STAFF REPORT
TOWN OF TONAWANDA — The Army Corps of Engineers is looking for resident input on yet another former town landfill containing radioactive material.
The Seaway Site, located in the Town of Tonawanda along River Road, was operated as a landfill from 1930 to1993 and accepted municipal, commercial, construction and industrial wastes. During the 1940s, the Linde Air Products Division of Union Carbide processed uranium ores under contract to the Manhattan Engineer District. The mill tailings from those processes were transported from the Linde Site to the former Haist Property, leased by the federal government.
In the mid-1970s, Ashland Oil constructed oil tanks on that property and removed materials containing radioactive residues including radium, thorium, uranium and uranium products to the Seaway landfill. At the landfill, those materials were used as cover or grading material. The site was operated as a landfill by Browning-Ferris Industries through 1993, after which most of the landfill was capped by BFI in accordance with the requirements of the New York State Department of Environmental Conservation.
But during the Corps' remediation efforts at Ashland, materials at higher-than-normal radioactive concentrations were found that appear to go onto the Seaway Site. At one location, those radiation levels may extend under the capped portion of the landfill, but remediation of this material as part of the Ashland project stopped at the property line.
The Corps conducted additional studies and issued an addendum to the original 1993 Feasibility Study performed by the Department of Energy. This addendum was completed this year and incorporates the results of subsequent Corps assessments of groundwater, institutional controls and radon emissions. The addition incorporates additional sampling results and improved volume estimates, updates the radiological risk posed by contaminants, and develops and evaluates alternatives for fixing the problem.
The Corps is advocating identified containment, covering the residues within the landfill with at least 4.5 feet of material. The residues in areas located outside of the landfill collection system and exceeding the cleanup criteria will be removed and shipped off-site for disposal.
In addition, long-term surveillance and maintenance will be provided by the Federal government to ensure that land use controls are in place to prevent future access to radioactive residues. The Corps contends this will protect human health and the environment and provide the best balance among the considered alternatives, particularly with respect to short-term effectiveness and costs.
Residents can have their say on what the Corps is proposing by writing to the address listed below. The formal public comment period on the proposed plan ends Oct. 27. In addition, the Corps will hold a public information session at 7 p.m. Sept. 24 at the Phillip Sheridan Building, 3200 Elmwood Ave.
For more information, call 1-800-833-6390 or visit http:/www.lrb.usace.army.mil/fusrap/seaway.
TO COMMENT, WRITE TO:
U.S. Army Corps of Engineers
FUSRAP Team
1776 Niagara Street
Buffalo, NY 14207
News Refresh
August 27, 2008
WEDNESDAY: Army Corps requests landfill comments (5:00 p.m.)
RADIATION: Public hearing set for Sept. 24.
- News Refresh
-
-
LAY OFFS: Seneca Gaming Corp. to cut 210 jobs
The struggling economy has evidently caught up with the local gaming industry.
The Seneca Gaming Corp. announced on Tuesday plans to lay off a total of 210 of the 4,800 employees who work at its casino operations in Niagara Falls, Buffalo and Salamanca. - MONDAY: Mets, Bisons set to announce affiliation deal New York Mets executives are in Buffalo to announce that the Triple A Bisons will be the major-league team’s top farm club.
- FRIDAY: Police, fire departments offer disaster training courses (3:13 p.m.) The Lockport police and fire departments are offering a free community emergency preparedness course.
- FRIDAY: Four school districts holding meetings (1:25 p.m.) Four school districts in eastern Niagara County will be holding school board meetings next week.
- FRIDAY: Staffing agency opens payroll center in upstate NY (12:40 p.m.) Adecco, the world’s biggest staffing agency, is opening a new payroll operations center in suburban Rochester that will create 200 new jobs by 2010.
- FRIDAY: Ex-manager accused of theft from NY bowling group (9:58 p.m.) State police say a 54-year-old man stole as much as $200,000 from a state bowling association while serving as its manager.
- THURSDAY: AT&T expands 3G to NT (4:57 p.m.) AT&T Inc. is expanding its third-generation, or 3G, high speed wireless network many areas of Niarage and Erie counties.
- THURSDAY: Schumer to offer banks a deal (2:43 p.m.) Sen. Charles Schumer plans to offer a broad economic proposal for the government to offer a financial lifeline to those banks that are willing to renegotiate mortgages for those on the brink of losing their homes.
- THURSDAY: US woman killed in Yemen embassy attack (11:35 a.m.) The State Department has confirmed that a young American woman and her Yemeni husband were killed in a terrorist attack at the U.S. Embassy in Yemen.
- THURSDAY: Vegas detective tells of encountering O.J. Simpson (11:24 p.m.) When police detective Andy Caldwell heard that O.J. Simpson was a suspect in a robbery, he said he couldn’t believe it.
- More News Refresh Headlines
-
LAY OFFS: Seneca Gaming Corp. to cut 210 jobs
The struggling economy has evidently caught up with the local gaming industry.






