Cleanup of PCBs on Fieldstone to begin
- Share via
Jenny Marder
Officials from the Department of Toxic Substances Control will
present new data tonight and discuss cleanup options for a
contaminated section of land near the Bolsa Chica wetlands. Priority
will be placed on cleanup in residential areas.
Dangerous levels of polychlorinated biphenyls, commonly known as
PCBs, were discovered four years ago in the Fieldstone Property, a
42-acre undeveloped plot of land between the Bolsa Chica wetlands and
Graham Street, Bankton Drive and Falkirk Lane. The source of the
contamination is unknown, but is believed to have been caused by
illegal dumping.
Banned in 1977, PCBs are cancer-causing chemicals formerly found
in electric transformers and hydraulic fluids.
Levels of 0.2 parts per million or above are considered to be of
concern, said Jeanne Garcia, spokeswoman for the Southern California
Department of Toxic Substances.
Soil samples collected in July and September of 2002 found 1.5
acres of the site contaminated with levels as high as 3,220 parts per
million. Of the five homes tested nearby, PCBs were detected in four,
with the highest level at 200 parts per million.
At the meeting, toxic regulators will present cleanup options and
data from the most recent soil samples, which were collected last
month. Property owner Hearthside Homes has agreed to shoulder the
cost of the cleanup on the site, said Garcia.
Lucy Dunn, vice president of Hearthside Homes declined comment.
Garcia stressed that special attention would be given to
residential areas found to be contaminated.
“We will be concentrating more on the homeowners,” said Garcia.
“We will let them know that we will remove contaminated soil. We’ll
let them know that we will not use heavy equipment and will not
disturb homes, yards or plants.”
While she could not predict an exact timeline, Garcia said that
cleanup of the homes will start immediately and should be finished
within the next few months.
Future plans will also include a feasibility study to determine
options for cleanup at the Fieldstone site.
In the past, the empty lot contained a bike path, a jogging trail,
and was often used to access the beach. In February of last year,
however, after the first soil samples were taken, the state agency
required Hearthside Homes to fence off the site.
“Kids used to ride bikes down the area and eat sandwiches there,”
said resident Dean Albright, who recalled watching a child drop a
sandwich on the ground, pick it up, wipe it off and eat it.
Albright, a former employee of the Long Beach Naval Shipyard,
aided in several PCB cleanups as the result of ruptures in the
transformers. After a cleanup, all tools used, as well as paper
suits, slip on boots, gloves and masks, had to be burned.
“We were always told by our health department that PCBs will cause
liver cancer,” he said.
Bolsa Chica Land Trust President Evan Henry was pleased with the
way the Department of Toxic Substances Control is approaching the
problem.
“They’re crossing all their t’s and dotting all their i’s,” Henry
said. “But I think that taking their time and doing it right is an
appropriate course of action.”
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.