Time has come for Ascon cleanup
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It is one of those once-in-a-lifetime opportunities. Seven major oil
companies have agreed, and one is being forced, to pay for the
cleanup of the Ascon toxic dump.
The polluted site in Southeast Huntington Beach, which sits
between the AES Huntington Beach power plant and Edison High School,
has long been a sore spot in the community.
For five decades, oil and chemical companies dumped their
crude-oil waste, styrene and other toxic compounds on the 38-acre
parcel. That was followed by the dumping of metals and wood. Then,
residents watched a string of developers go bankrupt trying to carry
out plans to clean up and develop the area.
Now, through the persistence of the state’s Department of Toxic
Substances Control, funds are on the way to clean up of one of
Southern California’s most contaminated landfills.
Cleanup could begin in a year and a half and take as long as three
years.
Many residents in Southeast Huntington Beach have voiced concerns
-- and some outright objections -- to the cleanup plans. This is
understandable considering the risks of stirring up toxins and the
definite inconvenience that will come with such an involved clean up.
But opportunities like this don’t come along very often, and
cleaning up a toxic pit is certainly worth the inconvenience of noise
of construction trucks in the long run. Home prices are bound to go
up once the dump is cleaned up. The looming danger of polluted
groundwater will at last be removed.
As for safety, it is of the utmost concern. State regulators need
to be vigilant in their attention to detail.
As the cleanup of another toxic area in Huntington Beach moves
forward on the homes surrounding the Fieldstone property on the other
side of town, state regulators have held numerous community meetings
to keep residents aware. They plan to do the cleanup by hand rather
than with machines for safety reasons, they said.
Meetings like those held near the Fieldstone property need to be
held in Southeast Huntington Beach. All Southeast Huntington Beach
residents should be notified and invited, as it will affect the
entire community.
In the meantime, let’s all look forward to the day, hopefully
soon, that the stain of the Ascon site will be removed forever from
this community.
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