LOCKPORT — A public meeting will be held at 7 p.m. at the 4-H Training Center on the Niagara County Fairgrounds concerning a $23 million proposal to clean up contamination at Eighteen Mile Creek.

The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency-proposed plan calls for a variety of actions to address contamination in the Creek Corridor portion of the Eighteen Mile Creek site, extending from the Erie Canal to Harwood Street. The Creek and several adjacent properties are contaminated with polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs) and other contaminants, including lead.

The cleanup proposal, which is the second phase of cleanup at this site, calls for the complete removal of contaminated sediment in the Creek Corridor. The plan also proposes a combination of excavation and off of the site disposal, capping, and institutional controls to address contaminated soil at Upson Park, the former Flintkote Plant, White Transportation, and former United Paperboard Company properties. During the removal of contaminated sediment, the dilapidated Clinton and William Street dams would be removed.

“We are making steady progress in cleaning up this site. To protect public health, we have relocated five families and purchased their homes,” said Judith A. Enck, Regional Administrator. “The proposed plan will further that progress by removing much of the contaminated soil that continues to pose a threat and I encourage people to comment.”

Under the proposal, EPA would be conducting work at:

  • The former United Paperboard Company property located at 62 and 70 Mill Street, where a lumber company and paper company operated from the 1890s to 1948;
  • The White Transportation property located at 30 through 40 Mill Street;
  • Upson Park, a 5.9 acre property that was used by a canal building company and then a paper pulp mill.  It is now a public park along the Erie Canal with recreational uses; and
  • The former Flintkote Plant property located at 198 and 300 Mill Street, where Flintkote operated between 1928 and 1971 and manufactured felt products. 

The EPA completed the initial phase of cleanup in 2016, which included the demolition of the former Flintkote building and the buyout and relocation of five families from their Water Street residences in Lockport, NY. Those homes and the former industrial building were demolished, and all demolition debris was removed from the properties. The excavation of contaminated soil at the residential properties will be performed during cleanup of sediment in the Creek Corridor to prevent recontamination of the Creek and the properties.

Eighteen Mile Creek has a long history of industrial use dating back to the 1800s when it was used as a source of hydro-power. The headwaters of the Creek consist of an east and west branch begin immediately north of the New York State Barge Canal in Lockport, NY. Eighteen Mile Creek flows north approximately 15 miles and discharges into Lake Ontario in Olcott, NY. The site was placed on the Superfund National Priorities List in March 2012. Investigations at the site show that sediment and soil in and around Eighteen Mile Creek and nearby properties are contaminated with variety of pollutants, including PCBs and lead.

In June 2013, EPA outlined a three-phase approach to site cleanup.  The initial phase, which involved demolition at the residential and Flintkote building properties, was completed in 2016. The second phase of the cleanup, which is the subject of the proposed plan released today for review and comment, involves the Creek Corridor. The third phase of cleanup, which is still in the investigation stage, will address groundwater and contaminated sediment in the Creek from Lockport to its discharge in Lake Ontario.

Those who can not make it to tonight’s meeting can send written comments until Sept. 30. Those comments may be emailed to kondrk.jaclyn@epa.gov or sent to:

Jaclyn Kondrk, Remedial Project Manager
U.S. Environmental Protection Agency
290 Broadway, 20th Floor
New York, New York 10007
212-637-4317

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