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Cianbro cleans up: Ex-Eastern Fine site major
project
Saturday, June 23, 2007 - Bangor Daily News
Cianbro Corp.’s ambitious
plan to bring several hundred highly paid workers back to the former
Easter Fine Paper site in Brewer has the potential to become one of the
region’s most significant economic development endeavors in years.
But first the company
will have to complete one of the largest industrial cleanup projects
ever attempted in Maine - and in record time, at that.
For more than a century,
factories churned out paper products at what now is known as the former
Eastern Fine Paper Co. facility. But those industrial operations left a
toxic legacy in the soil of the 41-acre site located on the banks of the
Penobscot River in South Brewer.
"We’ve found a variety of
contaminants there," said Jean Firth with the Maine Department of
Environmental Protection. "Over the long history of the site, they have
used many different chemicals."
Ash laden with mercury
and other heavy metals is buried on parts of the property. Other areas
are contaminated with petroleum that apparently leaked over the years
from aboveground tanks and pipes. Other environmental concerns include
PCBs, a once common industrial pollutant now banned in the U.S., as well
as asbestos and lead.
Cianbro officials have
said they hope to have their new facility — a manufacturing center for
prefabricated, self-standing building structures known as "modules" — up
and running within 10 months. The company predicts the facility will
employ about 500 people, twice as many as were employed by Eastern Fine
when the mill closed in January 2004.
Firth, who coordinates
the DEP’s industrial site cleanup and redevelopment program, known as
"Brownfields," said petroleum is the largest single contaminant on the
site. Contaminated soil will likely be removed, while the property will
have a deed restriction preventing Cianbro from tapping into
groundwater. The facility will be serviced by the city’s public water
system.
Overall, the Eastern Fine
facility would be one of the largest brownfields projects ever completed
in the state. That would make it a significant accomplishment for both
economic development and for Maine’s Brownfields program, Firth said.
"This is going to take
time given the sheer size of it, and some of it will be done as the
development proceeds at the site," Firth said.
The city of Brewer,
working in conjunction with the DEP, recently completed a $350,000
assessment of the site funded through the U.S. Environmental Protection
Agency’s brownfields program. D’arcy Main-Boyington, the city’s economic
development director, said the city has submitted a remediation plan to
the DEP for approval.
The remediation plan will
be the subject of a public hearing this Thursday in Brewer.
"We’ve done a huge amount
of investigation," Main-Boyington said. "We are very confident that we
do know what is in the ground, where it is and the extent of it in each
area."
Main-Boyington outlined a
tentative timeline for work on the site, pending regulatory approvals:
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Mid-July through fall:
Remediation gets up to full speed.
-
Late fall: Several
buildings on-site are demolished to make way for manufacturing
space.
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Early winter: The
Penobscot River is dredged near the site for a deep-water pier for
the barges that would carry the massive modules. The U.S. Army Corps
of Engineers will need to sign off on the dredging plan first.
-
Late winter-early
spring: The site is regraded to make room for the manufacturing
surface.
Main-Boyington said
Cianbro will not be using all of the property immediately, so some
cleanup projects likely will be completed after manufacturing has begun.
For instance, part of the southern end of the property that contains the
most environmental "hot spots" likely will be fenced off and remediated
after other areas are completely clean, she said.
Total site cleanup costs
are expected to be in the millions of dollars. South Brewer
Redevelopment, a limited liability company created by the city to own
and operate the mill site, will help funnel state and federal money to
the cleanup project. Cianbro is expected eventually to take ownership of
the property after those state and federal funds are expended.
Cianbro officials could
not be reached for comment Friday. But both Main-Boyington and Firth
said that given Cianbro’s record on completing large projects, they are
confident that the company can complete the environmental cleanup.
The company already is
lining up clients for its modules, providing added incentive to complete
the cleanup within the 10-month time frame.
"I think if they are
motivated enough they can accomplish most of what they would want to
do," Firth said.
A copyright story
from the Bangor Daily News, Saturday, June 23, 2007. |