmaterials.com






Posted by: Stephen Spoonamore (Wooster) on June 30, 2009 4:56PM
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