Long overdue pollution cleanup

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE - Oct. 27, 2003
03-207
Aberdeen gets plan and money to clean up Junction City site
OLYMPIA -Decades of pollution problems are finally going to be fixed, under
a final cleanup agreement for the former Roderick Timber site in Junction
City east of Aberdeen.
The cleanup agreement, or "consent decree," was signed Oct. 10 by the state
Department of Ecology, the city of Aberdeen and the Grays Harbor Historical
Seaport Authority.
"This milestone is a positive step toward righting years and years of
industrial pollution on the banks of the lower Chehalis River," said Rebecca
Lawson, a toxic-cleanup manager for Ecology.
Along with the plan, the Ecology Department is sending $1.2 million to
Aberdeen to help pay the cleanup bill.
Various past activities contributed to a mix of pollution problems on the
nearly 300-acre site, named for a former property owner, Phillip Roderick,
whose business went bankrupt in 1988.
Part of the site was used as a garbage dump in the 1950s and '60s. In the
mid-1970s until 1988, Roderick ran a log-sort yard and a truck-maintenance
shop on the property. Soils were contaminated by heavy equipment, by leaking
underground storage tanks and by hazardous materials stored and used on the
site.
The seaport authority bought 294 acres of the site in 1998 after the
Roderick bankruptcy. Since then, Aberdeen and the seaport authority have
worked with Ecology to clean the site.
The cleanup plan includes measures to protect neighbors and anybody who
might walk onto the site, Lawson said. Shallow ground water from the site
will be directed away from the neighborhood, even though the homes have been
hooked up to an outside source of drinking water for some time. Also, the
landfill area will be covered.
In the final plan, contaminated soil and sediment will be removed from the
site, the landfill area will be capped with soil and vegetation, ground
water will be monitored and vegetation will be planted.
The seaport authority will continue using the large metal building in the
former maintenance area to build wooden ships and to train students in ship
building and wood working. The seaport authority's Capt. Les Bolton said
that much of the property will be kept in a natural state to serve as a
buffer for flooding and to recapture the original environmental qualities of
the lower Chehalis River.
A separate "voluntary" cleanup continues at the nearby Sierra Pacific
Industries sawmill and power-generating plant.



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