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US EPA directs $1 billion to 25 Superfund hazardous waste cleanups

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FILE PHOTO: Environmental Protection Agency workers wait to meet with U.S. President Joe Biden during his visit to East Palestine for the first time since a fiery derailment of a Norfolk Southern train a year ago released more than a million gallons of hazardous materials and pollutants, in East Palestine, Ohio, U.S., February 16, 2024. REUTERS/Elizabeth Frantz/File Photo

By Timothy Gardner

WASHINGTON (Reuters) – The U.S. environment regulator said on Tuesday it is launching new cleanup projects at 25 hazardous waste sites from New Jersey to Oregon with $1 billion in funds.

The sites are in the Environmental Protection Agency’s Superfund program, originally created in 1980, which helps to repurpose land polluted by heavy industry for new economic development including parks and warehouses.

The $1 billion is the third and final wave of $3.5 billion in funding appropriated by the bipartisan infrastructure bill President Joe Biden signed into law in 2021.

“This funding will help improve people’s lives especially those who have long been on the front lines of pollution,” Janet McCabe, the deputy EPA administrator told reporters on a call.

McCabe said 75% of the 25 sites are in historically underserved communities. The $1 billion also will help speed up ongoing work at 85 Superfund sites. More than 25% of Black and Hispanic Americans live within three miles of a Superfund site, McCabe said.

New Jersey, which has more Superfund sites than any other state, has three sites among the 25 including Raritan Bay Slag in Old Bridge and Sayreville, where a seawall and jetty were built using slag, waste from the bottom of industrial blast furnaces used to smelt metal from the 1960s to the 1970s.

U.S. Representative Frank Pallone of New Jersey said the $3.5 billion is part of $23 billion expected to be raised for Superfund reinstated taxes included in the infrastructure bill and Biden’s Inflation Reduction Act.

“Reinstating that Superfund tax is really only about basic fairness that corporate polluters, not taxpayers, should have to pay to clean up the messes that they created,” Pallone told reporters.

In Clackamas, Oregon, the funding will help clean up the Northwest Pipe & Casing/Hall Process Company site where pipes were made and coated from the 1950s to the 1980s contaminating soil and groundwater with solvents, primers, coal tar and other pollutants, the EPA said.

(Reporting by Timothy Gardner; Editing by Bill Berkrot)

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