Soil testing required at garage site

NORTH EAST — The soil at the town garage at South Center Street remains in need of attention. The Town Board discussed the matter at its special meeting on Monday, Aug. 16, when it received notice that the its engineering firm, Morris Associates, had information relative to testing that needs to be done at the garage site. The work is to follow up on soil removal that had been done when the water mains were being excavated during a water project conducted jointly by the town and village last year. At that time the soils were considered to be contaminated but not viewed as dangerous.

“My understanding is those soils were able to be used as cover material as part of a landfill site,� said town Supervisor Dave Sherman. “Our major cost in that was the loading and transportation of soils. The DEC [Department of Environmental Conservation], after reading reports that were prepared explaining what happened to the soil, asked the town to prepare an additional plan of work to do additional sampling and testing of soils in that vicinity to determine the source and scope of the physical area where the soils were contaminated.�

The town did not have the scope of work, but is discussing how to get one prepared with Morris Associates, which would likely also manage the sampling and testing. The firm does use other vendors to provide specific services, like Ecosystem Strategies, which will likely do the actual sampling and testing work.

Town Engineer Ray Jurkowski (of Morris Associates) advised the Town Board that the estimate for that firm’s involvement in the project, along with the fees from Morris Associates, might be about $6,000. Sherman said that should also include the contract to do the probing and the lab work.

The end result of all of that work will be a report that will ultimately be submitted to the DEC. The DEC will then decide what needs to occur from that point onward.

“These things tend to flow like chapters until the DEC says, ‘It’s the end of the book,’� the supervisor said. “And we’ll see where this next chapter takes us.�

According to Sherman, when the excavation was occurring for the water main, the DEC was fine with the material that was being dug up and filled back in, which he said “was not a big issue.� However, things shifted slightly.

“I think they’re now interested in seeing if there’s some sort of active source that’s there or what’s occurring or occurred there,� he said. “Something could have happened at the site that does not reflect on any operations that the town had.�

According to Sherman, the town garage has not had any open spills at the site. He did remember that back in the 1990s fuel oil was stored behind the building, however, and that there was a line that ran from the storage tank around the building. At that time there was a leak in the line and fuel oil did get into the soil. That happened due to the plumbing, said Sherman, who added the problem was “fully resolved.� The town supervisor also said the site was thoroughly cleaned afterward.

“All soils that got contaminated were removed from where they were as required by the DEC,� he said. “There is no relationship from that to what was found when the excavation occurred to replace the water main on South Center Street.�

No time frame, meanwhile, was given as to how long it will take for the soil testing to be completed and results submitted back to the Town Board.

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