
 
		COURIER L 12     IFE, MARCH 4-10, 2022 
 SUPER FUNDED 
 Schumer says Newtown Creek, should benefi t  
 from $3.5b toward ‘orphan’ sites 
 BY KIRSTYN BRENDLEN 
 The long-delayed cleanup of the  
 Newtown Creek Superfund site needs  
 to be sped up, and an infl ux of federal  
 dollars toward National Superfund  
 cleanup should put the wind in the  
 sails of the Environmental Protection  
 Agency and the parties responsible for  
 funding the process, said Senate Majority  
 Leader Chuck Schumer on Friday. 
 “Unfortunately, the polluters, even  
 when they agree to pay, want to delay  
 and minimize,” he said at a press conference  
 in front of the creek. “We want  
 the polluters to speed things up and  
 maximize.” 
 Brooklyn  is  home  to  three  Superfund  
 sites — Newtown Creek, the  
 Gowanus Canal, and the Wolff-Alport  
 Chemical Company. The heavily-polluted, 
   often-dangerous  sites  are  usually  
 a result of years of irresponsible  
 dumping of waste and chemicals by  
 large  industrial  companies. Once  the  
 EPA designates a Superfund site, they  
 can identify the “potentially responsible  
 parties,” or PRPs, and force them to  
 contribute money to the cleanup. 
 Late last year, President Biden  
 signed off on the $1 trillion infrastructure  
 bill  with  promises  of  shoring  
 up the country’s roads and bridges.  
 Tucked  away  in  the  bill was  $3.5  billion  
 for the cleanup of “orphan” Superfund  
 sites, like Wolff-Alport, which  
 don’t have any PRPs and rely entirely  
 on government funding for cleanup. 
 But Newtown Creek, a tributary of  
 the East River that cuts divides Brooklyn  
 and Queens, isn’t an orphan site,  
 with  fi ve PRPs and the City of New  
 York agreeing to fund the cleanup under  
 a 2011 settlement with the EPA.  
 Since then, though, very little has  
 been done to clean up the Creek. In a  
 July 2021 community update, the EPA  
 said they anticipated issuing a cleanup  
 plan no sooner than 2024.  
 Schumer called for the “new Biden  
 administration  EPA,”  including  recently 
 named  regional  director  Lisa  
 Garcia, to hustle on the cleanup. 
 “We’re telling the EPA, we want  
 you to kick ass,” the longtime senator  
 said. “And get ExxonMobil, and Texaco, 
  and Phelps-Dodge, and National  
 Grid. All of these companies who so  
 polluted Newtown Creek to get moving  
 and clean it up.” 
 The $3.5 billion allocated to the orphan  
 sites should free up resources at  
 the EPA to “redouble their efforts” to  
 start pursuing the polluters, Schumer  
 said. 
 The money is a good start, but longterm  
 policy changes are needed to  
 keep the program funded and dirty  
 sites scrubbed, said Michael Lang, a  
 spokesperson for U.S. Rep. Nydia Velázquez. 
 U.S.  Senator  Chuck  Schumer  visited  Newtown  
 Creek  on  Friday,  celebrating  the  allocation  
 of $3.5 billion to Superfund sites nationwide  
 and urging the EPA to take action  
 at Newtown Creek. 
 “In 2018, Velázquez introduced  
 legislation to reinstate the Superfund  
 tax on big oil and chemical companies,” 
  Lang said. “The Build Back Better  
 Act includes reinstatement of the  
 Superfund tax, taking action from the  
 congresswoman’s bill. This is imperative  
 to the fund’s long-term outlook.”  
 Velázquez’s proposed bill would  
 also create a special loan under the  
 Small  Business  Administration  to  
 help small businesses who are suddenly  
 forced to move their operations  
 due to Superfund actions, he added.  
 Local Assemblymember Emily Gallagher  
 said  the  work  to  clean  up  the  
 creek goes hand-in-hand with ending  
 city and state reliance on fossil fuels,  
 which she said contributes to the ongoing  
 pollution at the creek as heavy  
 industry continues along its banks on  
 both sides. 
 “Oil  is  at  the  root  of  so  many  
 harms, both human and environmental  
 and ecological, where we are seeing  
 so many things suffer because of  
 our legacy with oil,” she said. “So, our  
 fi rst step is getting this Superfund  
 site cleaned up, and our second step is  
 making sure there is never a site like  
 this again, and that we move  forever  
 off of oil and gas as a source for anything. 
  We have other options.” 
 Cleaning  up  the  polluted  industrial  
 sites that border Newtown Creek  
 is necessary to keep the body healthy,  
 said Wllis Elkins, executive director  
 of the nonprofi t Newtown Creek Alliance, 
  because the chemicals that seep  
 into the ground often end up running  
 into the water. 
 “It’s not that, necessarily, they  
 need  to  shut  down  their  operations,  
 per se, but it is that the industries that  
 have created a lot of the pollution still  
 have pollution on their sites,” he told  
 Brooklyn  Paper.  “In  a  larger  sense,  
 yes,  we  need  to  be  transitioning  to  
 dirty fossil fuel, because that still is  
 posing not just a climate threat but  
 a  threat  to  our  local  environment  as  
 well.” 
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