
New Bedford considers future of Aerovox site
By Charis Anderson, New Bedford Standard-Times
After almost two years
of negotiations, the company responsible for demolishing
the old Aerovox mill is on the verge of signing
settlement agreements with the city and state and
federal environmental agencies that will clear the way
for the building to be razed in 2011, officials said.
And while the cleanup of the site at 740 Belleville Ave.
will take several years, city officials are already
looking to the future and potential development
opportunities for the 10½-acre parcel.
"You have to know where you want to go, and (Mayor Scott
W. Lang) has been clear that he doesn't simply want an
asphalt cap," said Matthew Morrissey, executive director
of the New Bedford Economic Development Council. "The
fully publicly vetted plans will be done well in advance
of when the site is fully clean."
While the city's plans for the site are still at a
conceptual stage, certain elements are likely to be
included in the final version: a recreational facility
such as a soccer field; open space and areas for public
gatherings; parking for the people who work in the
neighborhood, according to Morrissey.
"We're looking at this as an opportunity to provide more
recreational space," Lang said.
But first, the PCB-contaminated mill must be demolished
and the site cleaned.
Once the settlement agreements with the responsible
party, AVX Corp. of Myrtle Beach, S.C., are effective —
a date officials from the U.S. Environmental Protection
Agency say is still about a month-and-a-half away — a
10-month planning phase will commence, according to
Marilyn Wade, a consultant with URS Corp., which was
hired by AVX.
Wade spoke about the demolitions plans during a
community meeting at the New Bedford Free Public Library
last week.
During that initial phase, plans for everything from
ensuring the health and safety of workers on the site to
monitoring and managing air quality will be developed,
Wade said.
The second phase, demolition, will take about 16 months,
although the razing of the building will only take about
six to eight months, according to Wade.
Once the demolition phase is complete, the site will
move into a cleanup phase under the state Department of
Environmental Protection's Massachusetts Contingency
Plan, according to Wade.
During that process, which will take several years,
additional site assessment will be conducted to
determine how to address the remaining site
contamination in a long-term way, Wade said.
AVX will be shouldering the cost of the demolition,
about $13 million, as well as the costs of any studies
and remediation work conducted under the Massachusetts
Contingency Plan, according to Dave Dickerson, EPA
project manager.
The city of New Bedford will be responsible for
transporting the contaminated demolition debris to a
federally licensed disposal facility and will use EPA
funds to pay for those removal costs, estimated to be $8
million to $10 million, Dickerson said.
canderson@s-t.com
March 01, 2010 12:00 AM
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OUR VIEW: Harbor cleanup to create prime waterfront
site, New Bedford Standard-Times
The quick and easy way would have been for New Bedford
to agree to having the old Aerovox mill demolished and
then the ground capped with earth and asphalt.
That would have helped keep PCBs remaining at the
contaminated site on Belleville Avenue from doing more
harm.
However, Mayor Scott W. Lang and city leaders have
insisted that the corporate entity responsible for much
of the PCB contamination in the city's harbor make the
site clean. Therefore, a far more extensive cleanup will
be required.
For two years, negotiations with AVX Corp. of Myrtle
Beach, S.C., have been taking place, and the federal
Environmental Protection Agency expects that the company
soon will agree to pay more than $13 million to demolish
the building and clean up the 10-plus acre site.
Contaminated debris and earth from the demolition will
then be hauled to a licensed facility for disposal. The
trucking costs would be paid for by the city with
federal EPA funds.
It will add some years to the cleanup and make it more
expensive, but at the end New Bedford will have a
waterfront property that can be re-used.
Matthew Morrissey, the executive director of the New
Bedford Economic Development Council, said the city is
considering using it for recreation.
The city's waterfront is one of its greatest assets, but
while the public has superb access to the waterfront
along the outer harbor in the South End, it is a
different story along the inner harbor and the densely
populated neighborhoods nearby.
March 02, 2010
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