
 
        
         
		Everybody do your share! 
 Feds, state to ensure safety at planned Gowanus Green affordable housing 
 Immediate Work 
 CNA/PCA & HHA 
 • Sick Days 
 • Vacation Days 
 • Bonus after 3 months ($300) 
 • Rate increase after 4 months 
 • Health Insurance 
 • Night/Day shift Available 
 6     COURIER LIFE, APRIL 2-8, 2021 
 718-255-5946 
 $16.00 
 Per Hour 
 Immediately Hiring AIDES 
 CALL IMMEDIATELY 
 Position available in Queens-Brooklyn-Bronx-Manhattan 
 BRONX – BROOKLYN – MANHATTAN - QUEENS 
 1650 Eastern Parkway, Suite 400-403 Brooklyn, NY 11233 
 260 E. 138th Street, 4Fl Bronx, NY 10451 
 75 Clinton Street, Staten Island, NY 10304 
 BY KEVIN DUGGAN 
 Uncle Sam and the Empire  
 State are starting with a clean  
 slate. 
 Federal and state environmental  
 offi cials will join forces  
 to promise that a planned affordable  
 housing complex  
 along the putrid Gowanus Canal  
 will be safe — which comes  
 after an Environmental Protection  
 Agency  guru  raised  
 alarming concerns over the  
 site’s toxic soil. 
 “As part of EPA’s assessment  
 of the Public Place remediation  
 effort, EPA and New  
 York State Department of Environmental  
 Conservation  
 have agreed  to work cooperatively  
 with all parties involved  
 to ensure that the remediation  
 will  be  protective  of  public  
 health and the environment,  
 and that the basis for the remedy  
 is clearly communicated  
 to the public,” reads a March  
 22 letter by both agencies. 
 The joint statement came  
 after a behind-the-scenes rift  
 between the two agencies,  
 because EPA’s Superfund  
 Cleanup project manager for  
 the Gowanus Canal Christos  
 Tsiamis publicly voiced  
 concerns in December about  
 the housing project slated for  
 Smith and Fifth streets —  
 dubbed Gowanus Green — due  
 to the land’s century’s-worth  
 of pollution from once housing  
 manufactured gas plant. 
 The  proposal  includes  
 950 below-market-rate housing  
 units, a waterfront park,  
 and space for a future public  
 school — and, when completed, 
  the project will be the  
 largest cluster of affordable  
 apartments  promised  as  part  
 of the Gowanus neighborhood  
 rezoning.  
 The development of 100 percent  
 below-market-rate  housing  
 units will be jointly developed  
 by the Fifth Avenue  
 Committee, the Bluestone Organization, 
  the Hudson Companies, 
  and the Jonathan Rose  
 Companies. 
 National Grid  is  currently  
 working on a state-supervised  
 Brownfi eld Cleanup of Public  
 Place, and Tsiamis gave  
 his now-infamous analysis of  
 that work and the site’s future  
 safety  late  last  year  upon  request  
 by the Gowanus Canal  
 Community  Advisory  Group,  
 a local watchdog group of the  
 waterway’s federal scrub. 
 The veteran engineer got  
 into hot water with the state’s  
 DEC, whose local cleanup director  
 Michael Ryan fi red off a  
 missive to Tsiamis’s boss saying  
 he had spread “misinformation” 
   and  made  “fl ippant,  
 unsubstantiated statements,”  
 unnecessarily  drumming  up  
 fears. 
 Tsiamis  returned  to  the  
 CAG after a three-month absence  
 from their monthly  
 meetings on March 23, saying  
 he believed a cleanup of Public  
 Place could be done, citing  
 similar efforts in Manhattan,  
 but he added that his assessment  
 of  the  site’s  challenges  
 remained unchanged. 
 “It is in the interest of all  
 the parties involved — EPA,  
 the state, the city, and the developers  
 —  to  ensure  that  all  
 that needs to be done at that  
 site will be done so that the developed  
 site will be safe for the  
 public,”  Tsiamis  said  at  the  
 Tuesday virtual gathering. “I  
 have not seen any new data or  
 documents since I have last  
 spoken to you and I have nothing  
 to add to that assessment  
 that I provided at the CAG previously.” 
 The  engineer  compared  
 Public Place to the state-supervised  
 cleanups with Con Edison  
 of two properties slated for  
 residential development atop  
 the  former  West  18th  Street  
 Gas Works site in Manhattan,  
 where gas was manufactured  
 from 1833-1900 and gas holders  
 remained operational until  
 1914.  
 The company extracted  
 coal tar or excavated the polluted  
 soil at the Big Apple site  
 and in one case stabilized the  
 ground with cement, similarly  
 to EPA’s current method  
 of  cleaning  up  the  Gowanus  
 Canal bed.  
 “These sites have been developed  
 and in a manner that  
 it is protective of the future development, 
  of the users of the  
 future development, so it’s not  
 anything new,” Tsiamis said.  
 “These are fi nished  sites  and  
 they seemed to have done the  
 right thing.” 
 A rendering of the proposal.  HPD