
New Bedford wants rest of PCB settlement money
By Charis Anderson, Standard-Times
NEW BEDFORD — City
officials are pushing for the remaining funds in the New
Bedford Harbor trust to be allocated to city projects,
arguing that the money should be spent as close as
possible to where the damage from the long-running
contamination of the harbor occurred.
"The intent of this trust was to make sure that we begin
to repair the damage that had been done," Mayor Scott W.
Lang said. "This last major funding round, I want to see
the money infused into New Bedford."
Of the $19.1 million expended from the trust to date,
about a third has gone to projects in New Bedford or the
harbor, according to Jack Terrill, a fish and wildlife
administrator at the National Oceanic and Atmosphere
Administration.
The bulk of the money has been spent on projects outside
the immediate harbor vicinity, such as $1.5 million to
restore the tern habitat on islands off Marion and
Gosnold and almost $500,000 on the restoration of a
marsh in Nonquitt in South Dartmouth.
The New Bedford Harbor Trustee Council was established
in 1992 with a $20.2 million settlement from electrical
parts manufacturers who released toxic PCBs and heavy
metals into New Bedford Harbor from the 1940s through
the late 1970s.
In this final funding round, which was announced in
January 2009, about $6 million will be distributed,
according to Terrill, who is the council's coordinator.
The city submitted three applications: a $6 million
proposal to restore about 1½ miles of coastline along
the upper harbor; a $1.1 million plan to remediate
Palmers Island and an $800,000 project focused on the
continued restoration of shellfish beds in the outer
harbor, according to city officials.
"The citizens of New Bedford have been the recipient of
the greatest injury of this pollution ... and deserve,
from my perspective, that the remaining dollars go
toward projects that are in New Bedford," said Matthew
Morrissey, executive director of the New Bedford
Economic Development Council.
The riparian restoration project, which will include
planting native vegetation along the shoreline and the
construction of a walkway with a permeable surface, is
the city's priority, according to city officials.
In addition to the environmental benefits of the project
— reintroducing vegetation to an area of the shoreline
that has been denuded; improving the wildlife habitat;
and reducing erosion along the shoreline — the project
will give city residents access to that stretch of
waterfront for the first time in decades, city officials
said.
"The fact is connecting the people back to the river is
a significant statement that the Harbor Trustee Council
could do to say the damage that was done is being
reversed," said Lang, who noted he also wants additional
funding for shellfish restoration.
The trustee council received 15 applications, including
the city's three projects, requesting a total of $24.5
million, Terrill said.
A draft environmental assessment of the projects is
undergoing review, and an announcement of the council's
preliminary decision will be made once that review is
complete, according to Terrill, who said he expects that
to occur in the coming weeks.
The council's decisions are governed by the
Comprehensive Environmental Response, Compensation and
Liability Act, or CERCLA, which states that the
settlement funds must be used to restore, replace or
acquire the equivalent of the resources that were
damaged.
"There are typically fewer opportunities for natural
resource restoration projects in a working developed
harbor," wrote Terrill in an e-mail.
"The trustee council early on recognized that there may
be limitations on what could be done in the immediate
harbor considering that cleanup activities were going to
occur for years to come," he wrote.
The trustee council's restoration plan states that any
projects funded must not be undone or negatively
affected by the ongoing remediation work in the harbor,
according to Terrill.
Former Mayor John Bullard, who served as the NOAA
trustee on the council during the 1990s, said there was
an ongoing debate over whether to devote the money to
where the injury occurred or to restore natural
resources as close as possible to New Bedford.
"Everyone's going to have their own opinion on that," he
said. "Personally, I would have weighted it more toward
investing in the inner and outer harbor."
Mark Rasmussen, executive director of the Coalition for
Buzzards Bay, said he agreed with the city that trust
funds should be spent as close to where the damage
happened as possible.
However, he said, "The pollution in the harbor doesn't
know municipal bounds."
Projects such as the Marsh Island restoration and the
acquisition of the Acushnet Sawmill property, although
not located in New Bedford, benefit city residents as
well, Rasmussen said.
The two projects for which the coalition is seeking
funding from the harbor trust — a plan to restore
wetlands and create a public trail system on the sawmill
property, and a plan to purchase a 40-acre farm directly
north of that property — also will benefit the city, he
said.
canderson@s-t.com
March 04, 2010
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