G.E.'s Comments on Disposal of PCB's Draw
Objections
By Andrew C. Revkin
Copyright 1998 New York Times
January 28, 1999
To many people in the Hudson Valley, the scenario is familiar:
A stain of 
PCB's, toxic industrial chemicals, lies buried along the river.
Environmental 
officials and residents are eager to dig it up, and General
Electric presses to 
let the contaminants stay where they are.
The difference this time is that General Electric had
nothing to do with this 
particular pocket of pollution, which is in a fenced lot in
Hastings-on-Hudson, 
a prosperous Westchester village 15 miles from Manhattan. General
Electric's 
factories, which generated most of the PCB's in the river, are 150
miles 
upstream.  
 That is why Hastings residents and some elected officials
complained yesterday 
that the company was improperly interfering in local affairs when
it filed 
comments contending that the pollution did not pose a significant
environmental 
threat and opposing a state plan to excavate the tainted soil.
Jean Zimmerman, chairman of Hastings 
Waterfront Watch, a local environmental group, called for a boycott
of the 
company, saying its intrusion was irresponsible.
"G.E. should keep out of the Hastings waterfront
cleanup process and mind its 
own PCB's," she said. 
Company officials defended the seven-page letter sent to
the state's Department 
of Environmental 
Conservation in November, which criticized many aspects of the
proposed $40 
million cleanup plan. David Warshaw, a spokesman for General
Electric, said 
state law allows anyone to comment on such an issue. 
"To suggest that one portion of the public should in
some way be shut 
out seems to be at odds with 25 years of environmental law,"
he said.
General Electric has been engaged in costly PCB cleanups at
its plants in 
Hudson Falls and Fort Edwards and faces as much as $1 billion in
cleanup costs 
if Federal officials order it to dredge 
"hot spots" downriver of the factories. That decision is
due next year.
Over the last decade, the company has repeatedly challenged
Federal and state 
decisions to dig up polluted soil or river mud, saying that in most
cases the 
chemicals pose no substantial health 
risk and eventually break 
down if left buried.
Federal environmental officials say PCB's, or
polychlorinated biphenyls, are a 
probable 
cause of cancer and other ills in humans and can harm wildlife. The
chemicals were banned in 
1977. 
In Hastings, high levels of PCB's accumulated in the soil
and leached into the 
river 
during wire-making operations at a factory owned by Anaconda Wire
and Cable 
Company from 1919 to 1978. Other hazardous chemicals and heavy
metals permeate 
parts of the 26-acre tract. Once state officials settle on a
cleanup plan, it 
will be 
undertaken and paid for by the Atlantic Richfield Company, the
current owner of 
the property. Atlantic Richfield has not opposed the cleanup plan. 
The current proposal calls for the excavation of six
heavily contaminated 
spots, with the material taken to hazardous waste landfills. Other
areas would 
be capped with clean soil or 
other materials.
General Electric said the PCB's could be permanently sealed
and stabilized 
where they are, eliminating the need for costly digging, trucking
and disposal. 
This echoes its position on the dredging of PCB's in the upper
Hudson. 
Mr. Warshaw said the company felt it was obligated to share
its expertise and 
opinions, which had been gained 
over more than a decade of studying and cleaning PCB contamination.
Richard L. Brodsky, the chairman of the Assembly Committee
on Environmental 
Conservation and a Democrat representing Hastings, said General
Electric had no 
right to file comments in the cleanup case.
"The notion that they're casually offering 
an opinion just to be helpful doesn't have any dignity," said
Mr. Brodsky, who held a news conference yesterday to draw attention
to 
the issue. 
"Hastings is a pawn in the larger G.E. chess game."
Gary Sheffer, a spokesman for the State Department of
Environmental 
Conservation, said yesterday that there were no obvious legal
barriers to 
General Electric's expressing its views on cleanups that were not
its 
responsibility. 
The company filed similar comments last year when the state
agency proposed a 
PCB cleanup at a site owned by Georgia Pacific Corporation 
on the shore of Lake Champlain in Plattsburgh, Mr. Sheffer said. 
"We asked for removal," Mr. Sheffer said. 
"G.E. thought the best solution was containment, and we opted
for removal."
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