-------
PILE No. 838 07/15 '97 16:3*3 ID' ^4ฃZ DC
innocent victims. They did nothuig to knowingly place themselves in harm's way.
I here was a time bomb waiting in their home. It is a poison that we have knou
about since antiquity . It has invaded their bodies and we know who put it there
Who should make this nght'; They have no homes Their lives' investments were
permanently taken from them. What are ihe long terra effects of this on our fellow
citizens1
ฃ0flsmuem$ made whole. I want then liveiTfitume^ to normal.
1 want the Ai&hknaire eradeti Jot foem and j waiUjustK&jur The residern^-tl
and ihcir environment Thank you Tor giving me the opportunity to present" my
views.
-------
NKW JBHSBT SBXATB
SENATE COMMITTEES
BUDOCT JJTD Arrmonunat
IKABD F. Kawirr, JR. Jonrr Btmotr OVSUIOBT
ICMATOK. 33fป 0ซT*CT STAT1
Hrosow COUWTT A*r FotAjrcLu. IxrnTtmowi
235 HuDSOir STปปT
HoBoiDt, HJ orooo
TB_Kป*ป>-ซซ July 16, 1997
Mr. John Hansen
Remedial Project Manager
U.S. Environmental Protection Agency
290 Broadway, 19th Floor
New York, NY 10007-1866
Dear Mr. Hansen:
I am writing in support of the Proposed Plan that describes the alternatives which the U.S.
Environmental Protection Agency has recommended for the Grand Street Mercury Site in Hoboken, New
Jersey. As the state representative for the sixteen former resident families of 722 Grand Street, I believe
that the recommended course of action on this property should be the permanent relocation of the
residents and the complete demolition of the building.
The Grand Street Artists Partnership pooled their resources and purchased this building in
August 1993. They followed all the proper procedures to ensure this former industrial site was safe for
residential use and after receiving the required permits they began to move in and renovate their
individual units for living/work space. During this renovation period, mercury contamination was found
throughout the building and the Hoboken Health Department took the unusual action of ordering the
families to vacate the premises. The Health Department tested the residents for mercury and many were
found to have elevated levels of mercury in their system.
It has been over a year and a half that the families have been living in temporary housing and
with the uncertainty of what the future holds for them. Some of their personal belongings remain in the
sealed building while others are.,in storage. They have been living with the physical effects of exposure
to mercury, severe emotional distress and financial constraints. The Grand Street Artists have suffered a
great deal during the last two years. Having closure and the need to move on with their lives is important
for them.
After reviewing your Proposed Plan for the Grand Street Mercury Site and meeting with the
residents of 722 Grand Street, I believe that the safest long-term remedy for the site should be permanent
relocation of the former residents, acquisition of the property by the USEPA and demolition of the
property while ensuring that they environmentally restore the land. It is in the best interest of the
community to follow this course of action and important that the USEPA not change the preferred course
of action.
Yf ry truly yours,
BERNARD!
Senator, 33rd District1
BFKish
-------
REMARKS FOR ASSEMBLYMAN LOUIS ROMANO
iMINATED CONDOMINIUMS
PUBLIC MEETING
JULY 16.1997
HQBOKEN HIGH SCHOOL
LADIES AND GENTLEMEN. I WELCOME YOU HERE
THIS EVENING AND ASK THAT YOU FEEL FREE TO
VOICE YOUR CONCERNS ABOUT THE UNFORTUNATE,
TRYING SITUATION IN WHICH THE FORMER RESIDENTS
OF THE "MERCURY CONDOS" FIND THEMSELVES.
OVER A YEAR AGO, SIXTEEN FAMILIES WERE
FORCED OUT OF THE BUILDING THEY CALLED HOME,
AFTER A HIGH CONCENTRATION OF MERCURY WAS
DISCOVERED. THIS BUILDING HAS APPARENTLY
HARBORED THIS CONTAMINATION FOR YEARS,
HOWEVER, IT ONLY BECAME APPARENT DURING THE
-------
RENOVATION OF CERTAIN APARTMENTS IN JANUARY
OF 1995.
IT HAS BEEN DETERMINED THAT THE BUILDING
WAS A FORMER INDUSTRIAL SITE AND THE LOCATION
A HOME FOR MANY BUSINESSES, BEFORE IT WAS
PURCHASED IN 1993 BY THE GRAND STREET ARTISTS
PARTNERSHIP DURING THESE RENOVATIONS.
IT IS NOT MY PURPOSE TO QUESTION HOW THESE
RESIDENTS WERE ALLOWED TO MOVE INTO A
BUILDING OF THIS NATURE. MORE IMPORTANTLY, IT
WAS ULTIMATELY DISCOVERED AND DOCUMENTED
THAT MERCURY VAPORS HAVE PERMEATED THE AIR,
CAUSING SEVERAL RESIDENTS TO EXPERIENCE
MERCURY LEVEL IN THEIR URINE.
-------
FAMILIES WILL FINALLY BE PUT ON THE FINAL ROAD
TO RECOVERY. ALSO, I MIGHT ADD THAT I HAVE
INTRODUCED LEGISLATION THAT WILL PREVENT THIS
TYPE OF THING FROM EVER HAPPENING AGAIN. MY
BILL WILL REQUIRE ANY PERSON WHO CONSTRUCTS
NEW RESIDENTIAL HOUSING ON ANY PROPERTY THAT
WAS PREVIOUSLY USED AS AN INDUSTRIAL
ESTABLISHMENT, TO INVESTIGATE THE PROPERTY AND
MAKE SURE THATJ^Q HAZARDOUS CONTAMINANTS
THANK YOU FOR YOUR INDULGENCE IN ALLOWING
ME TO EXPRESS MY VIEWS THIS EVENING.
-------
ASSEMBLY, No. 1886
STATE OF NEW JERSEY
INTRODUCED MAY 6, 1996
Bj .Irfc.-u.ujUMu ROMANO ปo*i
i AN ACT concerning residential housing development, supplementing
2 P.L.1975. c.217 (C.52:27D-119 et seq.) and amending P.L.1993.
3 c.139.
4
5 BE IT ENACTED by the Senate and General Assembly of the State
6 of New Jersey:
1
8 1. (New section) a. No person shall construct new residential
9 housing on any property that at any time was used as an industrial
10 establishment unless that person, prior to the construction, conducts
i i 4 enacted IIM) inlended Io be omitted in the Uw.
Mailer underlined Ihus is neป nuller.
-------
AISS6
2
1 u follows:
2 23. Aป used in ปectioni 23 through 43 of P.LI993. c.139
3 (C.58:IOB-letieq.):
4 "Areซ of concern" means any location where contaminants are or
5 were known or suspected to have been discharged, generated,
6 manufactured, refined, transported, stored, handled, treated, or
7 disputed, or wtictc c**urairaปtt have cr may have, migntfl
8 "Authority" means the New Jeney Ecooomic Development
9 Authority established pursuant to P.L.I974, c.80 (C.34:1B-1 et seq.);
10 "Contamination" or "contaminant" means any discharged hazardous
11 substance as defined pursuant to section 3 of P.L.1976, c.Ul
12 (C.58:10-23. lib), hazardous waste as defined pursuant to section 1 of
13 P.L.1976, c.99 (C.I3:1ฃ-38), or pollutant as defined pursuant to
14 section 3 of P.L.1977, c.74 (C.58:10A-3);
15 "Department" means the Department of Environmental Protection
16 [and Energy];
17 "Discharge" means an inientional or unintentional action or
18 omission resulting in the releasing, spilling, leaking, pumping,
'n pouring cmilLir.e. emplyinc or ^unp'iis ฐ(* contaminant onto the
2(j land or intoihe water*01 me Ma;e or into j building tn uii> State:
21 "Engineering controls" means any mechanism to contain or
22 stabilize contamination or ensure the effectiveness of a remedial
23 action. Engineering controls may include, without limitation, caps,
24 covers, dikes, trenches, leachate collection systems, signs, fences and
25 access controls;
26 "Financial assistance" means loans or loan guarantees;
27 "Institutional control' means a mechanism used to limit human
28 activities at or near a contaminated site, or to ensure the effectiveness
29 of the remedial action over time, when contaminants remain at a
30 contaminated site in levels or concentrations above the applicable
31 remediation standard that would allow unrestricted use of that
I'. , Institutional controls may include, without limitation,
33 structure, land, and natural resource use restrictions, well restriction
34 areas, and deed notices;
35 '"No further action letter" means a written determination by the
36 department that based upon an evaluation of the historical use of a
37 particular site, or of an area of concern or areas of concern at that site,
38 as applicable, and any other investigation or action the department
39 deems necessary, there are no discharged contaminants present at the
40 site, ai the area of concern or areas of concern, at any other site to
41 which a discharge originating at the site has migrated, or that any
42 discharged contaminants present at the site or that have migrated from
43 the site have been remediated in accordance with applicable
44 remediation regulations;
45 "Preliminary assessment" means the first phase in the process of
46 identifying areas of concern and determining whether contaminants
-------
AIS86
3
1 are or were presentat site or have migrated or are mifratinf from a
2 site, and shall include the initial search for and evaluation of. existing
3 site specific operational and environmental information, both current
4 and historic, to determine if further investigation concerning the
S documented, alleged, suspected or latent discharge of any contaminant
A U required. T>- %luatiซn of historic information shall be conducted
7 from 193210 dwprcw.n, except that ttw ikputnent may require the
8 search for and evaluation of additional information relating to
9 ownership and use of the site prior to 1932 if such information is
10 available through diligent inquiry of the public records;
11 "Remedial action" means those actions taken at a site or offsile if
12 a contaminant has migrated or is migrating therefrom, as may be
13 required by the department, including the removal, treatment,
14 containment, transportation, securing, or other engineering or
15 treatment measures, whether of a permanent nature or otherwise,
16 designed to ensure that any discharged contaminant at the site or that
17 has migrated or is migrating from the site, is remediated in
18 compliance with the applicable remediation standards;
1ฐ "Rerredial investigation" rr"ปns ?. nซ-or<ซซซ to determine the nature.
2u ana extent ot a aischajge 01 a cuntaii.ii.aru ai <> sue ur a uiป\:h<ป.'gr jf
21 a contaminant that has migrated or is migrating from the site and the
22 problems presented by a discharge, and may include data collected,
23 site characterization, sampling, monitoring, and the gathering of any
24 other sufficient and relevant information necessary to determine the
25 necessity for remedial action and to support the evaluation of remedial
26 actions if necessary;
27 "Remediation" or "remediate" means al! necessary actions to
28 investigate and clean up any known, suspected, or threatened
29 discharge of contaminants, including, as necessary, the preliminary
30 assessment, site investigation, remedial investigation, and remedial
31 action;
32 "Si; HI'--* f " r, collection and evaluation of data
33 adequate to determine whether or not discharged contaminants exist
34 at a site or have migrated or are migrating from the site at levels in
35 excess of the applicable remediation standards. A site investigation
36 shall be developed based upon the information collected pursuant to
37 the preliminary assessment;
38 "Remedial action workplan" means a plan for the remedial action
39 to be undertaken at a site, or at any area to which a discharge
40 originating at a site is migrating or has migrated; a description of the
41 remedial action to be used to remediate a site; a time schedule and
42 cost estimate of the implementation of the remedial action; and any
43 other information the department deems necessary;
44 "Remediation fund" means the Hazardous Discharge Site
45 Remediation Fund established pursuant to section 26 of P.L. 1993,
46 c.!39(C.58:10B-4);
-------
AI8S6
4
1 'Remediation funding source' means the methods of financing the
2 remediation of a discharge required to be established by a person
3 performing the remediation pursuant to section 25 of P.L. 1993. c. 139
4 (C.58:10B-3);
5 'Remediation standards" means the combination of numeric and
6 .narrative faadards to which contaminants must be remediated for
7 toil. ฃyjldiAt_iBicggฃซ_/TO'indwit?T. or turfac* water as provided by
8 the department pursuant to section 35 of PJ-1993, c.139
9 (C58:10B-12). (cf:P.LI993.c.l39,s.23)
10
11 3. Section35ofP.LI993.c.l39(C.58:10B-12)isamendedtoread
12 as follows:
13 35. a. The Department of Environmental Protection [and Energy]
14 shall adopt minimum remediation standards for soil, building
15 interiors, groundwaier. and surface water quality necessary for the
16 remediation of contamination of real property. The remediation
17 standards shall be developed to ensure that the potential for harm to
18 public health and safety and to the environment is minimized to
19 acceptable levels, taking into consideration the location, the
10 suuooiซJ.ngi,-Hปซ ir.tEr,dt
-------
AISS6
3
I scenarios as to amounts of contaminants to which humans or other
2 receptors will be exposed, when and where those exposures will
3 occur, and the amount of that exposure;
4 (3) avoid the use of redundant conservative assumptions. The
S department shall avoid the use of redundant conservative assumptions
6 by the OK of ป*ป""** '^at provide an adequate margin of safety and
7 which avoid the ซtt r'^aortalisttc conservative exposure paruaeten
S and which guidelines make use of the guidance and regulations for
9 exposure assessment developed by the United States Environmental
10 Protection Agency pursuant to the "Comprehensive Environmental
11 Response, Compensation, and Liability Act of 1980," 42 U.S.C.
12 (9601 et seq. and other statutory authorities as applicable; and
13 (4) where feasible, establish the remediation standards as numeric
14 or narrative standards setting forth acceptable levels or concentrations
15 for particular contaminants.
16 c. (I) The department shall develop residential and nonresidential
17 soil remediation standards that are protective of public health and
18 safety. For contaminants that are mobile and transportable to
'9 ฃfซxjndwatcr lh& residential and nonresideniiaJ soil remediation
20 sundaicii shall be protective of grounclw.itcr and surface wtsfiar
21 Residential soil remediation standards shall be set at levels or
22 concentrations of contamination for real property based upon the use
23 of that property for residential or similar uses and which will allow
24 the unrestricted use of that property without exceeding a health risk
25 level greater than that provided in subsection d. of this section.
26 Nonresidential soil remediation standards shall be set at levels or
27 concentrations of contaminants that recognize the lower likelihood of
28 exposure to contamination on property that will not be used for
29 residential or similar uses. Whenever real property is remediated to a
30 nonresidentia) soil remediation standard, except as otherwise provided
31 in paragraph (3) of subsection g. of this section, the department shall
32 require, pursuant to section 36 of P.L. 1993, c.l 39 (C ^S,'"'0 '^)
-------
A1SS6
6
*ซ<* ~M^ will allow the miiettricted UK of thlt Droceitv without
2 eiceedint i health ritk level yreater than that provided In mbtac^jgn
3 d. of thii icction. Nonnaidentitl buildint Interior rtindirdi thill h{
4 Mt it teveli or concentrations of contamininti thlt recotnize tf|e
5 lower likelihood of exposure to contamination on pfopertv thil wil|
6 not be Hjtj fgf ft*idcntitl or iimilir utei. ^henever real property jf
7 rejr*tdi>tcd to i noBr***
9 section, the department thall require, purtutnt to lection 36 of
10 P.L.J993. c.l 39 (C.58:IOB-131. that the use of the property be
1 1 restricted to nonreiidential or other uses compitible with the extern
12 of the contamination of the building interior and thlt iccett to thy
13 site be restricted in a manner compatible with the allowable use of
14 that property.
IS d. In developing minimum remediation standards intended to be
16 protective of public health and safety, the depanment shall identify
17 the hazards posed by a contaminant to determine whether exposure to
1 8 that contaminant can cause an increase in the incidence of an adverse
!9 hfalih effect and whether (he adverse health effect may occur in
-l> huiitunS. ~nc uepaftntenTaKa!! wi
21 remediation standards for both residential and nonresidential uses
22 that:
23 (1) for human carcinogens, as categorized by the United States
24 Environmental Protection Agency, will result in an additional cancer
25 risk of one in one million;
26 (2) for noncarcinogens. will limit the Hazard Index for any given
27 effect to a value not exceeding one.
28 The health risk levels established in this subsection are for any
29 particular contaminant and not for the cumulative effects of more than
30 one contaminant at a site.
31 e. Remediation standards and other requirements established
32 pursuant to this section shall apply to remediation activities required
33 pursuant to the "Spill Compensation and Control Act," P.L.1976,
34 c.141 (C. 58: 10-23.1 I et seq ). the "Water Pollution Control Act."
35 P.L.I977, c.74 (C.58:IOA-1 et seq.), P. L. 1986, c.102 (C.58:10A-2I
36 et seq.), the "Industrial Site Recovery Act," P.L.I983, c.330
37 (C. 1 3 : 1 K-6 et al.), the "Solid Waste Management Act." P.L. 1 970, c.39
38 (C.13:1E-1 ct seq.), the "Comprehensive Regulated Medical Waste
39 Management Act," P L.I989, c.34 (C.13:1E-48.1 et seq.). the "Major
40 Hazardous Waste Facilities Siting Act," P. L. 1981, c. 279 (C.13:lE-49
4 1 et seq.), the "Sanitary Landfill Facility Closure and Contingency Fund
42 Act."P.L.198l,c.306(C 13: lE-lOOet seq.), the "Regional Low-Level
43 Radioactive Waste Disposal Facility Siting Act," P.L. 1987, c.333
44 (C.13ME-177 et seq.), or any other law or regulation by which the
45 State may compel a person to perform remediation activities on
46 contaminated property. However, nothing in this subsection shall be
-------
A1886
7
I construed to limit the authority of the department to establish
2 discharge limits for pollutants or to prescribe penalties for violations
3 of those limits pursuant to P.L. 1977, c.74 (C.58:IOA-1 etseq.), orto
4 require the complete removal of nonhazardous solid waste pursuant
S to law.
6 f. (I) A person performing a remediation of contaminated real
7 property, in \'A* ป.'ซ.-:ig the etiabluhed micimum soil remediation
8 standard for either residential use or nonrwidential use adopted by the
9 department pursuant to subsection c. of this section, may submit to the
10 department a request to use an alternative residential use or
11 nonresidential use soil remediation standard. The use of an
12 alternative soil remediation standard shall be based upon site specific
13 factors which may include (I) physical site characteristics which may
14 vary from those used by the department in the development of the soil
15 remediation standards adopted pursuant to this section; or (2) a site
16 specific risk assessment. If a person performing a remediation
17 requests to use an alternative soil remediation standard based upon a
18 site specific risk assessment, that person shall demonstrate to the
19 department lhaซ the requested deviation from the risk assessment
A3 piuicxo! usฃd by ihe uepaiiiiierti in t!it &tfeiof>r>ปฃrii of 6til
21 remediation standards pursuant to this section is consistent with the
22 guidance and regulations for exposure assessment developed by the
23 United States Environmental Protection Agency pursuant to the
24 "Comprehensive Environmental Response, Compensation, and
25 Liability Act of 1980." 42 U.S.C. ง9601 et seq. and other statutory
26 authorities as applicable. A site specific risk assessment may consider
27 exposure scenarios and assumptions that take into account the form
28 of the contaminant present, natural biodegradation, fate and transport
29 of the contaminant, and available toxicological data that are based
30 upon generally accepted and peer reviewed scientific evidence or
31 methodologies.
3ฃ j determination by the department that the requested
33 alternative remediation standard is protective of public health and
34 safety, as established in subsection d. of this section, and protective
35 of the environment pursuant to subsection a. of this section, the
36 alternative residential use or nonresidential use soil remediation
37 standard shall be approved by the department.
38 (2) The department may, upon its own initiative, require an
39 alternative remediation standard for a particular contaminant for a
40 specific real property site, in lieu of using the established minimum
41 residential use or nonresidential use soil remediation standard adopted
42 by the department for a particular contaminant pursuant to this
43 section. The department may require an alternative remediation
44 standard pursuant to this paragraph upon a determination by the
45 department, based on the weight of the scientific evidence, that due
46 to specific physical site characteristics of the subject real property, the
-------
I UM of the Adopted residential use or nonresidential use soil
2 remediation standards would not be protective of public health or
3 safety or of the environment, as appropriate.
4 g. The development, selection, and implementation of any
5 remediation standard or remedial action shall ensure that it is
6 protective of public health, safety, and the environment, as applicable,
7 as provided in this xectinn. In detenntnii>t the appropriate remedial
8 action that shall occur at a site in order to meet (ho established
9 remediation standards, the department, or any person performing the
10 remediation, shall base its decision on the following factors:
II (I) Permanent and nonpermanent remedies shall be allowed except
12 that permanent remedies shall be preferred over nonpermanent
13 remedies for remedial actions;
14 (2) Contamination may, upon the department's approval, be left
15 onsite at levels or concentrations that exceed the minimum building
16 interior or soil remediation standards for residential use or
17 nonresidential use if the implementation of institutional or
18 engineering controls at that site will result in the protection of public
19 health, safety and the environment at the risk level established in
1C siibsectiCn d. of this ?ecii(*i ir,d if the fc^ircrror.ts ejtablishrd in
21 subsections a., b.. c. and d of section 36 of P.L.1993, c.139
22 (C.58.IOB-13)aremet;
23 (3) Real property on which there is soil or a building interior that
24 has not been remediated to the residential buildine interior or soil
25 remediation standards, or real property on which the building interior.
26 soil, groundwater, or surface water has been remediated to meet the
27 required health risk level by the use of engineering or institutional
28 ^ controls, may be developed or used for residential purposes, or for any
29 other similar purpose, if (a) all areas of that real property or within a
30 building interior at which a person may come into contact with the
31 building interior or with soil are remediated to meet the residential
32 buildtng intgrr^jf or salt rtjme
-------
A18W
9
I real property for contamination coming onto the lite from another
2 property owned and operated by another person, unleu the owner or
3 operator is in any way responsible for the discharge;
4 (6) Groundwater that it contaminated shall not be required to be
5 remediated to a level or concentration for any particular contaminant
6 lower than th* uvปi or concentration that is migrating onto the
7 property from *ฃ;.- property owned and operated by another
8 person;
9 (7) The technical performance, effectiveness and reliability of the
10 proposed remedial action in attaining and maintaining compliance
11 with applicable remediation standards and required health risk levels.
12 In reviewing a proposed remedial action, the department shall also
13 consider the ability of the owner or operator to implement the
14 proposed remedial action within a reasonable time frame without
IS jeopardizing public health, safety or the environment;
16 (8) In the case of a proposed remedial action that will not meet the
17 established minimum residential use soil remediation standards, the
18 cost of all available permanent remedies is unreasonable, as
19 dซv*rT!med by department rules designed to provide a cost-based
lu preference foi Tiic use ofpcinunertfcmCdit's. The oepftilnrr.t s(\*H
21 adopt regulations, no later than 18 months after the effective date of
22 this act. establishing criteria and procedures for allowing a person to
23 demonstrate that the cost of all available permanent remedies is
24 unreasonable. Until the department adopts those regulations, it shall
25 not require a person performing a remedial action to implement a
26 permanent remedy, unless the cost of implementing a nonpermanent
v
21 remedy is 50 percent or more than the cost of implementing a
28 permanent remedy; provided, however, that the preceding provision
29 shall not apply to any owner or operator of an industrial establishment
30 who is implementing a remedial action pursuant to subsection i. of
31 section 4 of P.L.1983,c.330;
32 (9) The use of the establish 5: ' nt : v-" '" ซ interior or
33 soil remediation standard shall not be unreasonably disapproved by
34 the department.
35 The department may require the person performing the remediation
36 to supply the information required pursuant to this subsection as is
37 necessary for the department to make a determination.
38 h. (I) The department shall adopt regulations which establish a
39 procedure for a person to demonstrate that a particular parcel of land
40 contains large quantities of historical fill material. Upon a
41 determination by the department that large quantities of historic Till
42 material exist on that parcel of land, there is a rebuttable presumption
43 that the department shall not require any person to remove or treat the
44 fill material in order to comply with a remediation standard. In these
45 areas the department shall establish by regulation the requirement for
46 engineering or institutional controls that are designed to prevent
-------
A1IW
10
1 exposure of these contaminants to humans, thtt allow for the
2 continued use of the property, thtt are less costly than removal or
3 treatment, which maintain the health risk levels as established in
4 subsection d. of this section, and, as applicable, are protective of the
S environment. The department may rebut the presumption only upon
6 ซ finding hv ป 7-**aderance of the evidence that the use of
7 engineering or institutional controls wovU not be effective to
8 protecting public health, safety, and the environment. For the
9 purposes of this paragraph "historic fill material* means generally
10 large volumes of non-indigenous material, used to raise the
11 topographic elevation of a site, which were contaminated prior to
12 emplacement and are in no way connected with the operations at the
13 location of emplacement and which include, but are not limited to,
14 construction debris, dredge spoils, incineralor residue, demolition
15 debris, fly ash, and non-hazardous solid waste. Historic fill material
16 shall not include any material which is substantially chromate
17 chemical production waste or any other chemical production waste or
18 waste from processing of melal or mineral ores, residues, slags or
19 uilines.
.iG (l) Trie department snail ijevciop reccii.nitnuainjiis fi>i ici.icd.-i
21 actions in large areas of historic industrial contamination. These
22 recommendations shall be designed to meet the health risk levels
23 established in subsection d. of this section, and to be protective of the
24 environment and shall take into account the industrial history of these
25 sites, the extent of the coniamination that may exist, the costs of
26 remedial actions, the economic impacts of these policies, and the
27 anticipated uses of these properties. The department, within one year
28 of the enactment of this act, shall issue a report to the Senate
29 Environment Committee and to the Assembly Energy and Hazardous
30 Waste Committee, or their successors, explaining these
31 recommendations and making any recommendations for legislative or
32 regulatory action.
33 (3) The department may not, as a condition of allowing the use of
34 a nonresideniial use soil remediation standard, or .the use of
35 institutional or engineering controls, or where a building interior will
36 not be remediated to meet the residential building interior remediation
37 standards, require the owner of that real property, except as provided
38 in section 36 of P.LI993, c.l39 (C.58:10B-13), to restrict the use of
39 that property through the filing of a deed easement, covenant, or
40 condition.
41 i. The department may not require a remedial action workplan to
42 be prepared or implemented or engineering or institutional controls
43 to be imposed upon any real property unless sampling performed at
44 that real property demonstrates the existence of contamination above
45 the applicable remediation standards.
46 j Upon the approval by the department of a remedial action
-------
AIS86
11
1 workplan. or similar plan that describe! the extent of contamination
2 at a site and the remedial action to be implemented to address that
3 contamination, the department may not subsequently require a change
4 to that workplan or similar plan in order to compel a different
5 remediation standard due to the fact that the established remediation
6 standards have changed; however, the department may compel a
7 different mnediatinn standard if the difference between the new
8 remediation standard and the remediation standard approved in the
9 workplan or other plan differs by an order of magnitude. The
10 limitation to the department's authority to change a workplan or
11 similar plan pursuant to this subsection shall only apply if the
12 workplan or similar plan is being implemented in a reasonable
13 timeframe, as may be indicated in the approved remedial action
14 workplan or similar plan. k. Notwithstanding any other provisions
15 of this section, all remediation standards and remedial actions that
16 involve real property located in the Pinelands area shall be consistent
17 with the provisions of the "Pinelands Protection Act," PL. 1979, c. 111
18 (C.13:18A-1 et seq.), any rules and regulations promulgated pursuant
19 thereto, and with section 502 of the National Parks and Recreation
:C Ac; of !978, 16U.S.C. (4711.
21 1. Upon the adoption of a remediation standard for a particular
22 contaminant in soil, a building interior, groundwater. or surface water
23 pursuant to this section, the department may amend that remediation
24 standard only upon a finding that a new standard is necessary to
25 maintain the health risk levels established in subsection d. of section
26 35 of P.L.1993, c.139 (C.58:108-12) or to protect the environment,
27 as applicable. The department may not amend a public health based
28 soil or building interior remediation standard to a level that would
29 result in a health risk level more protective than that provided for in
30 subsection d. of section 35 of P.L.1993, c.139 (C.58.10B-12).
31 m. Nothing in P.L.1993, c.139 shall be construed to restrict or in
32 any way diminish the public participation which is otherwise provided
33 under the provisions of the "Spill Compensation and Control Act,"
34 P.L.1976, c.141 (C.58:10-23.11 et seq.).
35 (cf: P.L.1993, c.l 39, s.35)
36
37 4. Section 36 of P.L.I 993, c.l 39 (C.58:10B-13) is amended to read
38 as follows:
39 36. a. When real property is remediated to a nonresidential
40 building interior or soil remediation standard or engineering or
41 institutional controls are used in lieu of remediating a site to meet an
42 established remediation standard for a building interior, soil,
43 groundwater, or surface water, the department shall, as a condition of
44 the use of that standard or control measure:
45 (1) require the establishment of any engineering or institutional
46 controls the department determines are reasonably necessary to
-------
AI886
12
1 prevent exposure to the contaminants, require maintenance, at
2 necessary, of those controls, and require the restriction of the use of
3 the property in a manner that prevents exposure;
4 (2) require, with the consent of the owner of the real property, the
S recordinf with the office of the county recording officer, in the county
6 in which the property is located, a notice to inform prospective
7 holders of att intere*: is thr property that contaminstiof) exuts oo the
8 property at a level that may starutorily restrict certain uses of or access
9 to all or part of that property, a delineation of those restrictions, a
10 description of all specific engineering or institutional controls at the
11 property that exist and that shall be maintained in order to prevent
12 exposure to contaminants remaining on the property, and the written
13 consent to the notice by the owner of the property;
14 (3) require a notice to the governing body of each municipality in
15 which the property is located that contaminants will exist at the
16 property above residential use soil remediation standards or any other
17 remediation standards and specifying the restrictions on the use of or
18 access to all or part of that property and of the specific engineering or
10 institutional ccntrols at ihr ^'^r^rty tfv< "ist and that ซha)l be
lu maintained,
21 (4) require, when determined necessary by the department, that
22 signs be posted at any location at the site where access is restricted or
23 in those areas that must be maintained in a prescribed manner, to
24 inform persons on the property that there are restrictions on the use of
25 that property or restrictions on access to any part of the site;
26 (5) require that a list of the restrictions be kept on site for
27 inspection by governmental enforcement officials; and
28 (6) require a person, prior to commencing a remedial action, to
29 notify the governing body of each municipality wherein the property
30 being remediated is located. The notice shall include, but not be
31 limited to, the commencement date for the remedial action; the name,
Jdress and business telephone number of the person
33 implementing the remedial action, or his designated representative;
34 and a brief description of the remedial action.
35 b. If the owner of the real property does not consent to the
36 recording of a notice pursuant to paragraph (2) of subsection a. of this
37 section, the department shall require the use of a residential buildinฃ
38 interior and soil remediation standard in the remediation of that real
39 property.
40 c. Whenever engineering or institutional controls on property as
41 provided in subsection a. of this section are no longer required, or
42 whenever the engineering or institutional controls are changed
43 because of the performance of subsequent remedial activities, a
44 change in conditions at the site, or the adoption of revised remediation
45 standards, the department shall require that the owner or operator of
46 that property record with the office of the county recording officer a
-------
->
A18S6
13
I notice that the ute of the property it no longer restricted or delineating
2 the new restrictions. The department shall also require that the owner
3 or operator notify, in writing, the municipality in which the property
4 is located of the removal or change of the restrictive use conditions.
S d. The owner or lessee of any real property, or any person
6 ftfwrattng hi*$ on ซ*al property, which has been remediated to
7 a nonrestdemtti use gliding interior or soil remediation standard or
8 on which the department has allowed engineering or institutional
9 controls for a building interior, soil, ground water, or surface water to
10 protect the public health, safety, or the environment, as applicable,
11 shall maintain the engineering or institutional controls as required by
12. the department. An owner, lessee, or operator who takes any action
13 that results in the improper alteration or removal of engineering or
14 institutional controls or who fails to maintain the engineering or
IS institutional controls as required by the department, shall be subject
16 to the penalties and actions set forth in section 22 of P.L.1976, c.141
17 (C.58:10-23.1 lu). The provisions of this subsection shall not apply
18 if a notification received pursuant to subsection b. of this section
ir> authorizes all restrictions or co"!ro!c ป.o be-rer^vrrl from ibr subject
l(j pioperty.
21 e. Notwithstanding the provisions of any other law, or any rule,
22 regulation, or order adopted pursuant thereto to the contrary,
23 whenever contamination at a property is remediated in compliance
24 wiih any building interior, soil, groundwater, or surface water
25 remediation standards that were in effect at the completion of the
26 remediation, the owner or operator of the property or person
27 performing the remediation, except as otherwise provided in this
28 section, shall not be liable for the cost of any additional remediation
29 that may be required by a subsequent adoption by the department of
30 a more stringent remediation standard for a particular contaminant.
31 Upon the adoption of a regulation that amends a remediation standard,
32 onlyซ ^r. T < lia. .: up and remove that cgntamination
33 pursuant to section 8 of P.L.1976, c.141 (C.58:10-23.llg) shall be
34 liable for any additional remediation costs necessary to bring the site
35 into compliance with the new remediation standards except that no
36 person shall be so liable unless the difference between the new
37 remediation standard and the level or concentration of a contaminant
38 at the property differs by an order of magnitude.
39 Nothing in the provisions of this subsection shall be construed to
40 affect the authority of the department, pursuant to subsection f. of this
41 section, to require additional remediation on real property where
42 engineering or institutional controls were implemented.
43 Nothing in the provisions of this subsection shall limit the rights
44 of a person, other than the State, or any department or agency thereof,
45 to bring a civil action for damages, contribution, or indemnification
46 as provided by statutory or common law.
-------
AIM6
14
I f. Whenever the department approve* or has approved (he use of
2 engineering or institutional controls for the remediation of a building
3 interior, soil, groundwater, or surface water, to protect public health,
4 safety or the environment in lieu of remediating a site to a condition
5 that meets an established residential remediation standard, the
f> ^Hdneat *fcซ11 "** require additional remediation of that site unless
7 the crtfcrtwering or HMitutional controls no longer are protective of
8 public health, safety, or the environment
9 (cf:P.L.1993.c.l39.s.36)
10
11 S. This act shall take effect 90 days from enactment
12
13
14 STATEMENT
15
16 This bill would require any person who constructs new residential
17 housing on any property that has been used as an industrial
18 establishment, to investigate the property to determine if any
!Q hsz^rious contปminants arc. feseni at levels in excess of the
iU app.icaoic remcduttOfl stinAirds Tiic DepartnteiTtof Eiivirociim&ifel
21 Protection is required to establish the applicable standards.
22 The bill would also require that as a condition for the issuance of
23 the construction permit as required pursuant to the "State Uniform
24 Construction Code Act," P.L.I975, c.217 (C.52:270-119 et seq.). the
25 property owner certify either that no contamination exists at the site
26 in excess of the applicable remediation standards or that the site has
27 been remediated.
28
29
30
31
32 Requires investigation and cleanup " i ru ' -nents to be
33 developed for residential housing.
-------
COUNTY Or HUDSON
OFFICE OF THE COUNTY EXECUTIVE
BRENNAN COURT HOUSE
583 NEWARK AVENUE
JERT C. JANI8ZEWSKI JERSEY CITY, NEW JERSEY 07306 (201) 79M200
COUNTY extounvt
July 16, 1997
Mr. John Hansen, Regional Project Manager
US EPA-Region n
Emergency and Remedial Response Division
290 Broadway 19th Floor
New York, New York 10007-1866
Dear Mr. Hanson.
Please accept this letter of support for the US EPA's plans and efforts relating to the Grand Street
Mercury Superrund site It is of paramount importance to the health and well-being of Hoboken
residents that the US EPA demolish the contaminated building(s) and remediate the polluted site
in a safe and timely manner.
I am extremely confident that in permanently relocating the former residents of the Grand Street
property, the US EPA will use the utmost care and respect. However, the former residents of the
site should be treated as victims in this matter -- for many of them, the sequence of events has
amounted to a total loss I strongly urge the US EPA to provide the owners and their families
with the fair-market-value of their properties.
The County of Hudson stands ready to provide any assistance to the former residents of the site,
the City of Hoboken and the US EPA If you have any questions feel free to call me at (201)
795-6200.
Thank you for your consideration.
Sincerely,
Robert C Jasnszews
County Executive
Congressman Robert Menendez
State Senator Bernard Kenny
Assemblyman Rudy Garcia
Assemblyman Louis Romano
Freeholder Maurice Fitzgibbons
Mayor Anthony Russo
An equal opportunity employer
-------
HOBOKEN TESTIMONY 7/16/9!
Michael Gochfdd, MD, PhD
Department of Environmental and Community ^MV*inf
and
Environmental and Occupational Health Sciences Institute
Robert Wood Johnson Medical School
Piscataway, NT 08855-1179
I am Doctor Michael Gochttd, Clinical Professor of Environmental and Community
Medicine at the Robert Wood Jotmion Medical School in Piscataway, New Jeney. I have
V*ปi rปr ปป*! faculty fH*** ซJTVH io*n md have specialized in problems related to lead,
nvrniry. try} other toxic materials in the environment Prior to mat i (iuected UK. LJivioiou
of Environmental and Occupational Health at the New Jersey Department of Health, and wu
directly involved in discussions regarding evacuation of residents around several sites.
Before that I performed occupational Tnfffk*inf examinations of workers in a number of north
Jeney factories that handled various forms of mercury.
With regard to the 722 Grand Street building, our Environmental and Occupational
Health Sciences Institute was contacted by the Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease
Registry (ATSDR) on December 23, 1995, and Dr. Howard Kipen, Director of our Division*
of Occupational Medicine participated in a public meeting Building. During January to
March 1996, 27 adults from the building were evaluated at our clinical center, mainly by Dr.
Iris Udasin, one of our environmental medicine physicians, and Dr. Nancy Fiedler, our
clinical psychologist, with regard to medical and neurobehavioral consequences of mercury
exposure. This work was supported by ATSDR.
My remarks tonight represent my own medical experience and opinions, but I also
represent my colleagues at the Medical School, Drs. Udasin, Fiedler, and Kipen.
of m*rnirv-in1atert nซiTnhehavioral impairment in a number of the
levels and their performance on tests known to be affected by mercury. In other words,
those with the higher mercury levels had reduced muscular coordination in their hands and
fingers and showed evidence of a tremor.
Now, nearly 18 months later, we're beginning to re-evaluate the residents to
determine how much of their function has returned now that they're no longer exposed to
mercury.
In addition to the neurobehavioral performance, Dr. Fiedler tested certain
psychological measures which showed a severe level of psychologic distress among most of
the residents, in relation to their sudden evacuation from the homes in which they had
invested large sums of money as well as many noun. They voiced anger, frustration, and
Anxiety about their future. Many of the residents tested had clinically significant psychiatric
problems resulting from the a combination of the mercury exposure and the need to be
evacuated. Their exposure to mercury had resulted in severe disruption and they had lost
control of their lives.
Had they not been exposed to very high k/el.s <>j .r i .1 y, >\- ; < " 1 not have
experienced these disruptions and would not be suffering their current distress.
-------
Now IS months later, still living in temporary quarters, their lives still on hold, their
early anxiety was certainly warranted.
Social scientists have studied other populations forced to relocate temporarily or
permanently because of flooding, war, or other disasters. Such studies document the
scarring effects and the disruption of lives.
Stresses over which people have no control are particularly damaging. In that sense
the residents of the Grand Street Building are not unique. But in another sense they ARE
unique.
People whose homes are rendered uninhabitable by fire or flood eventually collect
intmyoa and rebuild their homes and lives. The victims of Grand Street mercury, have not
been able to do so.
Vปw ซ11 sutfer various losses in our lives, and we nuimปuaii OUIM**C^ ki*i o&wj ^
'get on with your iife\ The victims of Grand iireet mercury iurve not been ai>k to get un
with their lives.
Trapped by forces over which they have no control, the former Grand Street
residents, are increasingly vulnerable to psycbophysiological damage. Although the actual
neurologic consequences of their mercury poisoning may eventually recover, the scarring
from having lost control of their lives and being "on hold" for so long, may leave a long-
term or even permanent mark.
How long can people be 'on hold". Certainly a few months is tolerable, and most of us
have experienced such periods, for example between jobs. But the Grand Street victims have
been on hold already for 18 months.
It would be totally unrealistic to expect them to simply wait "on hold" for another 18
months, or for the 46 months projected by EPA if they were to re-occupy the buildling after
remediation.
They need rapid and definitive resolution so they can indeed "get on with their lives and
resume control over their future.
Although I have not personally evaluated whether the Grand Street building could be
remediated to residential standards, I do know from personal experience here in New Jersey,
that Superfund remediations rarely proceed quickly or smoothly. Often yean go by before
the remediation even begins. During this period, environmental consultants conduct
"remedial investigations and feasibility studies" and environmental engineers set forth
remediation alternatives which are then subject to several levels of review at the State and
Federal Level. Even if all parties were able to expedite the studies and review process,
remediation would not begin immediately. The EPA has estimated that remediation would
take more than 3 1/2 yean. Thus assuming it were to begin immediately, it would mean that
the victims would have been living "on hold" for at least five yean.
Thus from a Community Medicine point of view, it is entirely inconceiv.^Ij thr;* Or r!*ai !
Street residents should be subjected to waiting for remediation.
-------
In addition, for many and perhaps aH of the Grand Street victims, the building has become a
symbol of what has gone wrong in their lives. If the building were magically rendered
habitable overnight and they were required to return, it would be a constant reminder to them
of a very unpleasant event and period in their lives. Although we have not studied this for
each individual, I strongly believe that it is unrealistic to expect these people to return to this
building which, once a source of hope, has become a source of great pain.
I concur with the EPA's decision NOT to remediate this building for residential purposes. If
it were remediated the Grand Street victims should not be expected to return there. Most
importantly, I urge a rapid resolution of the composition issue so that these victims can
seek appropriate housing and begin pursuing normal lives.
Michael Gochfeld, MD, PhD
-------
Mark Graham
1026 Hudson Street
Hoboken, NJ 07030
201-792-4037
Statement on EPA's Recommendation for
722 Grand Street Mercury Site
appreciate this opportunity to speak.
My f.uti ---ฃ, -_---_._.- ''!. <_/
3ur building. We were the ground breakers in Hoboken, we did it totally on our own,
with a tremendous amount of work and a tremendous amount of debt, and we have lost it
311, except for the debt.
I have a sense of pride being part of a group that had the courage and the audacity to take
3n a challenge like this. In this national climate of worshipping the individual, the self-
starters, the risk-takers, we are the quintessential group. We were also exceptionally
cautious. We insisted on documentation assuring us of the safety of this building for
residential use. When we received these written assurances, we felt we were safe. In a
broader sense, that sense of safety is gone, forcefully replaced with an underlying distrust
and constant stress droning within us. My wife has developed a cardiac arrhythmia, ^nd
ten months after the evacuation, I found myself in the hospital with chest pains and
elevated blood pressure. My wife was over three months pregnant during the evacuation,
and worry for the future of our son's health is relentless.
-------
Mark Graham
1026 Hudson Street
Hoboken, NJ 07030
The reality that brings us here tonight never should have happened. With our caution
during the pre-purchase environmental review of the building, this message of "Unfit fa
Human Habitation" was beyond comprehension. The resulting evacuation was absolute!
surreal, nightmarish. To me, we appeared as zombies, dragging our two plastic bags of
belongings down through the building, silent and numb with disbelief. I feel echoes of
this disbelief within our group to this day.
With the emergence of this nightmare, the EPA appeared. As me group or us were in a
highly agitated state, the EPA acted as a reference point of sanity and reassurance. If it wer
not for the information, assistance, and support the EPA provided, we would have been,
in addition to everything else,, homeless and bankrupt. \ challenge any of the federal
^P','^ o .ฃป ฃ>KV ฃo**Cf}ซฃ~ ^Iff-ffc^0
officials in WashingtoriThvho undertake to lecture on the extreme environmental
positions, or the lack of importance of the Environmental Protection Agency to be silent
for just a brief time and open their eyes to the realities of the EPA's contributions to the
group of us and to this community. They might learn that, if the EPA can be accused of
having an agenda, it is essentially to protect the citizens from being poisoned and to help
those who have already been poisoned.
results in thib recommendation to aemonsn our iiumcb. iue reduction uป mo
termination creates an ache that will last a very long time. But it is the right thing to do,
for us and for the surrounding community.
For my family and for the group of us, I thank the EPA for its intense efforts on our behalf
You have contributed to showing us that a sense of stability in our lives is coming in the
future, so that we can move on from this suspended animation in which we find
ourselves.
Thank you.
-------
COMMENT ON THE PROPC D PLAN BY THI U.S. KNVIRO. 2NTAL AGENCY FOR
THE GRAND STREET MERCURY SITE
I want to make my comments not only on behalf of myself and
my wife but on behalf of our partners In what seemed like a
wonderful dream. It was a wonderful dream .in which we transformed
an idle, run down ghost of a building into a thriving community
: tuiG z::i =.-'.'v. "**ir.-v-gh oiป- *.*r* work, sacrifice.
determination, resourcefulness and stubborn perseverance against
great odds we thought we had actually turned this wonderful dream
into a very wonderful reality. And we dreamed for this city as
ซ
well, for the community we wanted to join together with in
creating a bright future. We did not dream of the living
nightmare this has become for all of us.
We had solved one of the most difficult challenges facing
t-hose of us in the arts: how to afford adequate housing that
included the studio work space we neeaea _o practice ^-i alia.
Our solution was to pool our resources and do it ourselves. We
designed our homes and studios in every detail. We had every
thing we needed for the rest of our lives - a wonderful home full
of air, light and so much space to grow in, to raise families in,
as well as the work space we needed to pursue our careers..
Everything was thought out - door sizes to accommodate art works,
the elevator size, special fireproofing, electrical wiring and
water lines for future needs, ga^ery space, storage space. We
all this common space on the ground floor and we had planned
community gallery, a space for concerts, performances, and art
-------
COHMBNT ON THE PROPC D PLAN BY THE U.S. KNVIRO. JNTAL AGENCY FOR
THE GRAND STRUT MERCURY SITE
studios to hold classes for the coonunity. In short we had
transformed this mothballed building into a place full of
creative life designed to accommodate all our needs present and
future, private and professional. Those of you who saw what we
had accomplished were amazed and let me tell you so were we! And
in doing this we discovered something more: we discovered that
vซปซ? ev*rvf"*y ซi:-^a3ซ.r .' '-ป! *-- '*~g tv..-aisซlvซปy in a s*ป'""r*ป and
permanent home of their own, but to build one's own home is tiia
moment in which we get to make one poem, at least, of our lives
which expresses us completely.
Many of us were strangers at first who were brought
together by this shared dream. Working together, building
together, learning to rely on each other, deep friendships were
formed. Without realizing it we were building our own small
conununitv, an extended family we could depend upon, We looked
forward to raising chilaren togerner. we j.oukeu ruLWdiu c.
celebrating together, to sharing all the new challenges the
future held for us. Now we share the devastation of this tragedy.
Our family has been torn apart, we are dispersed and let me tell
you we are in pain.
I can't begin to tell you of the emotional devastation, the
depression, the loss, the effects from the stress over the past
nineteen months. How do you get rid of the horror, the trauma of
the way we were forced out of our homes and studios. Being
-------
surrounded by police, surveillance helicopters flying overhead,
not being able to leave the building with our possessions, being
assailed by the press corps, our homes and studios invaded by
police and government officials of all stripes, men in "space
suits" probing all over the place. We felt humiliated, scared,
violated. The stress of our displacement, as well as the exposure
Wo hป<* *<"ป t'hi* trsi'llon* ^PT'- *"*s ป-i-nv^v.f r< '1^-ia-;? find
suffering. The uncertainty of our situation, the limbo we find
ourselves in is numbing. It is a daily struggle to face our
responsibilities and continue on with our lives as indeed we
must.
We can only hope that all the parties who played a part in
what has befallen us and this community will come together in a
spirit of constructive cooperation to forward the remedy
recommended bv the Environmental Protection Agency. It has been
nineteen months since we were evacuatea trotn our nomes. nineteen
months in temporary relocation. That is nineteen months of being
in limbo, displaced. That is nineteen months with all our
financial resources, our life savings, tied up. Add to that the
two and half years we put into creating and building this
project - that comes to over four years of our lives already
tied up in this!
Now after a year and half of thorough study by the U.S.
Environmental Protection Agency a recommendation has been made.
They have studied our building, they have studied us. Studied and
-------
studied and studied. It it clear by now that this recommended
plan is thซ only feasible plan that can begin to heal this
horrible tear to the fabric of our lives, to the fabric of this
community. We fear for our futures. Is it not enough that we have
to live with the fears for our health and the health of our
children for the rest of our lives? Is it not enough that we have
tc live v.f5 th *he ronaeauences of the orde*.i o* **ปซ pvi<-u*tior 7n.1
the nightmare of displacment? We fear we will never be able to
replace what we had or afford anything close to it. Proceed with
this plan with all due speed! Restore something of our lives!
Restore our faith in the system we relied upon to protect us and
which failed us. Please don't fail us again!
Curtis Crystal
July 16, 1997
-------
China Mark* 22 Cattwrirw St, 2nd Fir. Nซw YซK NY 10030 (212) 687-3329
STATEMENT FOR PUBLIC MEETING. HOBQKEN HIGH SCHOOL. 7-16-97
My name to China Marks.
In 1979 1 moved from Manhattan to Hobokcn, where I lived and made art in raw industrial
space on the top floor of Hoboken Glass at 805 CUnton St Summers I baked and winters I froze.
71 ซ. >uo.' U..'*.c>i of^I die iC..'. ^~fi iiSiftg. Bui noooua\ got mtu uiy unxni,
-------
IIRINABOCCHINO
July 16, 1997
John Hansei
Remedial Project Manager
U.S. Envirofuncntal Protection Agency
290 Broadway 19th floor
New York, NY 10007-1866
Dear John Hansen,
I am glad to have read your report, which is both thorough and explicit about the options
researched by the EPA to solve the hazard of my former home, the mercury contaminated site
at 722 Grand Street. The recommendation to demolish the building and remove it and it's soil
from the Hoboken community is truly the only safe and sane solution. The recommendation to
grant myself and the other families permanent relocation is a welcome light at the end of our
tunnel. Both these recommendations will help to heal this terrible long and drawn out wound
we have been living through.
Since the knock at my door on December 21, 1995 and a request for urine from myself, my
husband and my baby, my life has never been the same. Every day has some element of
stress, fear and sadness because of the exposure we have been exposed to and the loss of what
we created for a home.
We left the next morning, after receiving the high mercury readings in my husband, my eight
month old baby and myself. We did not know where we were to go and what we were to do.
It was one of the worst nights of my life. We did not sleep and were filled with questions and
feared for our health and that of our little baby. It was very difficult to leave the home that we
built with our own hands, the home that had all our belongings, the home with all my artwork
in it; where I planned to spend the rest of my life. Where we planned to build a family.
We were evacuated in one of the worst winters in New Jersey's history, I think the snow drifts
were over six feet It was extremely difficult to try to find an apartment besides trying to keep
sane in our temporary quarters. Looking back, I can't believe all that we did in such a brief
600 hudson St. 3c hobok*n nj 07030201-963031
-------
mount of time. I commend the EPA for their f"ปซ*ซ~-* and in particular for Pat Seppi and
Innee Huhn and Jack Harmon who lived through it with us and were there to try to help us.
After moving, an unusual move considering the circumstances; a home, a studio and much of
my belonging's to storage, fcontinue to go to storage a few times a month and just trying to
make do with whatever we have. I must still teU you of the difficult situation we are in. It it
itnnge but a reality about health is sinking in and instead of running on adrenaline in order to
function, as I have been for the past 19 months. I am realizing that I must deal with all of
this. You see I have been spending quite a bit of energy on trying to forget and pretend this
never really happened. However, finally, it is quite clear that the fears we have had may be
becoming reality. Stephen is having kidney problems, I am having short term memory
problems and I am seeing Ezra's shake being related to his nervous system.
I have come to terms with never returning to the building and that the responsible solution is to
remove it from the community. This recommendation will help to bring closure to this
nightmare or lets say. one part of it. The permanent relocation will help to bring stability and
security in some ways to my family. Not having these things for almost two years has
certainly created some serious psychological and emotional problems in my family , which I
hope this decision will help to heal.
Sincerely,
Bocchino and on behalf of Ezra Keough
600 Hudson St. 3c hobokซn nj 07030201-963031
-------
16 July 1997
EPA Hearing RE: 722 Grand St, Hoboken NJ
To whom it may concern:
I strongly support the concept of building reuse as well as organizing long term work/live
spaces for artists and have been very troubled by the troubles at 722 Grand Street.
The media has provided only spotty facts on the subject leaving one to get much of their
information on the street. I have the following comments and questions:
Is the building's mercury levels too high for industrial use?
The artists and their families have obviously suffered the most but as the buyers, I feel
they had the ultimate responsibility to know what they were buying. Being naive is not
valid. If they did not know to ask, then their lawyers should have asked for them. If the
lawyers did not look into this and protect their clients, then they are equally liable. I have
not yet heard any blame put on the shoulders of the lawyers.
Since this entire affair resulted because of numerous instances which seemed to fall
through the cracks, blame can be spread all around. Various government agencies need
to be involved to sort out the mess since the government is also liable for not flagging the
situation in time.
How much did the seller reveal of the building's history? How much did they know? They
are certainly responsible to find out if the building use was going to change, providing
them with a higher sales price.
This was the wrong building, with the wrong seller and wrong buyers but the idea was a
good one. I support the idea of the artists being relocated.
I would like the idea of artist work/live spaces to be pursued in Hoboken and not be
avoided because of this mess.
Thank you for you attention to this matter. Good luck.
Yours truly,
1 V '
Hank Forrest
518 Jefferson Street
Hoboken NJ 07030
-------
128 Grand St.
New Milford, NJ 07646
July 18, 1997
John Hansen
U.S. Environmental protection Agency
290 Broadway, 19th Floor
New York, NY 10007
Dear Mr. Hansen:
On July 16 I was at Hoboken High School and
heard your presentation on the Grand street Mercury
Site. (My son was one of the residents there.)
EPA1a recommendation that the site be demolished
seemed to make the most sense, in view of the fact
that Hoooken wants to keep the site residential and
you couxd never be sure all the mercury was removed.
On behalf of my son and nis family, I want to thank
you for all you have done.
Sincerely,
Henry Keough
-------
John Hansen Eileen Hoffman
Remedial Project Manager 600 Hudson Street, Apt. 2A
U.S. Environmental Protection Agency Hoboken, NJ 07030
290 Broadway, 19th Floor
New York, NY 10007-1866
July 21, 1997
Dear Mr. Hansen,
I am writing in response to the Focussed Feasibility Study concerning 722 Grand Street.
I am a former resident of the building. It is a heartbreaking decision to decide to destroy
something you so lovingly created, but I am unequivocally in favor of the decision to
demolish the building.
To provide you with a brief history, I am an artist who made a commitment to live in the
New York art world. I spent five years looking for an affordable, suitable home that came
close to my dreams. Grand Street more than exceeded these criteria. I was able to create a
magnificent home and studio with its high ceilings, skylights, sunsets, and long vistas. The
community we created was a huge contradiction to the isolation of urban life. I felt hopeful
about starting a family here and continuing my career as an artist.
However, Mercury was discovered in my unit shortly after I moved in. From that moment
on, my life has had an underlying sense of dread; I did not know what was to become of
my home or hearth. The eviction simply added another level of terror. For me, It brought
up my families connection to the Holocaust; tremendous distrust and a difficulty in being
able to tell that the world was safe.
The fabric of my life has completely changed. My studio is some distance away from my
home. The balance of art, work and home life I had built has been shattered. I am torn
between home and studio, It seems I am constantly traveling between the two, carrying
half my belongings back and forth. I am seldom home; relaxed time with my husband is
rare. I find it difficult to work in an isolated studio, as I am used to having people around
me and miss the easy camaraderie necessary fpr me to work creatively. Chronically
exhausted, I struggle to hold my life together.
-------
i add to this pressure, blood tests revealed that I have five times the safe, legal level of
ercury in my system. It is difficult to express the terror that living with such a high level of
xitamination can cause. I have experienced respiratory problems and short term memory
ss, and had intense nightmares that are just now beginning to subside. The far-reaching
facts of this poisoning have yet to be determined, and thus my plans to start a family
we been postponed indefinitely: I cannot be assured of the health of my child.
opite all these concerns, I am aware of how fortunate all the former residents have
een to have had the EPA come to our assistance. You have challenged big business on
*hatf of the individual, and for your careful scientific investigation of the building I am
irateful. Finally, I feel assured that the EPA has come to an educated decision about the
xiilding.
feel strongly that the building should not be remediated for industrial use. I could not, in
dljood conscience, leave the building behind with the potential of damaging other peoples'
stealth as it has mine. This risk is not an acceptable solution. It was not alright for us to
yi!)e subjected to that poison and it is not alright to leave ft behind for someone else. I am"
erribly saddened to say this, but I want to see the building demolished.
; need to start putting attention on rebuilding my life. I and the other former residents
need to make a clean break from this sad experience and get on with our lives.
ilhank you for your attention to this matter.
Sincerely,
Eileen Hoffman
-------
John Hansen Robert Vichnis
Remedial Project Manager 600 Hudson Street, Apt.
U.S. Environmental Protection Agency Hoboken, NJ 07030
290 Broadway, 19th Floor
New York, NY 10007-1866
July 21, 1997
Dear Mr. Hansen,
With the release of the EPA Focussed Feasibility Study I cautiously hope that this nightmare
will soon be coming to an end. My wife and I are former residents of 722 Grand Street. This
was a dream that did indeed rum into a nightmare. After searching five years for an ideal
home that combined plentiful living/working space, a good location and a close community
I was thrilled to join this project. The goal was to rum a dead factory on the edge of Hobokej
into a vibrant center of life for the community. Pouring our energies and life savings into
years of labor, attending countless meetings in the unheated basement, speaking with innu-
merable public officials, and passing every sort of inspection (local, federal, environmental),
we had finally made this dream a reality. This was where I intended to spend the rest ofTny
life.
But this dream was not to come to fruition; in what should have been the final hours of this
long project, mercury was discovered under the floorboards of one unit and ultimately
throughout the building. A massive spiraling down followed. Just as the mercury had seepe
into the cracks of this building, my hopes now seeped out. My home and body were contam
nated; my long-term plans, a shambles.
I now live continually with the fear of what this mercury has done to my body. I still experienc
symptoms from the contamination: most prominently, respiratory problems, short-term
memory loss, and sleep and vision disorders. I am frightened about my future health, not
only for next year, but twenty years hence.
Mentally and emotionally this has been a devastating experience. Directly after the evacuatioi
the stress and trauma were so intense that I could hardly function and was unable to work f<
six months. I also suffered from chest pains. I had no control over my life. This debacle has
also created great stress in my marriage to the point where my wife and I are now seeing a
marriage counselor. The trauma of this experiencethe discovery of the mercury, that
moment I learned my body was poisoned, the invasion of countless strangers from innumerable
governmental agencies, the evacuation during the worst blizzard in New Jersey history, beirv
homelessstill sits with me.
Now a year and a half later I am still living out of boxes in a temporary location and do not
know when I will be able to say that this saga has come to an end. Most of my belongings an
in storage and in a certain sense one could say that my life is, too. I cannot make plans or
have dreams for my future. Due to the stress and uncertainty, I have not been able to produci
art for a year and a half. Furthermore, I had wanted to start a family in Grand Street. Thus ha;
been put on indefinite hold. Both my wife and I were highly contaminated by the mercury:!
had almost six times of what is considered the safe level for adults. Fears of the effects of this
-------
ontamination and of our uncertain future have caused us to wait, and in light of both our
ges, our chances may be slipping away forever.
jow with the release of this Focussed Feasibility Study and the EPA-preferred alternative of
lemolition and permanent relocation, I find myself full of hope again. I firmly support this
decision and ask that it be carried out with due speed. If only due to the potential for fire,
lemolition is the only answer. I applaud the EPA for the extensive scientific research it has
conducted at 722 Grand Street. While waiting this past year and a half has been nerve-
vracking, the methodical steps the EPA has taken to collect this data has made this wait more
nanageable, and with the release of this detailed study, more understandable. I also want to
hank the EPA for all the efforts it has made on our behalf. Our situation is a prime example
of the importance of the Superfund.
Sincerely,
<&
Robert Vichnis
-------
Tova Back and Zak Friedman
P O.Box 930, Hoboken, NJ 07030
Tel: 201-420-4804 Fax: 201-420-4805
E-mail: petrocontrol@earthlirtk net
July 25,1997
Mr. John Hansen,
Remedial Project Manager USEPA-Region II
Emergency and Remedial Response Division
New York, NY 10007-1866
Re: Hoboken Grand Street Mercury Site
Dear Mr. Hansen,
As a family that was evacuated from the contaminated building at 722 Grand Street,
Hoboken NJ. we would like to put on record how appreciative we are of EPA's work
throughout this disaster.
We joined the Grand Street Artists partnership to buy this building in good faith, with
the intention of developing one of the units of the building (5B) as a live and work
space, suitable for our needs. We thought we were creating a home and a
community to live in. We invested our life savings plus many long hours of work,
buying the property and developing our unit, which came out breathtakingly beautiful
When mercury was discovered in the building and forced our evacuation, we were
financially and emotionally devastated We lost the resilience to recover from the
shock of losing the home we worked so hard to build.
We cannot overemphasize how helpful the EPA support has been to us. Our
temporary accommodations, imperfect as they were, have given us an anchor and
permitted life to go on. If not for that help we would have been homeless and on the
streets.
Now the EPA has made a recommendation in favor of remediating the Grand Street
building and permanently relocating the residents. We very much hope that the EPA
will go through with this recommendation as soon as possible. Only then can we put
this unfortunate event behind us.
We intend to continue to live in the City of Hoboken, and as Hcboken citizens we
would very much like to see the building site cleaned up and made safe.
-------
Please do keep on the good work. We hope that future legislation would prevent such
unfortunate and unnecessary disasters from ever taking place again.
Sincerely,
Tova Beck-Friedman & Zak Friedman
Former residents of
722 Grand Street
apt: 5B
Hoboken, NJ
-------
NAN'CYJESSUP
Food Consultant _ 299 Pavonia
Jersey City, NJ o?3(
July 19, 1997
John Hansen
Remedial Project Manager
U.S. Environmental Protection Agency
290 Broadway, 19th Floor
New York, New York 10007-1866
Dear Johni
It is with great relief that I read the E.P.A.'s Superfund
Proposed Plan for the Grand Street Mercury Site. The release
of this report signals, I hope, an end to what has thus far been
an agonizing 18 months.
We spent two years building our dream home. Two years of
scrimping, borrowing, using every penny we had to build a home
that would meet our every need. Our lives were put on hold,
friends and family neglected, while we struggled to convert a
derelict factory building into an inviting nest full of light
and air. All of the stress and construction-related tension ended
the day we moved in. That was the pay-off. We were the happiest
we had ever been. Not only did we have a wonderful home, but we
also had neighbors, friends who became family, sharing the same
interests and goals.
This dream existence came to a 'crashing halt when we were
forcibly evacuated by government and local health agencies on
January 11, 1996. Since that day life has become a nightmare.
We have moved three times in the past year, initially with only
those belongings that would fit in a plastic garbage bag. Most
of our possessions are in storage and our lives are on hold. The
quality of life we sought is gone. In its place is depression,
anxiety about the future, and fears for our health. It is bad
enough losing one's home, but is worse to have to relive the
experience over and over again when interviewed by the press, our
lawyers and government. I cannot wait for the day when the
topic of conversation among friends and strangers will no longer
revolve around "the mrecury building."
What is most upsetting however, is that we, the victims
in this disaster, are perceived in some quarters as criminals,
responsible for the mercury problem, and that we should bear
the costs of cleaning it up.' Well, let me tell you, I have
-------
NANCY JESSUP
Food Consultant299 Ptvonia Artnu., Apt. 1-10A
Jersey CJry. NJ 07302
/Hansen, page 2,
gone into debt cleaning the mercury out of a building that
was sold to us supposedly MERCURY FRSE1 We would, none of us,
ever have considered buying a toxin-soaked building to live in.
We relied on the assurance of the state government, our lawyers
and environmental experts that the building was clean. Now, as
it turns out, nothing could be farther from the truth.
I am weary of this process. I feel like I've been poked,
jabbed, probed, pinched, tweaked, examined and cross-examined
endlessly. Can't we please stop the debate? Let us have some
closure and put this all behind us. Our ordeal continues as
long as we remain displaced. Please, help us to rebuild our
lives.
Sincerely,
Nancy <7essup
Grand Street
Artists Partnership
Unit 5-C
-------
Nora Jacobson
38 Kendall Station Road
Norwich, Vermont 05055
July 27, 1997
John Hansen
Remedial Project Manager
US Environmental Protection Agency
290 Broadway, 19* floor
New York, NY 10007-1866
Dear Mr Hansen,
1 was unable to attend the hearing on July 16th concerning the Grand Street
Mercury Site, but as one of the displaced residents, I wanted to let my feelings known
concerning the proposed plan
First of all, I would like to express appreciation for the EPA s responsiveness
and sensitivity to our needs Although our predicament is terrible, given the amount of
time, work, love and money we invested in making that building our home, we have been
well treated by the Environmental Protection Agency.
My own feelings about the proposed plan are this: I wish that the building could
be remedied and that we could (those who wanted to) move back into the building.
However I understand that it is unclear that the building could ever be fully cleaned, at
least to the extent required for residential use and that if we did move back in, and if
mercury were detected later on, we would once again be forced to move. I don't want to
go through that again It was a terrible disruption in our lives.
Consequently, it is with regret that I find myself going along with the EPA's
preferred remedy I feel disgusted by the huge waste of resources, but I m relieved that
the EPA, which deemed it necessary to evict us, is also taking responsibility for relocating
us
Thank you for the opportunity to express my feelings
Sincerely,
Nora Jacobson
-------
Environment Committee ofHoboken
P.O.BoxM252
Hoboken, NJ 07030
July 31, 1997
Mr. John Hansen
Remedial Project Manager
US Environmental Protection Agency
290 Broadway, 19* Floor
New York, NY 10007-1866
Dear Mr. Hansen,
I attended the public meeting of the Grand Street Mercury site on Wednesday, July 16, 1997 but was
unable to bear the oppressive beat waiting for my turn to speak.
1 thought the EPA's presentation was very well done and specific. My organization, the Environment
Committee ofHoboken, sent out over 1 25 postcards to our mailing list informing members about the
meeting. We also posted flyers made up by Sabrina Boccino at our Farmers' Market on Tuesday. We
would be happy to help disseminate any other information at the market in the future.
The Environment Committee ofHoboken enthusiastically supports the EPA's preferred alternative to
permanently relocate the residents and demolish the building. We see this solution as the only acceptable
course of action for the condo residents and the City ofHoboken. It is sobering to realize that we have
lived with this undetected hazard in our midst for so long.
We sincerely appreciate the accelerated process the EPA has afforded this site. We encourage and believe
your agency will continue fast tracking this clean up. While we understand you have procedures to be
followed, our interest is to have this danger eradicated as soon as possible. If mere is any help we can
provide to that end, we would be happy to do so.
Sincerely yours,
Donna Cahill
President, Environment Committee ofHoboken
-------
GEORGE N. PAPPAS
ATTORNEY AT LAW
201 659-7040
FAX 201 659-1007
53 NEWARK STREET
HOBOKEN, NEW JERSEY 07030
August 1, 1997
John F. Hanson, EPA Project Manager
United States Environmental Protection Agency
Region 2
290 Broadway
New York, NY 10007-1866
Re: Eugenio Notaro
725 Adams Street, Hoboken, NJ 07030
Dear Mr. Hanson:
Following up on our telephone conversation, this office
represents Eugenio Notaro, owner of the above property, which is
adjacent to the former GE Mercury Lamp Factory at 720-732 Grand
Street. I have had an opportunity to review your July 9, 1997
letter, the April 4, 1996 Sampling Trip Report, pertinent portions
of the April 19, 1997 Final Baseline Human Health Risk Assessment
for the Grand Street site, the 35 page brochure prepared for the
Grand Street mercury site public meeting on July 16, 1997 and the
2 page ATSDR mercury information sheet.
Putting aside the question of dermal absorption, you note that
four of the samples taken exceeded the EPA soil borne mercury
ingestion limit of 23 mg per kilogram. Mr. Notaro has not let his
two young children play in the backyard since oil contamination was
discovered in the factory parking lot in 1994. I think you can
understand that he will continue to prevent his children from
playing in the backyard as a result of the April mercury test
results. Averaging is simply not meaningful when it comes to
children.
It has also come to our attention that the General Electric
Company is opposing your first remediation choice of demolition and
removal of the former factory building and mercury on the site.
Thus, resolution of the problem will likely exceed the two year
remedial estimate in the informational brochure distributed at the
meeting.
It is my client's understanding that the condominium unit
owners are being offered a buy-out of their interest under the
proposal. My client desires to be included in such buy-out.
-------
;oRGEN. PAPPAS
ATTORNEY AT LAW
Mr. John F. Hanson, EPA Project Manager Page 2
August 1, 1997
M^H|^^ He should not have to continue to endure the uncertain
errectof the admitted contamination of his property as well as the
proposed factory remediation on his children and himself.
Very truly yours,
GNPrsh
cc: Eugenio Notaro
-------
-------
-------
mw
>a4
.....
* r7*i
-wjtAimlt 4^0 kh m*, fat
U^Cl ^C^Oป^ /fu^^fA.~f~/ 6-n W.
-------
8/3/97
Mr. John Hansen, Remedial Project Manager
U.S..Environmental Protection Agency
290 Brotdvty, 19th Floor
New York, NY 10007-1866
Dear Mi. Haruen,
After reading the Supexfund Proposed Plan for the Grind Street Mercury Site, I wanted to
makt two comments.
First, I agree widi me proposed solution, Alternative 5 (Demolition of Building /
Permanent Relocation of Building Residents / Soil Remediation). This alternative seems me most
likely to have positive and known results.
If mother alternative for cledh-up is selected, and the approach eliminates the threat to the
health of any person who will work in or near the building, that is fine But, the key {mint of my
concern, is that the former rtndentt art relocated and provided a final settlement in the qttickett
way pottible. Only this will this allow the families that have been living in a Temporary situation for
two years to move on with dieir lives and put the unfortunate and frustrating situation behind them.
Making a settlement as quickly as possible also seems die most cost effective approach. For me
agency to pay for temporary living any longer, when it appears a longterm settlement will not include
moving back into me building, seems a waste of funds.
Whichever mercury clean-up solution is chosen, please make the final settlement of the
tenants your first priority.
Sincerely,
Kim Smitfi
Kittk * *
, mm
-------
. 32/89
HELLRING LINDEMAN GOLDSTEIN & SIEGAI
MCiLtiMO utiซ-iปti> COtTXSElXOHS A.T
JOCL o.
,/CNATNAW u OO^Of TCI*
AVV M. Cvt"C*ปCK*
JAMtS A SCAl^OMC*
Nicซปtw cocao*'
otc
ง. HปNซ* Aucrust 4. 1997
ICHABO H.COปCOW n**s|uj>w ^/ *ป^/^
Vปnroฃ "em**. MO je-tr- OJIOM
(100 ซn-ปoto
L
LSTtlN*
$.
WAM* t. MOCOSWOK* --_- _. w KVTTS
ACซetN.o*v,e$ON* VIA FAX AND
t ซADC>ฃO*
'. i.nปcw.Tit jjr. John Hansen, Remedial Project Manager
U.S. Environmental Protection Agency
29ฐ Broadway - 19th Floor
New York, New York 10007-1866
Re: Grand Street Mercury Site. Hoboken. New Jersey
COMMENTS OF DAVID P. PASCALS
IN RESPONSE TO THE JULY 19>7
FOCU88ED FEASIBILITY STUDY AND PROPOSED PLAN
Dear Mr. Hansen:
We submit the following comments on behalf of David
P- Pascale, a former owner of the property at 720-
732 Grand Street, Hoboken, (the "Property") regard-
ing the July 1997 Focussed Feasibility Study and
Proposed Plan respecting relocation of residents and
remediation of the Property.1
1Mr. Pascale is not a Potentially Responsible
Party under CERCLA. (See the prior correspondence
dated January 22, 1997 from Michael Edelson, Esq.,
to Catherine Garypie, Esq., annexed.) This letter
is written in Mr. Pascale's interest as the owner
of adjacent property at 718 Grand Street, Hoboken,
and in recognition that the current owners and
General Electric Company (the generator of the
mercury located at the Property) have sought to
shift their costs and responsibilities to him
through litigation now pending in the United
-------
LIKDEXAN OOLDSTZW * SZZGAL
Mr. John Hansen -2- August 4, 1997
As the Study acknowledges, "A remedy is deemed pro-
tective [of human health and the enviroruaent] if it
adequately eliminates, reduces or controls, in both
the short- and long-term, risks to human health and
the environment." (Study at 92.) Yet the rซcpป-
mendations studied by the EPA "screened out" any
proposal which did "...not completely remove bulk
elemental mercury at the Site." (Study at 70.) The
Study should have included those alternatives,
because the Study demonstrates that there exists
"protective" remedies which adequately reduce or
control mercury at the Property. (See study at 59-
64 - Options 7 through 13.)
By screening out all remedies which reduce and con-
trol, rather than completely eliminate, bulk mercury
at the site, EPA has chosen from a menu of options
involving relatively high costs of remediation, in a
narrow range (between $3.5 million and $4.3 mil-
lion) . However, achieving substantial (but less
than complete) removal and encapsulationtechniques
the Study acknowledges are effectivecan likely be
achieved at fractions of the proposed costs in the
Study and Plan. This information should be
developed and presented by EPA before action is
taken on the current proposed Plan.
States District Court of the District of New
Jersey.
We also must note at the outset that the
Study and Proposed Plan erroneously identify Kr.
Pascale's wife, Sherrill Pascale, as a former
owner of the Property- Sherrill Pascale never
owned the Property. She joined in a Deed con-
veying the Property to Grand Street Artists
Partnership, which was done at the request of such
partnership's title company in order to extinguish
inchoate rights of dower she might have otherwise
been able to assert. The back title information
reflecting that Ms. Pascale was never in the chain
of title was obtained by the Grand Street Artists
prior to their purchase of the Property and has
been available to all parties to the pending
litigation, including General Electric Company.
-------
"^0 4^ป
UKDEMAN OOLDSTZIH * SIEQAL
Mr. John Hansen -3- August 4, 1997
The ultimate recommendation of the EPA, i.e. demoli-
tion, is not only unduly costly but liXely involves
as much danger to the community as other techniques.
Demolition assures the release of encapsulated mer-
cury into the environment. Other techniques (such
as washing, vacuuming, etc.) followed by encapsula-
tion would not involve such risk of release of the
mercury, may never result in release of the mercury
into the community, and preserve a historically
significant structure.
EPA further assumes that the appropriate remedy in
this matter involves permanent relocation of the
former residents. If permanent relocation is the
desired option, it nevertheless cannot justify the
types of costs apparently contemplated (which are
barely documented in the Study and Plan). In par-
ticular, the costs of the "permanent relocation" op-
tions all result in costs which are greatly out of
proportion to the value of the Property, even as
improved by the former residents, and so appear to
present a windfall to the former residents.
Specifically, the former residents invested approxi-
mately $175,000 per unit for 17 units: $2,975,00.
(Study at 105.) They purchased the Property for
$1,500,000. Thus their total fair market value
should be approximately $4,475,000. EPA estimates
the residual value of the Property as a residential
building at $1,568,500. (Study at 124.) If EPA
adds the value of the same improvementseven with a
10% increase for inflation or market factorsthe
improvements have a value of less than $4.900,000.
Thus EPA's total permanent relocation payment (ex-
clusive of temporary relocation and moving expenses)
should be $4,900,000 or less. However, EPA costs
this element at $9,915,600 (Study - Table 6-5 at
129), more than twice the value.
-------
KZLLXINO LINDEMAK OOLDSTZW * SHOAL
Mr. John Han* en -4- August 4, 1997
The assumptions and techniques by which EPA cones to
its estimated payment of $9,915,600 for this element
must be questioned. EPA claims to base it upon a
confidential appraisals (Study at 123-124), which we
have not had the opportunity to see.
EPA will of course seek to shift the costs to Poten-
tially Responsible Parties. EPA must exercise care,
however, in selecting the appropriate remedy or
seeking to impose costs on the allegedly responsible
parties. Common sense bars providing a permanent
relocation at a cost so disproportionate to the
value of the former dwellings.
The proposed remedy here has not been adequately
studied or shown necessary or cost-effective. EPA
has failed to study other less-costly techniques
which appear to be adequately protective of human
health and environment, meet all applicable relevant
or appropriate requirements (ARARs), provide long-
term effectiveness, may be less risky tha'n the
proposed demolition strategy, can be accomplished
far more quickly and will likely cost much less.
Until EPA performs such a study, it should not
proceed with the current proposed Plan. EPA has
secured support of former residents and others by
holding out a permanent relocation proposal premised
on a windfall recovery for the former residents far
out of proportion to any reasonable estimate of
relocation costs.
*Indeed, this smacks of providing a bonanza
to many former residents, who undertook their own
independent investigations prior to purchase and
were by their own admission aware of the presence
of mercury as early as two occasions in 1993 and
another occasion in 1994 before most of the
renovation costs were incurred (Study at 6), and
so could have avoided their alleged capital costs
and the need for relocation through their own
exercise of care.
-------
jrELLRIHO LJVDEMAW OCIDSTdX * SEEOAA
Mr. John Hansan -5- August 4, 1997
From the information now available, Mr. Pascale sug-
gests that EPA consider providing permanent reloca-
tion at a cost commensurate with the value of the
former residence*; reducing bulk mercury at the
Property through a variety of simple, cost-effective
processes followed by encapsulation of remaining
elemental mercury/ and restoration of the building
to productive commercial use.
Respectfully yours,
HELLRING LINDEMAN GOLDSTEIN
& SIEGAL
/ /
By:_
MATTHEW E. MOLOSHOK
MEM/dm
cc: Mr. David P. Pascale
-------
OClD
iltARCTDCC
0. SHAป'ปOป
CHAM I. HOW ซ*
CHA*OK
)HN A
IDAM L
IUCtt.CTTCIปKAt.*
\rrtic* I notOSMQ^
iCxtL N. OAVIOSOM *
tMAWOCL*
VION HAAC1SO*
MM JAMC JtUN*
ICA,$AV*CC4
ปCปT I.
tปn t
HEULRINO LINDEMAN GOLDSTEIN & SIEGAL
COUNSELLOR! AT LAW
January 22, 1997
OMC aATCWAT CCMTC*
NCW jCMCv 0ปiO*-S3ซป
VIA rax
Catherine Garypie, Esq.
Assistant Regional Counsel
U.S. Environmental Protection Agency
290 Broadway - 17th Floor
New York, New York 10007
Re: Grand Street Mercury Site
Hoboken, New Jersey
Dear Ms. Garypie;
We write as attorneys for David Pascale to advise
the United States Environmental Protection Agency
("EPA") that Mr. Pascale is not in a position to
sign the proposed Administrative Order on Consent
("AOC") circulated by the EPA.
Mr. Pascale does not have the resources or ability
to perform the obligations which would be under-
taken or imposed upon the Potentially Responsible
Parties ("PRPs") by the terms of the AOC.
It has at all times been David Pascale's position
that he is not a PRP as defined by 42 U.S.C.
S 9607(a).
It is our understanding that Grand Street Artists
Partnership ("GSAP") put forth two arguments for
the naming of David Pascale as a PRP. GSAP argued
that John J. Pascale, Sr., David's father, has
claimed that David had knowledge of the prior his-
tory of the building; to wit, that it had once
been used for the manufacture of mercury vapor
-------
H1UJUXO UKD1MXN GOLDSTEIN * SOWAL
Catherine Garypi*, Eปq. -2- January 22, 1997
lamps. At the same tine, John Pascale has
asserted directly to the EPA that no aercury was
used in the building to his knowledge after he
purchased it in 1955, and that from and after the
date- of his purchase, he saw no evidence of and
had no tanovledge that there was any aercury in the
building. Even if John Pascale's allegation that
David Pascale knew the building had been used
sometime prior to 1955 for the manufacture of
mercury vapor lamps/ it would not provide David
with knowledge of the presence of mercury on or
about the premises. In any event, knowledge of
prior uses of hazardous materials does not make a
person a PRP under the definition of CERCLA.
GSAP has further argued that David Pascale is a
PRP because he was "an owner at the time of
disposal." That, argument fails. See generally
United States of America v. CDMG Realty Co.. et
a_l^_, 96 F-3d 706 (3rd Cir. 1996). Any gradual
releases of residual mercury do not constitute a
disposal. Id. The only active "disposal" assumed
by GSAP was that David Pascale, on behalf of
Quality Tool & Die Co., Inc., arranged for the
decommissioning of an underground storage tank and
disposal of contaminated soil. It is our under-
standing that the removal and disposal were ac-
complished in accordance with the requirements and
regulations of the New Jersey Department of En-
vironmental Protection and supervised throughout
by an environmental engineering firm, precluding
CERCLA liability. Under those circumstances,
David Pascale is not "an owner at the time of
disposal" under CERCLA. Id.
By contrast, it is absolutely clear that some if
not the majority of the partners in GSAP, as well
as the partnership itself, meet the definition of
a PRP under CERCLA. However, as of the date of
this letter, they have not been named as PRPs by
the EPA.
Notwithstanding the foregoing, and without
prejudice to the position set forth above, David
Pascale was prepared to attempt to negotiate an
appropriate contribution with the other nawed PRPs
in order to be able to join as a signatory to the
AOC.
-------
HUJUKO LINDEMAX OOLDSTZW * SHOAL
Catherine Garypie, Esq. -3- January 22, 1997
It is David Pascale'e position that a meaningful
AOC requires that all PRPs would have to partici-
pate, and in particular General Electric Company
("GE") Bust assume preeminent responsibility be-
cause (a) there is no dispute that of the named
PRPs, GE is the only one responsible for us in?
mercury on the premises and profiting from that
use, (b) GE is the only named PRP with the re-
sources necessary to perform the obligations that
would be required under the terms of the AOC, and
(c) GE is the only PRP with the necessary exper-
tise and manpower to meaningfully address remedi-
ation of the site. We have been advised, however,
that GE will not sign the AOC.
For the reasons set forth above, David Pascale
cannot consent to join in the AOC without the
participation of GE and without a realistic
allocation of responsibilities among all PRPs.
Very truly yours,
ME/dm
cc: Mr. David Pascale
-------
Shun-Yi Chen/Ching-Huang Chung
Aug 6, 1997 513 Broadway 3A
New York, NY 10012
John Hansen/Catherine Garypie
Remedial Project Manager/Assistant Regional Counsel
US Environmental Protection Agency
290 Broadway 19th Floor
New York, NY 10007-1866
Dear Mr HFtansen and Ms.Garypie:
We welcome CPA's recommendation adopting Alternative S regarding the
Grand Street Mercury Site. We believe that EPA has made the most appropriate
decision.
According to EPA's letter (Nov.21, 1996), we are eligible to receive
temporary relocation benefits and this benefits is retroactive to the date EPA;
began response activities at the Grand Street Mercury Site, which is
Jan, 5. 1996. In the same letter (Nov. 21, 1996), EPA requires that we submit
documentation of payment for housing costs in order to receive the above
benefits. However, unlike other tenants that were relocated by EPA immediately
upon vacated the mercury site, we did not relocate to temporary housing untiil
we received EPA's permission to do so on Nov.21,1996. Since we did not have
sufficient fund for such temporary housing, we did not seek for such housing
and will not be able to produce such document to receive reimbursement.
However, we do have documentation to show that we borrowed mere than
$15,000 in 1996 for our immediate need such as interests and apartment
maintenance, etc.,(see attachment A) because we were not be able to move
into the Grand Street unit. We hope that this document will meet EPA's
requirement for reimbursement due to our special situation. In addition, we
will also need an amount of $21,207 to satisfy the interests payment to our
loan (see attachment B) so that we will not be foreclose by our creditor.
We sincerely hope that EPA will consider that these documents are
satisfactory to obtain the reimbursement. Furthermore, we urge EPA to
consider that we are social partners of all other Grand Street Mercury Site's
tenants so that we are eligible for permanent relocation benefits We ace the
first tenant (and victim) to report the contamination of mercury in the Grar.d
Street Site and were evicted from the unit 5D as early as January 1995. We
suffered the same frustration and aggravation(if not more) as the other
tenants. Because of mercury contamination, we were not able to close the
property with the partnership and the bank. EPA should consider this not as
the reason to exclude us from the other tenants but a consequence of the
mercury contamination. We not only were not able to move to our dream house
but also had to carry a big loan for our down payment and construction costs.
To deny us the right as the other tenants will be a devastating blow to us.
We hope that you would consider our reo^iest favorable and look for to
hearing from you at your earliest convenience.
Sincerely Yours,
Shun-Yi Chen/Ching-Huang Chung
-------
Ai,ป.io PROMISSORY NOTE ^ ^^
R293-04
J 10.000.00 dollars Dated: Novcanbcr 18,1996
principal Amount State of niinotj
FOR VALUE RECEIVED, the undersigned hereby jointly ami severally promise to pay to the order of
Fti-Ling LL . _ฃ. the sum of
Dollars (510.000.00 ~~ ). together with interest thereon K the rate of 7.3% per annum on the unpaid balance. Slid sum shall be
pad inlhe manner following:
The principal and intexes before November 30,1997
All payments shall be first applied to interest and the balance to principal. This note may be prepaid, at any time, in whole or in part.
without penalty. All prepayments shall be applied in reverse order of maturity.
This noie~shaH at the option of any holder hereof be immediately due and payable upon the failure to make
ปy payment due hereundcr withiii_3Q.days of in due date.
hi (he event this note shall be in default, and placed with an attorney for coDection. then the undersigned agree to pay an reasonable
attorney fees and costs of collection. Payments not made within five (S) days of due iic shaO be subject to a late charge of iQfLuf
said payment. All payments hereundcr dull be made to such address as may from time 10 time be designated by any holder hereof.
The undersigned and ail other parties to ihis note, whether as endorsers, guarantors or sureties, agree to remain fuOy bound ^rt-_-vJir
and this note shall be fully paid and waive demand, presentment and pretest and aD notices thereto and former agree to rc-T.lTn >;>. - J.
notwithstanding any extension, renewal, modification. Barter, or other indulgence by any bolder or upon the discharge or release o:
any obligor hereunder or to this note, or upon the exchange, substitution, or release of any collateral gamed as security for ihti n j-._-.
No modification or indulgence by any holder hereof shall be binding unless in writing; and any indulgence on any one occasion >h_:
not be an indulgence for any otherer future occasion. Any modification or change of terms, hereunder granted by any bolder hereof.
shad be valid and binding upon rrr** of the undesigned, notwithstanding the acknowledgment of any of the undersigned. arซi each c:
the undersigned does hereby irrevocably grant to each of the others a power of attorney to enter into any such modification on their
behalf. The rights of any bolder hereof shall be cumulative and not necessarily successive. This note shall take effect as a sealed
instrument and shall be construed, governed and enforced in accordance with the bws of the State first appearing at the head of th:>
The undersigned hereby execute this note as principals and not as sureties.
Signed In the presence of:
Witness <^ 3ocro*>J .{*SS'^^/st&Z^r S_. '
/Shun-Yi
Witness Borrower ;
.GUARANTY
'.Vc the undersigned jointly and severally guaranty the prompt and punc:ual paymc::; of all moneys due under the aforesc; 3 r.cii
ijrcc to renuin bound until fully paid.
h the presence of:/* / j
K f -*
Wซncs> ฃ * * *
Ken Yzr.g
Witness
Ctunniur "fTOsL^s ~~ ^
/
Guarantor
^/>.-
tobajL,
E 2 Legal Forms. Before you use this form, read it, fin in all blanks, and make whatever
changes are necessary to your particular transaction, consult a lawyer if you doubt ;r-
lorm's fitness for your purpcse and use. E-Z legal Forms and the retailer make no
representation or warranty, eapress or implied, with respect to the merchantability cf
'orm tor an intended use or purpose.
-------
ii
7-
&ซ*
CHU-SHAN TANG
41 -*0 UNION ST.. APT. 160
FLUSHING. NY U35S
UNITED NATIONS FEDERAL CfiEDJT UNION
oj
Koe
IQDI
WLMO
iU80ซ:o a 30030
C55i
-------
LOAN NO. LOAN AMOUNT
FROM
TO
INTEREST PAD
INTEftCSTDlC
1,
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
8.
9.
10.
11.
12.
13.
14.
15.
16.
5.000.00
20,000.00
5,000.00
37.000.00
5,000.00
3,000.00
40,000.00
9,000.00
( 7/17/95
10,000.00
10,000.00
2,000.00
5,000.00
10,000.00
10,000.00
5,000.00
10,000.00
2/23/93
1/01/97
5/27/93
1/01/97
6/11 /93
1/01/97
7/16/93
1/01/97
8/23/93
1/Ot /97
3/07/94
1/01/97
5/09/94
1 /0V 97
5/10/94
Paid back nine
5/ 13/94
1/01/97
11 /01 /94
l/Ot/97
11/3/94
1/01/97
1/17/95
1 /Ot/97
5/03/95
I/Of /97
12/11 /95
1/01/97
9/ 11 /96
1/01/97
11 / 29 / 96
1/01/97
12/31/96
7 / 31/ 97
12/31/96
7 /3V 97
12/31/96
7 / 31/ 97
12/31/96
7/31/97
12/31/96
7/31/97
12/31 /96
7/31/97
12/31 /96
7/31/97
7/17/95
thousand doltars loan
12/31 /96
7/31/97
12/31 /96
7 /31/97
12/31/96
7 /31/97
12/31 /96
7/31/97
12/31 /96
7/31 /97
12/31 /96
7/3V97
12/31/96
7/3t/97
12/31/96
7/31 /97
1. 463.00 ( 1/22/97)
3,000.00 ( 3/25/96 )
1.675.00(5/28/96)
2.758.00(1/18/97)
1. 367.00 ( 1/22/97)
743.00 ( 1/14/97 )
1, 000.00 ( 7/17/95)
plus one thousand dollars
2,098.00 ( 1/22/97 )
1,700.00(3/15/97)
761.00(3/15/97)
1 ,287.00 ( 1/22/97)
784.00(2/26/97)
109.00(3/15/97)
1.599.00
288.71
2.362.00
978-34
218.75
1,618.75
218.75
f3f.25
8,536.00
2,123.45
interest )
437.50
437.50
340.00
102.38
218.75
437.50
437.50
218.75
62.50
440. .23
177,000.00
18,745.00
21,207.61
-------
tSt-LASiJ/K^.
/?<-^. r, /? fp
-ฃ-*~ป-*_-dฃ^x'
X/ J
//_ e 'i c < t \
7^-t--ฃc~ , x^t/X^"!/ -f TZ-J-.^s /7^j?.
/
^/^ ^ J^
s^-.,.
-------
Lucia Boochlno
109 Tesler Way
Hillsdale, N.J. 07642
August 13, 1997
Hans en
RaneJi&l Project Mgr.
U.S Environmental Igenor
290 Broadway
Hew York, N.T. 10007-1866
I am writing this letter to express my deep concern for the health, welfare
and future of my daughter Serena Bocchlno, her husband Stephen Keough,
so n Ezra and future children.
Serena and Stephen feuilt their hone a living space for the family and
a studio space for Serena, a professional painter* They celebrated
their first Christmas in the new home.
Shortly after, nercury was discovered in one of the lofts. Serena, Stephen
and Ezra were forced to move out. Their health was in great Jeopardy.
My daughter, husband and child cane to live in ny home inflil'lsdale !'.J.
During that terrible vinter of '95 I saw the daily stress and
strain they endured. To this day they are still enduring trenendous
daily pressures.
I strongly support the EFA's recorxiendation to demolish the building
At 722 Grand Street and decontamination of the entire area in order
to insure safety and health of the Hoboken residents.
Sincerely,
-------
WSTRlCT S
HUDSON COUNTY, NEW JERSEY
BOARD OF CHOSEN FREEHOLDERS
ADMINISTRATION ANNEX
5*7 PAVONIAAVENUE-JERSEYCITY. N.J. OTBOS
ZO1-79S-6OO!
FAX - 2OI-217-OAO*
August 18, 1997
Mr. John Hansen, Remedial Project Manager
U.S. Environmental Protection Agency
290 Broadway - 19th Floor
New York, New York 10007-1866
Dear Mr. Hansen;
At their Thursday, August 14 regularly scheduled meeting, the Hudson County Board of
Chosen Freeholders heard the prepared statement of Curtis Crystal, who formally represented the
Grand Street Artists Partnership of Hoboken.
The Freeholder Board adopted Resolution #23 unanimously by those present, which gives
support to the stand of the Grand Street Artists Partnership and urges the U.S. Environmental
Protection Agency to choose their own recommendation: Alternative 5, Demolition and
Permanent Relocation of All Residents.
A copy, with raised Freeholder seal, is enclosed for your formal records.
Sincerely,
Maurite Fhzgibbon;
Chairperson
&
Enclosure
c: Stephen Keough, for the Grand Street Artists Partnership
-------
BOARD OF CHOSEN FREEHOLDERS
COUNTY OF HUDSON
RESOLUTION
No. 404-8-1997
On Motion of Freeholder Board as a whole
Seconded by Freeholder
RESOLUTION REQUESTING SWIFT ACTON
ON THE PART OF THE ULS. ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY
IN THE MATTER OF 722 GRAND STREET, HOBOKEN
WHEREAS, in December, 1995, the City of Hobokea learned of mercury contamination
existing on die premises of 722 Grand Street, a residential building housing 17 families; and
WHEREAS, the families were evacuated from die premises in early January, 1996; and
WHEREAS, die former residents of 722 Grand Street have had to endure multiple severe
hardships attributable to rheai misfortune for rhe past 18 fflnnrtis, including exposure to
mercury, temporary housing, emotional distress, financial constraints and uncenainry atom the
future; and
WHEREAS, die United States Environmental Protection Agency has jurisdiction over dus
matter and is conducting a focused study to determine what course of arrinn should be taken
wiih regard to the contaminated site; mid
WHEREAS, die former residents of 722 Grand Street have manifested die desire for swift
action from, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency; and
WHEREAS, die rite of 722 Grand Street is, and shall continue to be, viewed negatively
by die public because of its mercury contamination.
NOW, THEREFORE, BE tT RESOLVED by die Board of Cbosen Freeholders of die Counry
of Hudson, than
1. This Board, along widi County Executive Robert C Janiszewski, cafls upon die U.S.
Environmental Protection Agency to expediently resolve die issue of permanent relocation of all
ri-nanrt and ro r-aVl for dปe demolition or removal of 722 Grand Street, Hoboken and die
environmental restoration of ic land.
2. This Board, along widi County Executive Robert C Janiszewski, recognizes die hard
work, along with the extreme personal hardship, diat each of the 17 fiitmlirs has experienced,
and extends its erapadiy for the loss of personal property, time, construction effort and
monetary contribution, as well as die addition of much aggravation and uncenainry in cheer
daily lives.
3, This resolution *MI take effect immediately.
It is hereby cerrifial dial at a regular meeting of die Board of Freeholders of die
County of Hudson held on the/^Otf day tfd*";^-**' A_D. 1997. die foregoing
resolution was adopted with 7 members voting in die affirmative and ^ in die
negative.
-------
Memojrom
Arnold J. Hoffman
199"
^/StO*'
j*t*~,
-V~Y~~-
/4&~<~~*i>
-------
August 30,1997
U.S. Environmental Protection Agency
290 Broadway, 19 th Floor
New York, New York 10007-1866
Attention: Mr. John Hansen, Remedial Project Manager
Reference: Grand St. Mercury Site, Hoboken. NJ.
Dear John,
I have reviewed: the Focused Feasibility Study, the Risk Assessment, the Proposed Plan, and
the other supporting documentation made available to me at the Hoboken Library. I support
the USEPA recommended Alternative 5,Demolition of the Building/Permanant Relocation of
the Building Residents/Soil Sampling,Excavation, and Offsite Disposal/Groundwater Sampling
and Analysis as the preferred method of dealing with this site.
As you are aware I am a former resident of 722 Grand Street. My wife and I have spent an
extraordinary amount of time developing this building into a home for our family. We had
planned to consolidate this space into a home with a artist's studio where we could raise our
children while my wife could persue her carrer as a artist. Please be aware this was a long
anticipated dream of ours not an idea that we came up with in 1993. My wife is a second
generation artist, she has first hand knowledge of the dificulties encountered by a woman
juggling the roles of wife, mother and artist.
For me the words "Grand Street" used to conjour up wonderful memories of my childhood
spent at 128 Grand Street, New Milford, New Jersey. Currently these words only evoke
feelings associated with a nightmare.
Please find enclosed photographs taken one December morning late in 1995 when the USEPA
arrived in our home to measure for mercury contamination. I was on my way out for work and
my 8 month old son Ezra was eating breakfast. These photos call to mind a speech given by
President Clinton during his reelection campiagn which he vowed that no child should grow
up with a hazardous waste site near his home. Well my son spent his first 8 months living right
in the middle of one.
Please proceed with all due haste to the Record of Decision based upon Alternate 5 so my
family and I may get on with our lives and allow this nightmare to become a distant memory.
Best Regards
Keough
cc President William Clinton
Vice President Albert Gore
-------
-------
August 30,1997
U.S. Environmental Protection Agency
290 Broadway, 19 th Floor
New York, New York 10007-1866
Attention: Mr. John Hansen, Remedial Project Manager
Reference: Grand St. Mercury Site, Hoboken. NJ.
Dear John,
I have reviewed: the Focused Feasibility Study, the Risk Assessment, the Proposed Plan, and
the other supporting documentation made available to me at the Hoboken Library. I support
the USEPA recommended Alternative 5,Demolition of the Building/Permanant Relocation of
the Building Residents/Soil Sampling,Excavation, and Offsite Disposal/Groundwater Sampling
and Analysis as the preferred method of dealing with this site,
As you are aware I am a former resident of 722 Grand Street. My wife and I have spent an
extraordinary amount of time developing this building into a home for our family. We had
planned to consolidate this space into a home with a artist's studio where we could raise our
children while my wife could persue her carrer as a artist Please be aware this was a long
anticipated dream of ours not an idea that we came up with in 1993. My wife is a second
generation artist, she has first hand knowledge of the dificulties encountered by a woman
juggling the roles of wife, mother and artist.
For me the words "Grand Street" used to conjour up wonderful memories of my childhood
spent at 128 Grand Street, New Milford, New Jersey. Currently these words only evoke
feelings associated with a nightmare.
Please find enclosed photographs taken one December morning late in 1995 when the USEPA
arrived in our home to measure for mercury contamination. I was on my way out for work and
ray 8 month old son Ezra was eating breakfast. These photos call to mind a speech given by
President Clinton during his reelection campiagn which he vowed that no child should grow
up with a hazardous waste site near his home. Well my son spent his first 8 months living right
in die middle of one.
Please proceed with all due haste to the Record of Decision based upon Alternate 5 so my
family and I may get on with our lives and allow this nightmare to become a distant memory.
Best Regards
Stephen Keough
cc President William Clinton
Vice President Albert Gore
-------
Mark Graham
1026 Hudson Street
Hoboken, NJ 07030
201-792-4037
John Hansen September 1,1997
Remedial Project Manager
U.S. EPA
290 Broadway, 19th Floor
New York, NY 10007-1866
RE: Public Comment
Grand Street Mercury Site, Hoboken, NJ
Dear John:
Please find enclosed comments on the EPA's proposal for the abovementioned site from
my wife and myself, both former residents of this site.
Thanks for all your work.
Best Regard'
Mark Graham
encl.
-------
Mark Graham
1026 Hudson Street
Hoboken, NJ 07030
201-792-4037
Statement on EPA's Recommendation for
722 Grand Street Mercury Site
appreciate this opportunity to speak.
[y wife and I were introduced to this project in October, 1992, and became actively
ivolved in December of that year. It took the group of us another nine months to
iccessfully purchase 722 Grand Street, and then another two and a half years to see
xnpletion on the horizon. It was at that point we discovered we might never reach that
orizon, when we discovered that over half of the residents that had just turned
lemselves inside out on this project had elevated levels of mercury in their bodies.
"Ve succeeded at Grand Street where other groups in the past, including professional
evelopers, had failed: we took an empty building on a half-empty street in a relatively
ead section of Hoboken, and self developed it into living units that were legally zoned for
rtists to work and live, the first, and still the only ones of their kind. Within one week
fter we received Final Site Plan Approval from the City of Hoboken, real estate signs
iading "Lofts for Sale" and "Lofts for Rent" appeared on buildings across both streets from
ur building. We were the ground breakers in Hoboken, we did it totally on our own,
'ith a tremendous amount of work and a tremendous amount of debt, and we have lost it
II, except for the debt.
have a sense of pride being part of a group that had the courage and the audacity to take
a a challenge like this. In this national climate of worshipping the individual, the self-
arters, the risk-takers, we are the quintessential group. We were also exceptionally
lutious. We insisted on documentation assuring us of the safety of this building for
sidential use. When we received these written assurances, we felt we were safe. In a
reader sense, that sense of safety is gone, forcefully replaced with an underlying distrust
^d constant stress droning within us. My wife has developed a cardiac arrhythmia, and
In months after the evacuation, I found myself in the hospital with chest pains and
evated blood pressure. My wife was over three months pregnant during the evacuation,
Nd worry for the future of our son's health is relentless.
-------
Mark Graham
1026 Hudson Street
Hoboken, NJ 07030
The reality that brings us here tonight never should have happened. With our caution
during the pre-purchase environmental review of the building, this message of "Unfit for
Human Habitation" was beyond comprehension. The resulting evacuation was absolute!)
surreal, nightmarish. To me, we appeared as zombies, dragging our two plastic bags of
belongings down through the building, silent and numb with disbelief. I feel echoes of
this disbelief within our group to this day.
With the emergence of this nightmare, the EPA appeared. As the group of us were in a
highly agitated state, the EPA acted as a reference point of sanity and reassurance. If it wen
not for the information, assistance, and support the EPA provided, we would have been,
in addition to everything else, homeless and bankrupt. I challenge any of the federal
officials in Washington or any corporate entity involved in this situation who undertake
to lecture on the extreme environmental positions, or the lack of importance, of the
Environmental Protection Agency to be silent for just a brief time and open their eyes to
the realities of the EPA's contributions to the group of us and to this community. They
might learn that, if the EPA can be accused of having an agenda, it is essentially to protect
the citizens from being poisoned and to help those who have already been poisoned.
The EPA has been meticulous and thorough in their handling of the research which
results in this recommendation to demolish our homes. The realization of this
termination creates an ache that will last a very long time. But it is the right thing to do,
for us and for the surrounding community.
For my family and for the group of us, I thank the EPA for its intense efforts on our behalf.
You have contributed to showing us that a sense of stability in our lives is coming in the
future, so that we can move on from this suspended animation in which we find
ourselves.
Thank you.
-------
Myra Graham
1026 Hudson Street
Hoboken, NJ 07030
201-792-4037
RE: E.P.A.'s Recommendation to Demolish the Building at 722 Grand Street, Hoboken, NJ
For so long now I have felt as if I had been haunted by a pestilent ghost. In a fallacy of vision I
could perceive that ghost to take the form of the building into which my husband and I put so
much of ourselves. But, although our dream home is contaminated with vapors from, and
the actual liquid mercury, it is not the building that has haunted me for this most difficult of
time periods. I am haunted by the hateful greed that allowed someone to sell a building full
of poison to a group of hard working well intended people. It is incomprehensible to me how
any individual could act with such disregard for the welfare of innocent people, and it is
despicable that anyone would allow mothers to take their babies into a place, with the
intention to live there, where they were going to be poison. We were sold a building full of
poison, and that sale was made with a smile on the face of that seller. The poison that is in the
minds and hearts of a person who would be able to do such a thing is worse in effect and
greater in quantity then that which sadly permeates my former home.
Why was that building so saturated with mercury? The question echoes in my mind,
answerless. The uses of mercury are probably many. I would never discount its usefulness to
our society. But the abuse of the privilege and responsibility to use a material that becomes a
potentially life threatening substance is also in question.
v
For the past four plus years my husband and I have been involved in this building. We began
the adventure with hopes and realistic concerns. We knew we would do 90% of the work
ourselves. We knew it would be difficult to ask but we asked for some financial help from our
family. We were realistic in our endeavor. We worked hard, really hard. Each stud was
gratifying, each sanded and sealed floor board held mesmerizing beauty. We were exhausted at
light, but filled with the anticipation of some day living with all the beauty that we ourselves
were creating. It is very well documented the way that the mercury issue evolved. It still is so
surreal. What happened should not have ever happened. And the fact that it happened
should sit heavily on certain peoples minds. Contemplating what transpired, and what is
continues is almost numbing. Maybe I wish I could numb out all that I feel from this travesty
that consumes each and every one of my days. Perhaps then I would not have the heart
palpitations that continue to scare me, perhaps I would not have had the eczema that flared up
twice right below my eyes. Maybe if I could ignore the fears concerning my baby's well-being,
my husband's health and my own I would no longer have the episodes of vertigo. Maybe if I
tad a sense of where I was going to finally create a home for my family the anxiety would
-------
Myra Graham
1026 Hudson St.
Hoboken, NJ
lessen. But what do I do with the thought that plagues me that it could be because of all this
worry fear sadness and anger that I was stressed to such an extent that I lost the baby I carried
for three months. All of the fear, worry, anger, confusion that exists within my body every day
of my life is-a by product of what began as a dream that seemed as if it was going to come true.
Now I live in a nightmare unending unknowns.
We need an end to this disaster. We need relief from the droning worries and the ever
looming unknowns. Our community needs a safe solution to what I personally have been
told worries many, especially those in the immediate neighborhood. Mothers and Fathers
whose children play in the nearby park have expressed their worry and confusion. People
simply walking by the building have questioned me a number of times about the dangers of
the building. People are scared. And it just is not fair to try to ignore or steamroll these
peoples' concerns.
We have been through a travesty that I would not wish on anyone. This turbulent time has
gone on far too long. Although it is indescribably heart wrenching to think that our building
should be demolished it is ultimately very clear that this is the only decision that ensures the
safety of our community. 1 support the E.P.A.'s recommendation for that reason and I hope
and pray that the simultaneous effect of removing the building from where it stands will
remove the ghost of pestilent greed and irresponsibility from my immediate life.
-------
Anthony Russo
Mayor
September 2, 1997
City of Hoboken
Board of Health
124 Grand Street
Hoboken, New Jersey
07030
Tel: 420-2365
FAX:(201) 420-7862
Frank S. Sasso. MS.MSW
Health Officer
Mr. Richard L. Caspe
United States Environmental
Protection Agency
Region II
290 Broadway
New York, NY 10007-1866
Dear Mr. Caspe:
Please be advised that I am writing this letter in support of the Hoboken
City Council's resolution requesting that 720-722 Grand Street, Hoboken,
New Jersey, be raised due to the imminent health hazard which is being
caused because of the presence of elemental mercury.
I have personal first hand knowledge of many of the events that have taken
place and had the unfortunate but necessary duty of ordering the
aforementioned building deemed unfit for human habitation and summarily
vacated.
Since the closure of the aforesaid building, I have had numerous queries
with regard to the safety of 720-722 Grand Street. Questions from the
general public such as, "is it safe to walk in front of the building?" have
been raised many times.
-------
Given the fact that the above building conversion was approved (industrial
to residential use) by a government agency, public perception has eroded as
to public trust regarding health and safety statements from my office.
Because of the above, I support the Mayor and the City Council's request
for total demolition and removal of 720-722 Grand Street, Hoboken, New
Jersey, and removal of all other ground contaminants.
If you have any further questions or concerns or would like to meet with me
in person, please contact me at (201)420-2375, and I shall be more than
happy to further assist you.
Sin
Frank S. Sasso, M.S., MSW
Health Officer - City of Hoboken
FSS/dd
cc. Mayor Anthony Russo
Director Robert K. Drasheff
Director George Crimmins
-------
ANTHONY RUSSO 'j* i ^'VJT^ '*.!
MAYOR
September 2, 1991
^\ '->" ~ -
CITY HALL
HOBOKEN, NEW JERSEY
Richard L Caspe
United States Environmental Protection Agency
Region II
290 Broadway
New York, New York 10007-1866
Dear Mr. Caspe:
Please be advised that I am writing this letter in support of the Hoboken City Council's
resolution requesting that 720-722 Grand Street, Hoboken, New Jersey, be raised due to the
imminent health hazard which is being caused because of the presence of elemental mercury.
I support the EPA's alternative No. 5.
/Yoursve
rsveryjruly
AR/as
Anthony Russo
Mayor
-------
HUDSON REGIONAL HEALTH COMMISSION
MEADOWVIEW CAMPUS
595 COUNTY AVENUE, BUILDING 1, SECAUCUS, NEW JERSEY 07094
TEL. (201)223-1133 FAX (201)223-0122
Karen L. Comer. President Robert Ferraiuolo. Director
September 2, 1997
John Hanson
Remedial Project Manager
U.S. Environmental Protection Agency
290 Broadway, 19th Floor
New York, New York, 10007-1866
Mr. Hanson,
The Hudson Regional Health Commission (HRHC) respectfully submits the following
comments with regard to the Superfund Proposed Plan for the Grand Street Mercury
Site. The remedial alternatives referenced are as described in the proposed plan dated
July, 1997.
The HRHC can only support those remedial alternatives which in its view are fully
protective of the environment, and the health of the building residents, the public and any
future occupants. Since, the presence of a hazard within the building has been clearly
demonstrated along with the existence of a potential health threat to the community,
Alternative 1 is not supported by HRHC.
Alternatives 2 and 3, present the possibility of remediation of the building as means of
ensuring the safety of future residential occupants. However, both options rely upon
remediation to a specified level of mercury vapor in air, and imply that not all mercury can
be removed from the building. The assumption that complete removal of mercury cannot
be accomplished while leaving the existing building intact is reasonable based on the extent
of saturation of building components with mercury which has been found at the site to
date Furthermore, the proposed remedy cannot offer any absolute degree of confidence
that mercury vapors will remain below the remedial action objective in perpetuity. Since,
exposure to mercury vapor, at any level, is not a usual occurrence in most households, and
mercury vapor exposure is a documented health hazard, the HRHC cannot support any
alternatives in which occupants of a residential building may be exposed to mercury vapor.
Thus, the HRHC cannot support alternatives 2 or 3.
"SERVING BAYONNE. EAST NEWARK. GUTTENBERG. HARRISON. HOBOKEN.
JERSEY CITY. KEARNY. NORTH BERGEN. SECAUCUS.
UNION CITY. WEEHAWKEN. WEST NEW YORK."
-------
Alternative 4 proposes remedial measures similar to Alternatives 2 and 3 but would
restrict occupancy to commercial or industrial. Under this scenario workers would be
exposed to mercury vapor, presumably at levels well below the OSHA Permissible
Exposure Limit (PEL). However, workers would still need to be informed of their
exposure_.to mercury pursuant to the Hazard Communication Standard. There can be no
guarantee that such notice would be made to workers by future occupants of the building.
This may allow workers to unknowingly and possibly unwillingly be exposed to mercury
vapor. Additionally, there would be no means to restrict future renovation which could
conceivably damage controls which were put in place to control mercury vapor exposure.
Thus, the HRHC does not support remedial alternative 4.
With regard to the issue of permanent relocation of the residents, the HRHC believes the
residents should be recompensed for their actual monetary losses associated with their
being unable to reside in the units which they constructed or purchased. The rationale for
this is based on the belief that the buildings residents are "innocent parties" who were
placed in substantial physical and monetary jeopardy due to mercury contamination within
the building. The premise that the residents are "innocent parties" is based upon the fact
that they used due diligence to a degree which would be expected of any individual. It
was only through the lack of discovery or disclosure of the contamination at the site by
parties who each individually should have either known of, discovered, or caused to be
discovered the history of mercury use at the property that the residents are now damaged.
These parties are: the prior building owner who sold the property to the Grand Street
Artists Partnership (GSAP), the environmental consultant for the buildings seller; the New
Jersey Department of Environmental Protection; and the environmental consultant for the
GSAP. Had any one of these entities reported the use of mercury at the site to GSAP, the
HRHC would not view the residents as "innocent parties". Furthermore, upon discovery
of some mercury in the building, GSAP hired additional environmental consultants who
they viewed as experts with regard to such contamination. These consultants allegedly
assured them the contamination was not extensive and could be remediated. Presently the
Commission knows of no evidence which demonstrates the members of GSAP were aware
of the use of mercury within the building prior to its purchase by them. Thus, the HRHC
can only consider supporting those options which offer recompense to the residents in the
form of "permanent relocation".
-------
HRHC believes alternative 6 is the remedy which will permanently eliminate all potential
environmental and public health hazards associated with the site as well as recompense a
small portion of the damages suffered by residents of the building.
If you have any questions in this regard please feel free to contact me.
Sincerely,
Gary Garetano, Assistant Director
c: Robert Ferraiuolo, Director
Frank Sasso, Health Officer
-------
CITY CLERK'S OFFICE
CITY HALL
HOBOKEN, NEW JERSEY 07030-4585
BOCCIO
Council President
HOME: 798-1688
BUSINESS: 420-2342
Septembers, 1997
Mr. John Hansen
Project Manager
US Environmental Protection Agency
290 Broadway
New York, New York 10007
Dear Mr. Hansen:
On behalf of the Council of the City of Hoboken, I would like to strongly encourage the United
States Environmental Agency to implement Alternative #5 regarding the disposition of
contaminated property known as 722 Grand Street within the City of Hoboken.
After discussion among city officials and with representatives of the EPA, it is clear that
Alternative #5 is the only solution that suits both the needs of the city and the residents of the
affected area.
I hope that implementation of Alternative #5 can proceed in a timely fashion to resolve this long-
standing problem of contamination within the City of Hoboken.
Sincerely,
Richard Del Boccio
City Council President
-------
Grand Street Artist Partnership 722-732 Grand Street Hoboken NJ 07030
September 3, 1997
Mr. John Hansen
Remedial Project Manager
U.S. Environmental Protection Agency
290 Broadway 19th floor
New York, New York 10007-1866
Re: Proposed Clean Up Plan for the Grand Street Mercury Site In Hoboken, NJ
Dear Mr. Hansen:
I am writing on behalf of the Grand Street Artists and each of its members to express our
gratitude for the diligence and dedication with which the U.S. Environmental Protection
Agency ("EPA") has examined and addressed the consequences of the mercury contamination
at the Grand Street property. We are particularly gratified by the fact that the EPA has
considered not only the technical aspects of the various remedial alternatives described in the
Focused Feasibility Study, but the devastating impact which the mercury contamination has
had on the lives of the families which sought to make this building their home. We are also
writing to express our unqualified support for the proposed remediation Alternative #5
recommended by the EPA.
Many of the residents had the opportunity to speak at the public meeting and to describe, in
very personal terms, the manner in which their lives and the lives of their children have been
forever changed by the mercury contamination at the Brand Street property. In addition to the
harsh realization that we will never be able to return to our homes, we must also try to cope
with the stress, anxiety, fear and uncertainty which each of us faces on a daily basis.
Although events of the last several years have affected us in many different ways , the one
thought that is uppermost in the minds of each of the members of the Grand Street Artists is
the compelling need which each of us has to be able to find homes for our families, to be able
to plan for our futures and to begin to restore some sense of normalcy to our lives.
Although we understand the many technical requirements which must be met before a remedy
can be determined and implemented, we remain anxious at the prospect of an administrative
process over which we have no control but which will profoundly affect the lives of each of
-------
us. Although we are greatly appreciative of the speed with which the EPA has moved the
process along, we are fearful that other interested parties will attempt to impede, hinder and
delay the implementation of the remedy selected by the EPA and, in particular, the issuance of
permanent relocation benefits. To that end, we urge that the EPA do everything within its
power to issue the Record of Decision as soon as reasonably practicable and to implement the
Proposed Plan with all deliberate speed so as to enable all of the former residents of the
Grand Streelproperty to find new homes for themselves and their families and to begin the
hopeful process of rebuilding their lives.
Best Regard
StepHerrKeough, President
Grand Street Artists Partnership
-------
KENNETH J. HOLLENBECK
JOSEPH A. ASCKDNE'
GLENN C. KENZ
ROBERT E LEVY"
Cmimi> C1MKA1. T1UAL
VICTOR E. KINON
STEVEN B. HART
EDWARD A. BERTELF
JAMES W. CLASSEN"
' AUO ADMITTED W NEW TOM
AiJO ADMITTED tH BOnOYLVAKU
* ALJO ADMITTED D* DISTUCT Of CQUJVKA
SCARINCI & HOLLENBECK
ATTORNEYS AT LAW
mTP://WWW.NJLEGALJNK. COM
500 PLAZA DRIVE
P.O. BOX 3189
SECAUCUS, N. J. 07096-3189
(201) 392-8900
FAX (201) 348-3877
JOSEPH S. SHERMAN
SHERI K. SIEGELBAUM
SCOTT A. CARVER
ALLAN C. ROTH
KAREN LEVINE'
DOLORES M. BLACKBURN
MAURA JOHNSON KIMBAU.
PATRICK J. McNAMARA'
FRANK A. BLANDINO1
SEAN D. D1AT
STEPHEN N. SEVERUD
GINA GEORGE-GREER
MARIE CINQUE
NOMI IRENE LOWT
RUSHTON S. YOUNG1
September 5, 1997
VIA UPS KEXT DAY AIR
Mr. John Hansen
Remedial Project Manager
USEPA - Region II
290 Broadway, 19th Floor
New York, New York 10007-1866
Re: Response on Behalf of Anthony Mastromauro
Focused Feasibility Study by USEPA
722 Grand Street Superfund Site - Hoboken, N.J,
Our File No. 1907.1000
Dear Mr. Hansen:
Please accept this letter on behalf of Mr. Anthony
Mastromauro, a former resident of the 722 Grand Street Superfund
Site. The purpose of this letter is to provide you with comments
concerning the Focused Feasibility Study ("FFS") issued by the
USEPA concerning this property.
Mr. Mastromauro is in full agreement with the conclusions
reached in the FFS. Ass was stated at the public hearing conducted
by the USEPA, Mr. Mastromauro has absolutely no intention of ever
taking up residence in this building ever again. He has suffered
both physical and psychological damages as a direct result of his
exposure to the mercury contamination which permeates the premises.
We believe it is absolutely inconceivable that any party could
actually advocate the idea of attempting to remediate this building
to a level where it would be "safe" for residential use, or even
for commercial purposes. Given the documented levels of mercury in
the blood and urine samples of the residents, and the long
recognized toxicity of mercury, it is untenable from any reasoned
scientific standpoint for anyone to believe that this building
could ever be occupied again for any type of use. It is worth
noting that many of these persons had only a few months exposure,
yet showed significant levels of mercury in their blood and urine.
-------
September 5, 1997
page 2
One need not speculate very much to recognize the permanent
physical and psychological damage which would have occurred to
people like Mr. Mastromauro if this exposure had gone on for even
a few more months. The recent report issued on June 30, 1997 by
the USEPA concerning mercury emissions from the disposal of
florescent lamps only highlights the environmental hazards posed by
mercury. Unfortunately, we fully expect that General Electric, and
possibly other PRP's, will ignore overwhelming evidence. We hope
that the USEPA is fully prepared to address and rebut the onslaught
of scientific gibberish that is to come to justify such an
outrageous position.
As such, we strongly urge the USEPA to proceed with
Alternative No. 5 in the FFS, which calls for permanent relocation
and demolition of the building. The latter is the only way to
insure that this threat is eradicated from the environment. It is
also, in the long run, likely to be far more cost efficient than
attempting to remediate the building interior. It does not appear
to us to be economically justifiable to literally have to gut
several floors, in an attempt to "save" the building, an activity
which may not address, let alone remediate, all of the mercury
contamination which permeates this structure.
While we can anticipate that there will be challenges to the
Record of Decision ("ROD") and the finalization of the NPL listing
of this Site, we hope that all of the parties interested in this
matter do not lose sight of the human element involved. Unlike the
typical Superfund Site, which is usually an abandoned industrial
facility or a landfill, this building was the home, and center of
both the professional and personal lives, of most of its residents.
It is easy for lawyers and PRP's to "sit around the table" and
argue over remediation strategies and which technology to use and
the dollars at stake.
What is far more critical here is the cost in the ongoing
disruption of the lives of the former residents such as Mr.
Mastromauro, which has been an ongoing saga for nearly two years.
While we recognize that the process used by the USEPA at this Site
has been expedited to the extent possible under the NPL
regulations, and we appreciate the efforts of all those involved in
this effort, he, along with every other resident, is entitled to
finality. The proposed Alternative No. 5 will bring that finality,
and some sense of closure for all of the former residents. No one
can truly make up for the tremendous disruption to the professional
SCARINCI & HOLLENBECK
-------
September 5, 1997
Page 3
and personal lives of people like Mr. Mastromauro and the other
former residents. However, it is time for this ongoing "Twilight
Zone" existence for Mr. Mastromauro, as well as the other former
residents, to come to an end.
We strongly urge the USEPA to move forward as quickly as
possible with the issuance of the ROD, the NPL listing, and the
processing of permanent relocation for Mr. Mastroraauro. If you
have any questions concerning this submission, please contact us at
your convenience.
Respectfully Submitted,
PAT:
For
McNAMARA
Firm
PJM/cm
cc: Anthony Mastromauro
Hon. Robert Menendez
SCARINCI & HOLLENBECK
-------
STERNS & WEINROTH
A ^HOrcSSlONAL COMOM A TlON
COUNSELLORS AT LAW
90 WEST STATE STREET 19O, ATLANTIC AVCNUC
SUITE I4OO ATLANTIC CITY N j Oซ*Ol
POBdxizea ieow 3*o-ซ3oo
TRENTON. NEW JERSEY OeeO7-(2Sป8 fACS.HILt ปOซ **O
iซO9l 392-ZlOO
WRITER'S DIRECT LINE: rACSiMiLt
I0O9I 302-7096
(609)989-6034 ^50619-01
Septembers, 1997
Via Federal Express
John Hansen, Remedial Project Manager
U.S. Environmental Protection Agency
290 Broadway -19th Floor
New York, NY 10007-1866
Re: Grand Street Mercury Superfund Site
Hoboken, New Jersey
Dear Mr. Hansen:
John J. Pascale, Sr. ("John Pascale") submits these comments in response to the
United States Environmental Protection Agency's ("EPA") July 9, 1997 Focused Feasibility
Study concerning the property located at 720 and 722-32 Grand Street, Hoboken, New
Jersey ("the site"). We request that these comments be added to the Administrative Record
We reserve our right to amend and/or supplement the Administrative Record in the future.
On March 28, 1997. John Pascale submitted comments in response to EPA's
February 24, 1997 Unilateral Administrative Order ("UAO"), which included a detailed
statement of relevant facts describing John Pascale's relationship to the site. We incorporate
the statement of relevant facts set forth in the March 28, 1997 letter into these comments
-------
John Hซnซซn
September 5, 1997
Page 2
Additionalfy, John Pascalt requests that the following changes be made to the facts wt fort
in the Focused Feasibility Study:
1. The Focused Feasibility Study states at page i and page 5 that mercury vapo,
lamps were manufactured at the sKe until 1965. According to Warren Millar, an owner *n<
operator of the Cooper Hewitt Electric Company ("Cooper Hewitt"), Cooper Hewitt's
operations ended in 1964. See pages 168 and 216 of Warren Millar's March 6, 199/
d
deposition transcript, which are attached hereto. By including these excerpts from Warrer
Millar's deposition transcript, John Pascale has not accepted or acknowledged the accuracy
of Mr Millar's testimony.
2. Paragraph 2, page i, unnecessarily states what "the GSAP thought" when
mercury was discovered on three occasions through 1995. The purpose of the Focused
Feasibility Study is to assess site conditions and evaluate alternatives to the extent
necessary to select a remedy. 40 C F.R. ง300.430. Thus, there is no reason for the
Focused Feasibility Study to include what members of the GSAP allege they were thinking
when they discovered mercury in the building. We agree that the Focused Feasibility Study
should include background information regarding the discovery of mercury. However, this
can be accomplished by describing how and when mercury was discovered.
3 The first sentence of Paragraph 2, page 5 states that John Pascale operated the
Quality Tool and Die Company ("Quality") from 1940 to 1970. The reference to 1970 is
incorrect; it should be changed to 1979.
-------
Sซpt*mbซr5,1997
Page 3
4. The third sentence of Paragraph 2, page 5 is incorrect. Majoda did not move to
51 Market Street, Hoboken in 1963.
5. Paragraph 2, page 5 should include a statement indicating that Quality's
operations did not involve the use of mercury.
6. The first sentence of paragraph 4, page 5 is incorrect, all stock in Mojada was
given to David Pascale, not John J. Pascale, Jr.
7. EPA should identify the factual basis for the statements made in the section
entitled "Site History," page 4 through paragraph 1 of page 7
8. On page 8, paragraph 2, EPA states that the Hudson Regional Health
Commission ("HRHC") became aware of the mercury remediation activities and visited the
site in September 1995 to inspect the remediation activities. The Focused Feasibility Study
should state how the HRHC was made aware of the mercury remediation activities.
John Pascale agrees with and hereby adopts the General Electric Company's ("GE")
technical evaluation of the Focused Feasibility Study, which begins at Section III of GE's
comments on the Focused Feasibility Study. Specifically, but not by way of limitation, John
Pascale agrees with the following conclusions reached by GE:
The action levels adopted by EPA are inappropriately extreme.
EPA has conducted a risk assessment that is not based on actual, realistic
exposure assumptions but, has based its decisions on implausible exposure
scenarios.
-------
JohnHanaan
September 5, 1997
Page 4
EPA should have applied the exposure standard set by the American Confereno
of Governmental Industrial Hygienists ("ACGIH"), 1996.
The use of excessively high exposure standards and EPA's failure to explain wtr
preexisting standards are not appropriate constitute violations of the National 0
and Hazardous Substances Pollution Contingency Plan ("NCP").
EPA has incorrectly assumed and has failed to demonstrate that remediation to
industrial standards is infeasible.
EPA has failed to recognize that GE has significant experience in remediating
mercury-contaminated buildings for industrial use and that the remedial methods
used by GE at other facilities can be readily and successfully implemented at the
site at much less cost than EPA's proposed remedy.
EPA's risk assessment is incorrectly based upon inflated breathing rates for
industrial workers and the presence of sensitive subpopulations.
Remediation to accepted industrial and commercial standards is cost effective and
pursuant to 40 C.F.R. ง300.430(f)(ii)(D), should be selected as the appropriate
remedy for the sife.
EPA's risk assessment has incorrectly assumed a residential exposure scenario
The property was improperly converted to residential use as a result of the Grand
Street Artists Partnership's negligence and David Pascale's submissions pursuant
to New Jersey's Environmental Cleanup Responsibility Act (N J S.A. 13 1K-5 et
-------
John Hงnปซn
Septembers, 1997
Pagซ5
sea). EPA's risk assessment should have been based or. the more reasonable
assumption that the site will be used for industrial/commercial purposes.
EPA's estimated exists for permanent relocation are unsupported and overstated.
The NCP at 40 C.F.R. ง300.160(a)(i) requires EPA to complete and maintain
documentation supporting all actions taken under the NCP. Additionally. 40 C.F R.
ง300.810 requires that the Administrative Record include those documents that
form the basis for EPA's response action. Contrary to these requirements. EPA
has not documented the basis for its estimate regarding permanent relocation of
the former residents.
EPA has improperly failed to reduce the costs of permanent relocation by the
amount of insurance coverage available to the former residents of the site. 44
C.F.R. ง221.5 prohibits EPA from providing duplicative benefits to displaced
persons.
The Focused Feasibility Study provides cost estimates for remediating the site to
residential standards that are inconsistent with the technical engineering report
prepared by Levire-Fricke-Recon.
For the reasons set forth in John Pascale's March 28, 1997 comments to EPA's
UAO and GE's April 1, 1997 comments to EPA's UAO, it is unlawful and improper
for EPA to pay relocation benefits to the prior residents, who are liable under
CERCLA. Furthermore, for the reasons set forth in John Pascale's March 28.
-------
John Hansen
Septembers 1997
Page 6
1997 comments to EPA's UAO, John Pascale is not liable as a matter of law for
relocation costs.
John Pascale also has the following questions regarding the Focused Feasibility
Study.
1. Has EPA determined whether any employees of the companies that previously
occupied the srte have suffered from mercury inhalation? EPA should describe the efforts it
has taken to determine whether employees of the former companies have suffered from
mercury inhalation.
,
2. Does EPA agree that the answer to Question No. 1 above :s relevant in deciding
whether the building should be remediated to industrial standards? If no, please explain
why.
3 Has EPA evaluated the effect of GSAP's renovation efforts on the release of
mercury? If yes, explain the results of that evaluation.
4. Has EPA taken any groundwater sample* at the site? If yes, provide the results
of the samples taken. If no, when will EPA conduct groundwater sampling?
Very truly yours,
>r-> '* - - ^>y ^
John F Sempte
JFS:vkb
-------
1 UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
DISTRICT OP NEW JERSEY
2 CIVIL ACTION NO. 96-3774 (DRD)
3
4 GRAND STREET ARTISTS,
J. MATTHEW SCHLEY, BARBARA :
5 KENRY, HANK SCHLBY, by hiซ
Guardians ad litem J. MATTHEW:
SCKLEY and BARBARA HENRY/
CHINA MARKS, JOHN STEADWBLL, :
7 MEREDITH LIPPMAN. NORA
JACOBSON, DAVID PERM, STEPHEN:
8 KEOUGH, SERENA BOCCHINO. EZRA
KEOUGH, by his Guardians :
9 ad licem STEPHEN KEOUGH and
SERENA BOCCHINO, MICHAEL :
10 SOLTER, CORINNE MULRENAN,
SULTAN CATTO. NESLIHAN CATTO.:
11 IMRE CATTO and KEREM CATTO.
by their Guardians ad litem :
12 SULTAN CATTO and NESLIHAN
CATTO. MARK GRAHAM, MYRA :
13 GRAHAM, EILEEN HOFFMAN,
ROBERT VICHNIS. TOVA BECK :
14 FRIEDMAN, Y. ZAK FRIEDMAN,
BARATC FRIEDMAN. CURTIS :
15 CRYSTAL, NANCY JESSUP,
ROBERT SCHIFFMACHER, :
16 SHUN-YI CHEN and CHING-HUANG
CHUNG :
17 (Videotape)
Plaintiffs. : Deposition of:
18
- against - : WARREN G. MILLAR
19
GENERAL ELECTRIC COMPANY, :
20 COOPER HEWITT ELECTRIC CO.,
INC., QUALITY TOOL & DIE :
21 CO., JOHN J. PASCALS,
DAVID P. PASCALS. SHERRILL :
22 PASCALE, ROGERS
ENVIRONMENTAL MANAGEMENT. :
23 INC., JENNY ENGINEERING
CORPORATION, ENPAK SERVICES :
24 COMPANY, INC., ENVIRONMENTAL.
25
WAGA i SPINELLI (201} 592-4111
-------
1 WASTE MANAGEMENT ASSOCIATES, :
INC. and CHASAN, LEYNBR,
2 TARRANT fc LAMPARELLO, :
3 ' Defendant*. :
4
PARKER, et al . ,
5 :
Plaintiffs,
6 :
- against -
7 :
GENERAL ELECTRIC COMPANY,
8 et al., :
9 Defendants. :
10
11
12 TRANSCRIPT of testimony as taken by and
13 before ANNA I. CROUCH, a Shorthand Reporter and
14 Notary^Public for the Commonwealth of Kentucky,
15 at che Commonwealth Hilton, 7373 Turfway Road,
16 Florence, Kentucky, on Thursday, March 6, 1997,
17 commencing at 10:10 in the forenoon.
18
19
20 APPEARANCES:
21
SIDLEY & AUSTIN
22 1722 Eye Street, N.W.
Washington, D C. 20006
23 EY: LANGLEY R. SHOOK. ESQ.
For the Defendant, .General Electric Company
24 (202)736-8197
25
WAG A i SPIN'ELLI (231) r92-4 111
-------
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
APPEARANCES: (Continued)
CAMHY, KARLINSKY fc STBIN, L.L.P.
1740 Broadway, 16th Floor
New York, New York 10019
BY: ROBERT P. STBIN, ESQ.
For the Plaintiff, Grand Street Art
<212) 977-6600
MBDVIN & ELBBRG
One Gateway Center
Newark, New Jersey 07102
BY: PHILIP S. ELBERG, ESQ.
For the Plaintiffs, Katherine Parke
Gerald Norton, individually and as
Guardians ad litem, Janet Filomeno
Louis Nel
(201) 642-1300
STERNS & WEINROTH
50 West State Street
Trenton, New Jersey 08607
BY: JOHN F. SEMPLE, ESQ.
For the Defendant, John J. Pascale,
(609) 392-2100
MARSHALL, DENNEHEY, WARNER,
COLEMAN & GOGGIN
Three Greentree Centre, Suite 304
Marlton, New Jersey 08053
BY: EMILY H. ARMSTRONG, ESQ.
For the Defendant, Chasan, Leyner,
Tarrant & Lamparello
(609) 985- 3900
3
iits
r ,
and
Sr .
HELLRING, LINDEMAN, GOLDSTEIN & SIEGAL
One Gateway Center
Newark, New Jersey 07102
BY: MATTHEW E. MOLOSHOK, ESQ.
For the Defendants, David P. Pascal
Sherrill Pascale
(201 ) 621-9020
PITNEY, HARDIN, KIPP & SZUCH
Park Avenue at Morris County
Morristown, New Jersey 07962
BY: PETER J. HERZBERG, ESQ.
e and
For the Defendant, Rogers Environmental
(201 ) 966-6300
WAGA & SPINELLI (201) 992-4111
-------
C
orrziani
5 MARINE VIEW PLAZA
SUITE 500
HOBOKEN, NEW JERSEY 0703P
(201)963-3194
FAX (201) 963-0148
September 8, 1997
Mr. John Hansen
Remedial Project Manager USEPA-Region II
Emergency and Remedial Response Division
New York, NY 10007-1866
Re : Hoboken Grand Street Mercury Site
Dear Mr. Hansen:
This letter is in support of EPA's preferred Alternative 5
at the Grand Street Mercury Site, as providing the best outcome for
the Hoboken community and the building's former residents.
I have been a developer and owner of residential housing in
Hoboken since the 1970's. My companies currently own and/or manage
more than 2000 Apartments, including both market rate and rent-
subsidized units, in the City of Hoboken. Several of our projects are
within a few blocks of the Grand Street site, and given Hoboken's
limited land area, none of our buildings are very far from the site.
The decision to demolish the former mercury vapor lamp
factory, relocate the displaced residents, and clean the soil is the
only sensible choice for the community. Hoboken does not need a toxic
question-mark situated across the street from the High School and in
an area which is becoming more and more residential. Rather, the City
would be best served by having the building removed and the site
entirely cleaned.
We therefore endorse the EPA's proposed plan, and applaud
the Agency's prompt action toward removing this blight from our
community
Ve
arry, President,
Companies
-------
croMJi
MM*.- ftOi) m-niO Dial CMML- t*2ป-J210
/fat.- (303) J73-26U DU Ctmm:
September 8, 1997
BY MESSENGER
JohnHansen
Remedial Project Manager
U S Environmental Protection Agency
290 Broadway, 19th Floor
New York, New York 10007-1866
Re Grand Street Mercury Site, Hoboken, New Jersey
Dear Mr. Hansen:
Enclosed are the Comments of the General Electric Company on the Focused
Feasibility Study and Proposed Remedial Action Plan for the Grand Street Mercury Site in
Hoboken, New Jersey For your convenience, we have enclosed an extra copy of the comments.
We request that these materials be placed in the administrative record for this site.
Thank you.
Sincerely,
Leonard H Shen
cc: Catherine Garypie, Esq , ORC
Enclosures
-------
Comments of the General Electric Company
on the Focused Feasibility Study
and Proposed Remedial Action Plan
for the Grand Street Mercury Site, Hoboken, New Jersey.
Submitted By:
The General Electric Company
3135 Easton Turnpike
Fairfield, CT 06431
Septembers, 1997
-------
TABLE OF CONTENTS
I EXECUTIVE SUMMARY 1
II BACKGROUND 4
A. The Industrial History Of The Site 4
B. The Unlawful Sale And Conversion Of The Factory To Residential
Condominiums 6
C The Temporary Relocation 8
E The CERCLA Contribution Actions 9
F EPA Enforcement Activities 10
III THE RISK ASSESSMENT AND EPA'S PROPOSED REMEDIAL
ACTION ARE TECHNICALLY INFIRM AND DO NOT COMPORT
WITH EPA REGULATIONS AND POLICY 11
A. Overview 11
B The NCP, EPA Guidance Documents And EPA's Administrative
Reforms Require That Risk .Assessments Be "Grounded In Reality"
And That Remedial Actions Be Sensible And Cost-Effective 13
C EPA's Risk Assessment is Scientifically Unsupportable, and the
Application of Appropriate, Risk-Based Exposure Standards
Demonstrates that Remediating the Site for Industrial or Commercial
Use is Protective of Human Health 15
1 The Derivation of EPA's Stringent Mercury Cleanup Level
for Industrial Exposure is Fundamentally Flawed 15
2 Existing Occupational Standards for Mercury Vapor Are
Reasonable and Are Supported by the Scientific Literature 19
3 Conclusion 27
D GE Has Had Considerable Experience And Success In Industrial
Mercury Remediation .. 28
-------
E Remediation of the Factory to Industrial/Commercial Standards
is Cott-Effective, and Should Have Been Selected by EPA as the
Appropriate Remedial Action 31
F EPA Inappropriately Employed a Residential Exposure Scenario
in the Risk Assessment 33
G EPA Miscalculated The Soil Exposure Risks, Soil Remediation At
the Site Is Not Necessary 37
IV EPAS ESTIMATED REMEDIAL COSTS ARE NOT ADEQUATELY
SUPPORTED BY THE ADMINISTRATIVE RECORD AND ARE
OVERSTATED 39
A EPA's Estimated Costs Of Permanent Relocation Are Suspect and
Overstated 39
B Because Soil Remediation Is Unnecessary, Supra, EPA Should Not
Consider The Costs of Soil Remediation 44
C EPA Has Also Overstated The Costs Of Remediating The Building
For Residential Reoccupancy 45
V LIABILITY ISSUES 46
VI CONCLUSION 47
Attachment I Summary of studies suggesting effects of mercury exposure at < 50 ng/m3
Attachment 2 Cost estimates of remediation to commercial/industrial standards and
building demolition
Attachment 3 Excerpt of Transcript of Meeting of the Grand Street Artists Partnership,
August 15, 1995
Attachment 4 Report, American Appraisal .Associates, September 5, 1997
Attachment 5 Insurance certificates of Grand Street Artists Condominium Association,
Inc.
Attachment 6 Letter (and attachments) from L Shen, GE, to J Green, EPA, August 20
1997
- 11 -
-------
Comments of the General Electric Company
on the Focused Feasibility Study
and Proposed Remedial Action Plan
Tor the Grand Street Mercury Site, Boboken, New Jersey
September 8, 1997
The General Electric Company ("GE") submits these comments regarding the
United States Environmental Protection Agency's ("EPA's") Focused Feasibility Study ("FFS")
and Proposed Remedial Action Plan ("PRAP") (July 9, 1997) and supporting Baseline Human
Health Risk Assessment (Apr. 1997) concerning the Grand Street Mercury Site in Hoboken, New
Jersey (the "Site") Pursuant to the extension of time provided by EPA in which to file these
comments, GE is providing these comments by September 8, 1997 GE requests that these
comments be included in the administrative record for the Site and reserves the right to provide
additional comments and to supplement the administrative record in the future.
I. EXECUTIVE SUMMARY
From the first, when EPA began providing temporary relocation benefits to
residents who had knowingly purchased units in the mercury-contaminated factory building at 722
Grand Street in Hoboken ("the Factory"), EPA has used the Superfund to profit a group of
residents for the consequences of their own actions. On July 9, 1997, EPA took the latest
significant step in that direction when it issued a plan to demolish the building and to buy new
residences for the building owners.
EPA's decision to level the Factory is driven by the Agency's risk assessment and
its conclusion that the building cannot be safely remediated for appropriate, non-residential use
-------
In fact, if one believes EPA's risk assessment, demolition is unavoidable because the Agency has
proposed an exposure level for mercury so minute that no reasonable amount of remedial work
could possibly meet it. But the risk assessment is not to be believed. Sweeping aside established,
scientifically sound exposure standards developed through elaborate, independent, and peer-
reviewed procedures by US. and international agencies, EPA has come up with its own mercury
exposure standard keyed to the politicized circumstances of the Hoboken Site The result of this
stretching exercise is a mercury standard two orders of magnitude less than the industrial
standards set by more than a dozen developed countries in five continents and the World Health
Organization. To get to this result, EPA has ignored current, scientifically sound workplace
exposure standards set by the very agency charged with protecting worker health and safety -- the''
Occupational Safety and Health Administration ("OSHA") - and by national standards
organizations, such as the National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health ("N10SH") and
the American Conference of Governmental Industrial Hygienists ("ACGIH"), whose purpose is to
evaluate occupational risks and develop exposure standards to address those risks. EPA has
identified no site-specific features warranting its radical departure from such established exposure
standards. Instead, in an apparent effort to create support for the Agency's preferred remedial
alternative. EPA has chosen to rely upon a risk assessment that is flawed, unrealistic and based on
incorrect principles and assumptions. The critical flaws in the risk assessment, and EPA's
inappropriate departure from established, scientifically sound exposure standards, run to the heart
of the selection of the proposed remedy, and demonstrate that EPA's proposal is arbitrary and
capricious
-------
In addition, EPA ignores the basic facts - that this property was historically used
for industrial purposes and was unlawfully and improvidently converted to residential use. Thus,
the Agency's reliance upon residential exposure assumptions as the underlying support for the
PRAP is arbitrary and capricious. When an appropriate remediation standard is applied, it
becomes clear that remediation of the Factory to commercial/industrial standards not only is
protective and viable, but is by far the most cost-effective option. Thus, EPA is required by the
criteria set out in the NCP to select remediation to commercial/Industrial standards as the remedy
for the Site.
In contrast, EPA's PRAP represents a giant step backwards in EPA's approach to
Superfund sites Contrary to EPA's policies that risk assessments should be grounded in reality,
ซ
EPA here has developed an exposure standard that leaves reality behind Contrary to EPA's
policies of promoting the continued use of viable industrial property, EPA proposes just to tear
down the still viable Factory And, contrary to EPA's policies and its statutory mandate of
promoting cost-effective remedial decisionmaking, EPA has rejected a protective, viable, and
cost-effective alternative of restoring the Factory to industrial use, in favor of the most expensive
remedy under consideration leveling the Factory and buying new residences for the current
owners. The remedy not only is inconsistent with the remedy-selection criteria promulgated in the
NCP, it inappropriately profits the owners of the Factory, compensating them for far more than
their out-of-pocket costs in a situation where they knowingly purchased units in a building
contaminated with mercury.
Finally. EPA has put forth a proposed remedy not supported by the administrative
record. EPA refuses to divulge key aspects of the basis for the proposed remedy, including any of
-3-
-------
the analysis supporting the Agencys claim that it will cost nearly $10 million to relocate the
residents EPA's failure to document the basis of its proposed decision denies GE the opportunity
for meaningful comment and subverts the statutory and regulatory requirements applicable to
CERCLA remedial decisionmaking.
GE's specific comments follow To understand the extent of the errors underlying
the proposed plan, it is necessary to set out the facts surrounding the use of this property and the
unlawful conversion to residential use After summarizing that background, GE will analyze
EPA s unsound risk assessment and demonstrate how under an appropriate risk assessment it is
protective, feasible and cost-effective to return the Factory to industrial use We will then discuss
the inadequacies in the administrative record supporting the PRA?
Q. BACKGROUND'
A. The Industrial History Of The Site
The Site is a former industrial plant located at 722 Grand Street, Hoboken, New
Jersey, comprised of a five-story brick factory building and an adjoining four-story structure
(collectively, "the Factory") Beginning in approximately 1910, the Cooper Hewitt Electric
Company ("Cooper Hewitt I") owned and operated the Factory to produce lighting equipment
and other products, including Cooper Hewitt mercury vapor lamps In approximately 1919. GE
1 The factual statements made herein are based on GE's best current understanding of the facts, as
drawn from discovery to date and the admissions of the parties in the pending administrative and
judicial proceedings Many of the crucial facts in this matter began to surface only recently.
beginning with the Grand Street Artists Partnership's (GSAP's) Response to EPA's CERCLA
^ 104(ej Request for Information (Dec 11, 1996) (the "GSAP Response") and the panics' initial
information disclosures in the pending private litigation. Grand Street Artists, et al v General
Elec Co . et ai. Civ No 96-3774 (D N J ) (the "private contribution actions")
4 -
-------
acquired an interest in Cooper Hewitt I By approximately 1940, GE had acquired all of Cooper
Hewitt I's business and had become the owner and operator of the Factory During World War
II, GE operated the Factory in support of the war effort
Information presented in initial discovery in the private contribution actions and in
EPA's administrative depositions demonstrates that during GE's involvement at the Factory
operations were conducted safely and cleanly, and in accordance with the prevailing commercial
practices of the time Significantly, knowledgeable former employees recall no instances of
employee health or safety problems because of exposure to mercury at the Factory See
Deposition Transcript of Warren Millar ("Millar Dep Trans.") at 64-65, Deposition Transcript of
JohnJ Pascale ("Pascale Dep Trans ") at 105-06; EPA Admin Deposition Transcript of Francis*-
Chenel at 30-31
In 1948, GE discontinued its operations in Hoboken and sold the Factory and
associated property with full disclosures to a newly established corporation, which operated as
Cooper Hewitt ("Cooper Hewitt II") The new company, which had no connection to GE,
manufactured Cooper Hewitt mercury vapor lamps and other lighting products at the Factory
until approximately 1964, when it moved its operations to Kentucky Although Cooper Hewitt II
sold the Factory in 1955 to John Pascale, it continued to manufacture mercury vapor lamps at the
Factory as a tenant until 1964. From 1948-1979, John Pascale operated a tool and die business.
Quality Tool & Die Company ("Quality), at the Factory
In 1979, John Pascale transferred the Factory and the Quality business to his son,
David Pascale David Pascale continued to use the Factory for industrial purposes until a legal
dispute with his father resulted in the temporary transfer of the property back to John Pascale In
-5-
-------
1988, John Pascale ceased operating the Quality business and sold off virtually all of its assets.
David Pascale regained title to the Factory shortly thereafter In August 1993, David Pascale sold
the Factory to GSAP for conversion from industrial use to residential condominiums Thus, from
the beginning of the century, for at least eight decades, the Factory had been used continuously
for industrial purposes.
B. Thg Unlawful Sale And Conversion Of The Factory To Residential
Condonrinium*
Quality s industrial operations ceased in 1988 (Pascale Dep Trans at 102-04)
That cessation of operations triggered New Jersey's Environmental Cleanup Responsibility Act
("ECRA"), N J S A 13 1K-6 el sfifl (currently known as the Industrial Site Recover,' Act
("ISRA")) Under ECRA, Quality had a duty to file an application to the New Jersey Departmen
of Environmental Protection ("NJDEP") within 5 days of ceasing operations. However, it was
not until 1990 that David Pascale filed an application under ECRA As the current owners, David
Pascale and Quality had a legal duty to comply with ECRA, including investigating the property
and cleaning up any contamination. Id at 13:1K-9, -13.
Long before the ECRA process was completed if not from the very beginning --
David Pascale specifically intended to sell the Factory In the summer and fall of 1992, the
founding partners of what eventually became GSAP, Robert Schiffrnacher and Matthew Schley.
saw a "For Sale" sign on the Factory, inspected the building, and began negotiations with David
Pascale for the express purpose of purchasing and converting the Factory into residential
condominiums GSAP's Response at pp 5-6 Nonetheless, David Pascale and Quality completed
-6-
-------
the ECRA process based on initial ECRA submissions to the NJDEP and a so-called Negative
Declaration Affidavit, certified by David Pascale, that specified only "cessation of operations'1 as
he ECRA trigger and did not disclose the planned conversion of the Factory for residential use
Significantly, the ECRA submissions and Negative Declaration Affidavit also failed to disclose
hat the Factory had been used to manufacture mercury vapor lamps and other products
:ontaining mercury or which used mercury during manufacture, stating merely that the Factory
had been used only to manufacture "light bulbs." See David Pascale ECRA Filing.2
On August 4, 1993, GSAP formally was created, and on the same day it purchased
the Factory from David Pascale and his wife, Sherrill Pascale. In or about November 1994, the
first residents began to move into their respective units under temporary certificates of occupancy
GSAP partners have admitted to discovering mercury in the building as early as
October 1993 and on several occasions thereafter in different locations within the building GSAP
Response at pp 23-25 In January 1995, the renovation of a fifth floor unit revealed a "pool of
mercury" in the Factory GSAP Response at p 24 On or about May 1, 1995, the owners
discovered even greater amounts of mercury in that urut Complaint of GSAP gj a]., 1fl[ 71-72.
All of the current unit owners purchased their individual uruts from the Partnership after May 1,
1995
" A copy of this document was provided to EPA with GE's April 1, 1997, Comments to EPA's
L'rulateral Adrrurustrative Order for removal action at the Site C UAO") GE hereby incorporates
, ^ose comments by reference into this document, including the attachments to the comments to
:';; the UAO.
-7-
-------
C. Tht Temporary Relocation
In November 1995, attorneys for a minority of the owners reported the presence of
mercury in the Factory to the Hoboken Health Department ("HMD") Letter from Steven R
Spector to Ira Karasick (Nov. 7, 1995).3 In late December 1995, the HHD requested EPA
assistance at the Factory, and on January 2, 1996, the NJDEP further requested that EPA conduct
a removal action under Section 104(a) of CERCLA, 42 US C. ง 9604(a) On January 4, 1996,
EPA began a removal action, and HHD ordered the residents to leave the Factory.
Coinciding with these events in Hoboken, the federal government was temporarily
shut down due to a budget stalemate between Congress and the White House, while the East
Coast was experiencing a record snow blizzard. On January 8, 1996, GSAP's attorneys first
contacted GE regarding the mercury situation and the impending evacuation In view of the
unusual circumstances confronting EPA, GE temporarily set aside its serious reservations as to
liability, and within two days offered emergency funds to the former residents so they could afford
to vacate the building immediately All of the residents took advantage of this offer and used up
virtually all of the money, although not all of the funds were spent on emergency relocation.
On or about January 11, 1996, the last of the former residents left the Factory
Since then, with the initial, voluntary assistance from GE, EPA has managed the relocation and
paid for the housing and related expenses ("temporary relocation") of these former residents
EPA has done so without utilizing basic (and legally required) cost and fiscal management
controls, such as confirming the unit owners' compliance with their mortgage obligations, and has
also provided "temporary relocation" to one couple who never even moved into their assigned
3 A copy of this document was provided to EPA with GE's Apnl 1, 1997, UAO Comments.
-------
unit or even purchased it. Letter from Jtck Harmon, On-Scene Coordinator, EPA Region II, to
^Ching-Huang Chung & Sun-Yi Chen (Mar. 19, 1996).' GE, pursuant to the terms of the modified
UAO which became effective on May 9, 1997, has recently taken over the performance of certain
removal activities at the site; however, EPA continues to pay temporary relocation benefits to the
$ former residents. GE has maintained and continues to maintain that it is not liable for temporary
fl relocation costs incurred in connection with the site.
D. The CERCLA Contribution Action*
On August 7, 1996, GSAP. its individual partners, and the owners of the Factory
and former residents filed their tort and private CERCLA contribution actions against GE, John
and David Pascale and other defendants, including GSAP's attorneys and environmental
consultants who were retained in connection with the acquisition of the Factory 5 The complaints
in the consolidated private contribution actions seek, inter alia, a judgment declaring that the
plaintiffs, including the current owners, are not liable under CERCLA and, alternatively,
contribution under CERCLA from GE, John Pascale and other defendants GE has
counterclaimed against GSAP and the owners for a declaratory judgment that the Partnership and
the current owners are liable under CERCLA and for contribution under CERCLA for any
A copy of this document was provided to EPA with GE's April 1, 1997 UAO comments.
An individual "re-sale" owner has filed a separate action, which has been consolidated with the
others, in which the plaintiff has also named GSAP and certain individual partners as defendants
Mastromauro v General Elec Co.. et al.. Civ No 97-1123 (D N J ) This plaintiff alleges in his
complaint, among other things, that the previous owner of his condominium unit, Tova Beck
Friedman and GSAP, negligently concealed from the plaintiff the presence of mercury in his urut
before he ourcha^H it Id. at ซ!
-------
response costs incurred by GE. CFs Motion for Partial Judgment on Pleadings or, Alternatively,
for Partial Summary Judgment currently is pending before the District Court. See Section V.
infra.
E. EPA Enforcement Activities
On August 12, 1996. EPA issued General Notices of Potential Liability only to
GE. John Pascale and David Pascale, naming them as CERCLA potentially responsible parties
("PRPs") at the Site EPA has steadfastly refused to name the Partnership or any of the current
Site owners as PRPs On February 24, 1997. EPA issued its UAO only to GE and John Pascale
EPA did not issue the UAO to either David Pascale. the Partnership or any of the partners or
individual owners. EPA subsequently modified the UAO to delete all requirements pertaining to
the temporary relocation of the former residents This UAO. as modified, became effective on
May 9, 1997.
The comments that follow must be considered against this unique and still-evotvni
factual background.
10-
-------
OL THE RISK ASSESSMENT A\D EPA'S PROPOSED REMEDIAL AmON ARE
TECHNICALLY fNTTBM Al^fD DO NOT COMPOPT WITH r,p^
REGULATIONS AND POLICY.
A. Overview
EPA has selected a proposed remedy that is first and foremost based on the
Agency s evaluation of the potential risks of mercury exposure. The Agency s preferred
alternative - demolition of the Factory and permanent relocation of the residents -- is the most
expensive remedial alternative considered by EPA in the PRAP EPA concludes that there is no
viable available technology that can remediate the building to the exposure standards that the
Agency has selected, and therefore the valuable Factory building must be destroyed
It may be that the Factory cannot feasibly be remediated to the action levels
selected by EPA, but that is because the action levels adopted by the Agency are inappropriately
extreme To get to those extreme levels, EPA has conducted a risk assessment that is not based
on actual, realistic exposure assumptions and risks but, instead, has predicated its decisions on
implausible exposure scenarios chosen, it would appear, for the sole purpose of supporting EPA's
pre-ordained remedial preference -- demolition of the Factory This is a warping of the normal
Superfund decisionmaking process, and a rush to judgment that has been unduly influenced by
community pressure.6
6 The desires of community members are quite transparent. They are demanding demolition of
both the Factory and the adjacent townhouse See, e.g., Caren Lissner, Destroy it' Artists ask
EPA to smash their contaminated creation. The Hoboken Reporter, July 20, 1997 at 15 (noting
that former residents, neighbors and others are urging EPA to demolish the building), Peralte C
Paul, Demolish condos, EPA says: Owners, GE hear 573.5 million plan. The Jersey Journal, July
17. 1997 (quoting a former resident as stating that demolition "is the right thing to do for us and
the surrounding community") As noted below, while the National Oil and Hazardous Substances
Pollution Contingency Plan ("NCP"), 40 C F R Part 300, does allow EPA to consider the views
(continued )
-------
EPA relies on its risk assessment u the basis for rejecting other viable alternatives,
including remediation of the Factory to current industrial standards At bottom, however,
because the risk assessment is fundamentally flawed, it canr.ot be used to support EPA's preferred
remedial alternative
EPA instead should have looked to respected existing exposure standards and
guidance to derive an appropriate mercury exposure level. These standards and guidance have
been developed by agencies whose mission it is to put forth exposure standards assuring the safety
of workers standards that an appropriate remediation of the Factory can attain. GE's own
evaluation of the most stringent of these standards -- the 25 ug/m3 standard set by ACGEH --
shows that it is conservatively supported by the literature examining the potential health effects
attributable to mercury exposure EPA offers no sound reason why these preexisting standards
are not appropriate for the Factory. Instead, EPA sweeps them aside, essentially promulgating its
own indoor exposure standards for mercury at levels so stringent that no workplace lawfully using
mercury could hope to attain them, notwithstanding compliance with promulgated federal
standards and existing guidance The precedent and policy implications which would flow from
EPA's approach here call for a full revisiting and revocation of this scientifically unfounded
proposal.
6 ( continued)
of the, community in selecting a remedy for a site, such considerations are not determinative
Indeed, they may only be considered by the Agency as "modifying criteria" after a remedial
alternative has been selected on the basis of protection of human health and the environment,
cost-effectiveness, and other threshold and primary balancing criteria 40 C F R. ง 300 430(0
-------
B. The NCP. EPA Guidance Documents And FPA'i Admlniซtr.Hve Rrformi
Require That Riak Aneumgnti Be "Grounded In Reality" And That
Remedial Artiona Be Sensible And Coat-Effective.
The NCP establishes a three-tiered approach for selecting remedies under
CERCLA. 40 C F.R. ง 300 430(0. The first tier identifies the "threshold criteria" that a remedy
must satisfy overall protection of human health and the environment and compliance with
applicable or relevant and appropriate requirements. The second tier sets out "primary balancing
criteria" (i.e., long-term effectiveness and permanence; reduction of toxicity, mobility, or volume
through treatment, short-term effectiveness; implementability; and cost). The third and lowest-
weighted tier of review allows EPA to consider State and community acceptance as "modifying
criteria." Id
Recently, EPA has explicitly stated, also as part of its Superrund reforms, that the
Agency must "make smarter cleanup choices that protect the public at less cost." EPA Press
Release, "Superfund Administrative Reforms" (Oct 1995) at 1 In making this pronouncement,
EPA has stressed:
Lowering the costs of cleanups makes both economic and environmental sense for
communities, state and local governments, and businesses involved in cleanup
settlements. The new reforms will ensure consistency; streamline processes to
save time and money; create new opportunities for choosing cost-effective cleanup
options; and do more to protect public health and encourage economic
redevelopment
(Emphasis added). Further, the Agency has made it clear that where possible, remedial
alternatives should be based on reasonably anticipated future land use, not on an unreasonable use
for which the site was never and will likely never be appropriate See "Land Use in the CERCLA
Remedy Selection Process." OSWER Directive No 9355 7-04 at 2 (May 25, 1995).
- 13 -
-------
In addition to making "common sense" cleanup decisions, EPA has also supported
state-led redevelopment programs aimed at bringing contaminated sites back into productive use
through its brownfields funding initiative See. e.g.. Memorandum from S.D. Luftig (Director,
EPA Office of Solid Waste and Emergency Response) and J Clifford (Director, EPA Office of
Site Remediation Enforcement) to Directors of EPA Regional Superfund Programs re: FY 1995
Superfund Reforms Semiannual Report, February-December 1995 (Mar 13, 1996). Indeed, the
Agency has stated its continuing commitment to "encourage the safe and sustainable reuse of
idled and under used industrial and commercial facilities" through state-led brownfields
redevelopment programs Id at 6 While it is true that many of the state-specific programs
expressly exclude sites on the National Priorities List ("NPL") from participation, the focus of the
programs and EPA's brownfields initiative is clear -- to return contaminated sites to economically
viable use New Jersey is one of the many states with a large number of industrial properties
which, although contaminated from historic operations, could be restored and returned to
productive industrial use And New Jersey, like a significant number of other states, has
recognized the importance of facilitating the reuse of formerly contaminated properties See N J
Stat Ann งง 13:1K-6 to 14, N J Admin Code tit. 7, ง 26C GE is not presently suggesting that
the Factory should be remediated under a brownfields program, rather, we point out EPA's strong
preference, in both the Superfund context and the Agency's support of state brownfield programs,
for returning industrial sites to productive commercial use
Viewed against this background, EPA's risk assessment and its selected remedial
action at the Site are fundamentally flav-ed and overly conservative The Agency cannot
demonstrate that its risk assessment is "grounded in reality" or that the proposed remedial action
- 14 -
-------
is either necessary or appropriate. For instance, EPA's risk assessment exposure scenarios assume
residential use of the property, though it is clear that the Factory was operated for industrial
purposes for more than eighty years and was improperly and unlawfully converted to residential
use EPA's proposed remedy, including the building demolition, is equally suspect because the
Agency fails even to consider future use of the Factory for industrial purposes, a purpose for
which the Factory remains well-suited today. Moreover, EPA assumes, rather than demonstrates.
that remediation to industrial standards is infeasible. As shown below, GE has significant
experience in remediating mercury-contaminated buildings for industrial and commercial use, and
the remedial methods used by GE at these other buildings can be readily and successfully
implemented at the GSAP Site at much less cost than EPA's proposed remedy For these reason^
alone, EPA must revisit its risk assessment exposure assumptions and reconsider its proposed
remedial action for the Hoboken Site
C. EPA's Risk Assessment is Scientifically Unsupportablc. and the Application
of Appropriate. Risk-Based Exposure Standards Demonstrates that
Remediating the Site for Industrial or Commercial Lrsc is Protective of
Human Health.
1. The Derivation of EPA's Stringent Mercury Cleanup Level for
Industrial Exposure is Fundamentally Flawed.
EPA's proposed industrial exposure standard of 0 44 ng/m3 is based on bad
science The Agency employed an unusual and unnecessarily convoluted process that started with
exposure levels for the entire population, including sensitive subgroups, and reverse-engineered
that standard to derive an impractical workplace exposure number This is an unconventional
- 15-
-------
approach that was compounded by errors and implausible assumptions, all of which led to an
unrealistic and unnecessarily strict standard
EPA began its derivation of an industrial exposure standard by using the Reference
Concentration ("RfC") for mercury, a highly conservative general population exposure standard
EPA defines the RfC as:
an estimate (with uncertainty spanning perhaps an order of magnitude) of a
daily inhalation exposure of the human population (including sensitive
subgroups) that is likely to be without an appreciable risk of deleterious
effects during a lifetime.
EPA IRIS Database EPA's Office of Health and Environmental Assessment derived the RfC by
taking the exposure level (25 ug/m3) at which the Agency considered that some adverse effects
have been reported in workers, adjusted for occupational as against general population exposure
(5/7 days/week, 10/20 m3 air breathed/day), and divided by uncertainty factors (10* for assumed
lowest observed adverse effects level ("LOAEL") to no observed adverse effects level
("NOAEL"), 3* for incomplete data set related to concerns about reproductive toxjcity) (USEPA
1997)7 Thjs gave a concentration of
RfC - 2Sng/*,'.S/7ซ 10/20 = Q3 /w,
10*3
Thus information is contained in EPA's Integrated Rjsk Information System ("IRIS ') EPA
recognizes that "entry of a value in IRIS is not a rulemaking. Thus, the entry of a value on IRIS
does not make the number legally binding (i.e., the value is not entitled to conclusive weight) for
the purposes of Superfund risk assessments When a lexicological value is questioned in a
comment on the proposed plan, a written explanation for the value ultimately se'ected (v-hether it
is the IRIS value or another number) must be included m the administrative record." OSVVER
Directive = 9285 7-16, "Use of IRIS Values in Superfund Rjsk Assessment," at 2 (Dec 21, Iq93)
- 16-
-------
EPA next modeled the theoretical average daily dose of mercury received by a
worker exposed to a mercury concentration of 45 9 ug/mj (the upper 95th percentile of the
measured concentrations within the building) This calculation included the assumptions that the
worker breathes 20 mj of air per day while working (rather than the usual 10 m3 as used by EPA
in deriving the RfC), weighs 70 kg, and is exposed 250 days/year:
uf L r u i ^ n 45 9 MS7"1' x 20 m'/day* 250/365
Worker Inhaled Dose - - f-s - ฃ. -
70 kg
EPA then derived the "hazard quotient" ("HQ") by dividing the calculated worker
inhaled dose by the dose received from exposure at the RiC (calculated by simply multiplying the
RJC value by 20 m3 and dividing by 70 kg in this case the 20 mj inhalation rate applies to a full
24-hour day):
HO =
4S9ug/m3 * 20 w3 x 250/365
70 Ag
0 3 ug/m3 * 20 m}
45.9*250/365]
0.3 J
Finally, EPA divided the mercury concentration used in the dose calculation by the HQ to derive
an occupational exposure standard.
Proposed Mercury Standard =
4S 9
459^250/365]
0.3 J
= 0.3 x 365/250 = 0.44ug//nJ
- 17-
-------
There are several basic flaws and a number of addition*] compounding errors in
EPA's approach First, the RJC is a general population exposure standard that should not be use
as the basis for setting an occupational exposure level The RfC is used by EPA to identify a lev<
of continuous exposure (24 hours/day, 365 days/year, for a lifetime) that the Agency believes is
safe for the entire population, including sensitive subgroups, such as children and the elderly.
Because of the conservative assumptions and uncertainty factors included in its derivation,
however, it is not intended, and should not be used, as the basis of an occupational exposure
standard where there is no basis to assume the presence of these sensitive subgroups
Second, EPA has used an inappropriate inhalation rate for workers that is
inconsistent with established approaches and normal physiology EPA does not explain the basis
for assuming a 20 m3/day inhalation rate other than to offer the conclusory statement that it was
"in accordance with EPA guidance." Risk Assessment at 3-14 This is a gross exaggeration of
any likely exposure since it appears to assume that either the worker is in the building 24
hours/day (20 m3 is the standard 24-hour inhalation volume generally used by EPA), or is engagec
in non-stop heavy exercise for eight hours/day (based on inhalation rates reported by ICRP 1984
Even workers who do perform heavy exercise take breaks, with the result that their total air
intake will be less than 20 mVworkday. Indeed, there is no reason to believe that future workers
at this site will breathe any more dunng each workday than the workers in the studies that formed^
the basis of the RfC, while the procedure used by EPA assumes they will breathe twice as much
EPA's assumption is also out of step with the assumptions used by OSHA and ACGQi both of
- 18-
-------
which are charged with developing standards for occupational risk assessments. These groups
both assume an inhalation rate of 10 m3/day rate for workers'
Finally, EPA's starting point, the RfC for mercury, is itself based on the
assumption that exposure to mercury at an air concentration of 25 ug/mj is associated with
adverse health effects. In fact, 25 ^g/mj is itself a protective occupational exposure level for
mercury That is the level adopted by ACGIH and numerous regulatory agencies around the
world, see infra. Table 1, and GE's evaluation of available health-effects studies shows that the
standard is grounded in good science, as the following discussion will show.
2. Existing Occupational Standards for Mercury Vapor Are Reasonable
and Are Supported by the Scientific Literature.
EPA's proposed occupational exposure standard for mercury is grossly out of line
with well-reasoned, existing domestic and international standards which were developed through
elaborate, independent, and peer-reviewed procedures. GE's analysis of these standards and their
underlying bases demonstrates that EPA should have adopted for the Factory a standard no lower
than the broadly accepted 25 ug/m3 standard developed by ACGIH
I'.S. Standards
The current U S Federal occupational standard for mercury vapor exposure is the
Permissible Exposure Level ("PEL") of 100 ug/m3 established by OSHA OSHA had adopted a
new standard of 50 ug/m3 in 1989, but this standard was vacated in 1992 (along with more than
8 It is also inappropriate for EPA to assume that an individual worker is exposed to mercury 250
days per year Thjs assumption improperly takes into account only weekends and two \\eeks of
vacation per year without factoring in holidays
- 19-
-------
400 other standards adopted by OSHA in the same rulemaking) as a result of a ruling by the US
Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit. AFL-CIO v OSHA. 965 F 2d 962 (11th Cir. 1992)
The court concluded that OSHA had not followed the correct rulemaking process, but the
decision did not address the scientific merits of OSHA's standard Thus, the PEL of 100 ^m5
remains in effect as the only enforceable mercury exposure standard for industrial settings in this
country, and it is the standard by which compliance is measured EPA recognizes the OSHA PEL
as an ARAR for the Factory. FFS at Table 4-1, p. 40
In 1973, NIOSH established a Recommended Exposure Level ("REL") of 50
Mg/m3, identical to OSHA's 1989 PEL of 50 ug/mj Thus, both of the federal agencies tasked
with setting safe occupational standards for mercury have concluded that a standard of 50 ng/mj
is an appropriate, protective occupational standard for elemental mercury, even though OSHA's
standard was subsequently vacated in the courts on other grounds.
The most widely followed standard for occupational exposure to mercury vapor is
the current Threshold Limit Value ("TLV") established by ACGIH (1996) According to
ACGEH, thus TLV is "intended to minimize the potential risk of adverse health effects and to
ensure that workers maintain their functional capacity "
This TLV was established in 1993 as a result of evaluation by ACGIH
scientists of all available data on the adverse effects of exposure to mercury. These data
include several studies that ACGIH concluded suggest adverse effects at occupational exposure
levels below the previous TLV of 50 ug/m3 These studies, which also form the basis of EPA's
RfTT. are discussed briefly in Attachment 1
- 20-
-------
Derivation of ACGIH TLV for Mercury
ACGIH developed its standard of 25 ng/mj after a careful review of the available
toxicology, epidemiology, and clinical studies evaluating the relationship between exposure to
mercury and adverse health effects. GE has reviewed the ACGIH standard and has analyzed the
underlying studies. The results of GE's analysis are fully supportive of ACGEH's standard.
The data reviewed by ACGIH included most of the studies reviewed by EPA for
its derivation of the RfC.9 ACGIH mentioned the studies of Fawer et al and those of Piikivi and
coworkers, but there was no explicit indication if (or how) they were considered in the derivation
of the TLV, though in the case of the studies by Piikivi and coworkers, the ACGIH review
emphasizes the study authors' own conclusions that these studies support an occupational
exposure limit of 25 ug/m3
In addition to the studies briefly reviewed above, ACGIH cites a series of studies
suggesting that there is a "threshold for preclinical changes of CNS [central nervous system] and
kidney effects at 50 jag Hg/g creatinine" in the urine (ACGIH 1996) This concentration
corresponds roughly to a concentration of 100 ug Hg/liter of urine Data were also cited
associating this level of urinary mercury excretion with an average airborne exposure level of
about 41 pg/m3
ACGIH also cites several studies from the early 1970s that correlate neurologic
effects and kidney damage with exposures resulting in urinary levels above 100 ug Hg/liter of
ACGIH did not rely on Ngim et al 1992 and Liang et al. 1993, which EPA did consider in
developing the RfC for mercury However, these two studies are the least supportive of a finding
of adverse effects at exposure levels as low as 25 ug/m3. because of the limitations in the
characterization of exposure associated with reported effects; as discussed above.
-21 -
-------
urine, but notes that these studies did not use the most sensitive measures of effects, such ts
finger tremor (Smith et al 1970; El-Sadik and El-Dakhakhny 1970; Vroom and Greer 1972).
Many subsequent studies, however, also support the suggestion that adverse
effects occur only at mercury exposure levels resulting in urinary concentrations above 50 ug
Hg/g creatinine or 100 ug Hg/liter of urine. (Lauwerys and Buchet 1973; Foa et al. 1976; Langolf
et al. 1978, Levine et al. 1979 1982, Buchet et al. 1980; Williamson et al 1982, Roels et al. 1982,
1985, 1987, 1989, Albers et al 1982, 1988, Stonard 1983, Meyer et al. 1984; Roels et al. 1985,
1987, 1989, Bunn et aJ 1986; Rosenman et al 1986; Barregard et al 1988) One study by
Verberk et al (1986), not cited by EPA, reported an association between finger tremor and recent
mercury exposure, as measured by urinary mercury concentration (in the range of about 10 to 50
umol Hg/mol creatinine -- about 18 to 90 jig Hg/g creatinine) in 21 workers in a fluorescent
lamp factory. The authors equated this level of exposure to an air level of 17 /ig/ra3, but no
air measurements were made. In fact, based on the relationship between air mercury level and
urinary mercury level in the study of Fawer et al. (1983), the air level would have been about
50 Mg/m3. Furthermore, the study did not include a control group, the reported effect was
slight (r = 0.39), and in contrast to other reports, the effect was reported to be most strongly
associated with recent level of exposure rather than past exposure. It is not clear, therefore,
that this study supports an association between exposure to mercury at less than 50 ng/m* and
adverse health effects as the study authors suggest.
Based on its review of the entire body of scientific literature, ACGIH concluded
that "to protect the CNS and kidneys, a TLV-TWA of 0.025 mg Hg/m3 is recommended."
Moreover, it is significant that ACGEH's TLV, like the OSHA and N1OSH standards, carries a
- 22 -
-------
"skin* notation. Because there would be no opportunity for dermal contact with mercury at the
Factory if it was appropriately remediated, this would yield an additional margin of safety
compared to a workplace where the air level met the ACGIH TLV but additional skin contact
(leading to a higher systemic dose) was possible. It is the systemic dose of mercury, not
simply the air concentration, that is critical in determining whether adverse effects might be
produced.
Other International Standards
The standard-setting organizations of a number of nations, as well as several
international bodies, have established mercury exposure standards. Comparing these standards
to the ACGIH TLV shows that ACGEH's standard is among the most protective of
occupational standards for mercury in the world. In some instances, these organizations have
simply adopted ACGIH's standard of 25 pg/m*. In other cases, however, these organizations
have conducted independent reviews of the scientific literature, leading them to a result
consistent with ACGIH's standard. Not one of these organizations has suggested an industrial
exposure level even approaching the stringency of EPA's proposed standard for the Hoboken
site of 0.44 /ig/m3.
Table 1 below lists various national and international occupational exposure
levels for elemental mercury. Most of these values are as reported by ACGIH (1996). The
procedures used to establish occupational exposure standards in different countries are
described by Cook (1987). Many countries simply adopt ACGIH TLVs, or World Health
Organization ("WHO") recommendations, in some cases after evaluation and endorsement by a
national expert board. For example, the Australian National Occupational Health & Safety
-23-
-------
Commission ("NOHSC") has adopted the ACGffl TLV for mercury, but the exposure standani
was modified as a result of the review of the Exposure Standards Expert Working Group
(NOHSC World Wide Web site, August 1997).
Other countries, notably the U.K., Australia, and Germany, have entirely
independent groups that establish their own occupational limits based on expert review of the
relevant data (Cook 1987). In the U.K., for example, the Working Group on the Assessment
of Toxic Chemicals ("WATCH"), a group of experts in chemical safety, examines the
toxicological, epidemiological and other data relating to exposure to a substance and makes
recommendations and forwards them to the Health and Safety Commission which also reviews
them and, after public consultation, establishes an appropriate, health-protective occupational
exposure limit. In the case of mercury, WATCH identified a threshold for toxic effects of
mercury corresponding to a urinary concentration of 20 ^mol/mol creatine or more, and
equated this urinary concentration to an airborne level of 25 ng/m*. That airborne level was
adopted as an 8-hour TWA occupational exposure standard ("OES") for elemental and divaleni
(inorganic) mercury.
Australia has a similar procedure, with review of data by a nine-member
Exposure Standards Working Group who are nominated on the basis of their expertise in
specific occupational health and safety areas. The recommendations of the Exposure Standards
Working Group are subsequently reviewed by the tripartite Standards Development Standing
Committee and the National Commission. In the case of mercury, the Exposure Standards
Working Group reviewed and adopted the ACGEH TLV, with the exception that they
recommended deletion of the "skin" notation because they did not consider skin absorption of
-24-
-------
mercury vapor to represent a significant hazard (they did not address skin absorption due to
direct contact with liquid mercury).
The German Commission for the Investigation of Health Hazards of Chemical
Compounds in the Work Area is an expert group composed of 35 members elected for terms
of three yean by the German Senate, plus four permanent guest members. The Commission
has five working groups with the following respective responsibilities: (1) establishment of
Maximum Allowable Concentration ("MAC") values; (2) analytical chemistry; (3) evaluation of
paniculate matter; (4) occupational cancer; and (5) dermal lesions. The Commission's
recommended occupational exposure limits (MAC values) are published in the official bulletin of
,
the Ministry of Labor, and thus become mandatory For each chemical (including mercury), the
Commission publishes a monograph that describes the derivation of the MAC value and the
human and animal data on which it is based As with ACGIH TLV values, notice is given one
year in advance of proposed changes in MAC values.
Importantly, many of the standards set by other nations, like those of ACGEH,
MOSH, and OSHA, have a "skin" notation indicating the potential for a substantial additional
dose of mercury as a result of skin contact with mercury liquid or vapor As noted earlier, there
will be no potential for dermal contact with mercury after renovation at the Factory Thus, these
standards are overly conservative as applied to post-remediation exposure in the Factory.
-25-
-------
TABLE 1
National and International Occupational Standards for Elemental Mercury
Standards Organization
ACGIH (US)
N1OSH (US)
OSHA (US)
Australia
Belgium
Canada
China
Egypt
Finland
France
Germany
Hungary
India
Mexico
Poland
Sweden
Switzerland
Turkey
UK
WHO
Mercury Air Standard 8 Br TWA (jig/m1)
25 (skin)
50 (skin)
100 [50 (skin) stnick down, 1992]
50 (skin)
100 (skin)
50
20
50
50
50 (skin)
100 (skin)
20 ("Target")
50
50
50
50 (skin)
50 (skin)
100 (skin)
25 (recently revised down from 50)
25
-26-
-------
3. Conduiion
Several compelling conclusions result from this analysis. First, the risk assessment
employed by EPA to develop the extremely stringent industrial exposure standard was critically
flawed. From a scientific perspective, the Agency's analysis used an unconventional and faulty
approach in which numbers initially derived for residential exposure, which were based on
assumptions not applicable to an industrial setting, were modified to attempt to derive an
industrial exposure standard. In addition, demonstrably incorrect assumptions, such as the
inflated breathing rate for an industrial worker and the presence of sensitive subpopulations,
skewed the Agency's risk assessment. Moreover, the overly conservative assumptions used in the
risk analysis are unsupported and at odds with current EPA policy initiatives directing the use of..
more realistic exposure assumptions.
It is hardly surprising, therefore, that the result of this slanted analysis is to
produce an exposure standard that is not only unattainable and excessively stringent, but is grossly
out of line with the considered analysis of every standard-setting organization in the world that
has developed mercury exposure standards for industrial settings The proposed industrial
standard of 0 44 ng/mj derived from the risk assessment is over 200 times more stringent than
the legally enforceable OSELA standard, and over 50 times more stringent than the
standard adopted by ACGEH and regulatory agencies in more than a dozen developed
countries across five continents GE's analysis shows that the TLV put forth by ACGEH is
protective in an industrial setting, and indeed that its application to the Factory would provide an
additional margin of safety because the remediated building would present no opportunity for
dermal contact with free mercury.
-27-
-------
Moreover, EPA has not identified any unique factor* at the Factory that justify
departing from established national and international standards. That is, there is nothing in the
possible exposure scenario in the Factory to distinguish it from any other commercial or industrial
setting in a way that warrants adopting a more stringent standard. To the contrary, the only
distinguishing factor cuts the other way: the absence of the potential for dermal contact in the
Factory (post-remediation) provides an additional margin of safety when those standards are
applied to the Factory
In short, EPA should have adopted an industrial exposure standard equivalent to
the ACGEH standard of 25 ug/m3 to consider whether remediating the Factory for industrial or
commercial use is protective and achievable. Having established .that such a standard is
protective, we now examine GE's successful remediation efforts at other locations, \vruch
demonstrate that a standard of 25 pg/mj is achievable at the Factory.
D. GE Has Had Considerable Eipericnce And Success In Industrial Mercury
Remediation.
In contrast to the Agency's unsupported conclusions regarding technical
infeasibiUry, GE has had considerable experience and success in remediating former industrial
facilities to current industrial standards which are protective of human health and the environment
Specifically, GE has remediated three former mercury-contaminated lamp plants, all of which
currently satisfy applicable standards governing worker health and safety in a fully operational
facility (1) the Jackson, Mississippi, Lamp and Glass Plant, (2) the Newark, New Jersey, Lamp
Plant, and (3) the Cuyahoga. Ohjo. Lamp Plant
-28-
-------
In 1985-86, GE successfully completed a remediation of its former Jackson Lamp
and Glass Plant. This plant, located in Jackson, Mississippi, was operated by GE from 1940-
1985 There were two parts to the plant -- a fluorescent lamp assembly operation and an
adjoining glass tube facility The plant, which is no longer owned by GE, is predominantly single-
floored with a second floor lamp assembly operation. The first floor is concrete, and the second
floor is made of wood. The primary contaminants of concern at the facility were mercury,
cadmium, beryllium and arsenic. Prior to remediation, the mercury levels at Jackson were in the
range of 70 ug/m3 In the course of the remediation, GE removed the second floor of the plant,
power washed the walls and ceiling and acid etched the concrete floor and ceramic tile using a
20% nitric acid solution. At the conclusion of this encapsulation project, the facility satisfied not..
only mandatory OSHA standards but also the recommended standards set by NIOSH and
ACGIH . The facility is currently used by an electrical contractor and an automobile parts
r
operation.
GE has had sirrular success in remediating its formerly owned Newark Lamp Plant,
located in Newark, New Jersey This plant, which operated from 1907-1984, was previously an
incandescent lamp assembly facility which used mercury vacuum pumps as part of the production
equipment The primary constituents of concern at this plant were mercury, polychlorinated
biphenyls ("PCBs") and oils. The remedial project at this facility consisted of the following:
(1) removal of process equipment, partitions, floor tile and some sections of the wood floor; (2)
sanding some sections of wood flooring; (3) power washing certain other sections of wood floors
and all walls and ceilings, (4) encapsulation of the wood flooring; and (5) acid etching the
Concrete flooring Like the Jackson plant, at the time of remedy completion, the Newark plant
-29-
-------
met or exceeded OSHA regulatory thresholds and the N10SH and ACGW standards This
facility is presently used as a small business center.
Most significantly, GE has safely and effectively remediated its Cuyahoga Lamp
Plant, a facility similar in structure to the Hoboken Factory, to satisfy current industrial standards
This facility, located in Cleveland, Ohio, operated as a lamp assembly plant from 1921-1985.
Mercury lamps were among the types of lamps assembled at the Cuyahoga facility This plant,
like the Hoboken Factory, is a multi-storied, brick building with wooden floors and concrete and
tile in the basement, and wood beams and floors overhead The primary constituents of concern
at the facility were mercury, cadmium, thorium and asbestos Mercury levels prior to remediation
ranged as rugh as 35 ng/m3
Beginning in 1988, GE undertook the following remedial measures (I) removal
of process equipment and partitions; (2) vacuuming of remaining surfaces; (3) encapsulation of
wood floors and covering them with plywood and carpeting; (4) painting of walls, (5) installation
of vinyl wall coverings in some locations, and (6) installation of drop ceilings Despite these
V
substantial remedial measures, GE was able to preserve the historical structure and features of the
building, including the arched windows, wood post and beam supports and the brick and masonry
This building, which is listed in the National Register of Historic Places and is stilled owned and
operated by GE, currently houses office space, a fitness center and a small machine shop At the
conclusion of remedial efforts, it too satisfied both legal and recommended workplace exposure
standards for mercury, including the ACGtH standard of 25 ng/m3 The facility continues to meei
those standards today
- 30-
-------
The remedial measures implemented by GE at these three facilities are easily
transferable to the Hoboken Factory GE has unequivocally demonstrated the technical feasibility
of remediating mercury contaminated industrial facilities, as well as the ability of remediating
facilities to satisfy the federally enforceable workplace exposure standard for mercury set by
OSHA, and the more conservative standards established by N1OSH and ACGIH. Furthermore,
because the Hoboken Factory is similar in structure and age to the Cuyahoga Lamp Plant, at
which an industrial remediation has been successfully completed, the techniques previously used
by GE are readily transferable. In short, EPA erred in dismissing remediation to current industrial
standards as a technically impracticable alternative and must reconsider its analysis of this
alternative in light of the information provided above
E. Remediation of the Factory to Industrial/Commercial Standards is Cost-
Effcctive. and Should Save Been Selected by EPA as the Appropriate
Remedial Action.
We have demonstrated that remediating the Factory to comply with established
workplace standards of 25 ug/m3 is protective, and based on GE's experience at similar facilities
we know it is readily achievable., The costs of remediating the Factory to these levels is
significantly less than the costs of demolition As a result, remediation to industrial/commercial
standards is the most cost-effective option that assures protection of human health and the
environment, and this course should be selected by EPA as the appropriate remedy for the
Factory.
-------
The NCP and EPA guidance specifically require EPA to select a remedy that is
cost-effective As indicated above, 40 C F R ง 300 430(f) governs remedy selection at a
Superfund site Subsection 300 430{fXiiXD) of the provision states, in relevant part, that:
Each remedial action selected shall be cost-effective Cost-effectiveness is
determined by evaluating [three criteria] to determine overall effectiveness: long
term effectiveness and permanence, reduction of toxkaty and mobility, or volume
through treatment, and short-term effectiveness. Overall effectiveness is then
compared to cost to ensure that the remedy is cost-effective. A remedy shall be
cost-effective if its costs are proportional to its overall effectiveness
(Emphasis added) During the feasibility study process, a remedial alternative must be screened
out where (1) it provides effectiveness and implementability similar to another alternative but at
,
greater cost or (2) the costs associated with the alternative are "grossly excessive compared to its
overall effectiveness " 40 C F R ง 300 430(e)(7)(iii); see also "The Role of Cost in the
Superfund Remedy Selection Process," OSWER Quick Reference Fact Sheet at 4 (Sept 1996)
EPA has recently reiterated the importance of cost in the selection of a preferred remedial action
Cost is a critical factor in the process of identifying a preferred remedy In fact,
CERCLA and the NCP require that every remedy selected must be cost-effective
OS WER Quick Reference Fact Sheet at 5 (underscoring in original) Thus, EPA is obligated to
evaluate the costs associated with remedial alternatives thoroughly and accurately and to select
the most cost-effective alternative. Failure to do so may be considered arbitrary and capricious
action inconsistent with the NCP Cf. United States v Ward. 618 F Supp 884 (E D N C 1985)
(defendant may seek to show that Agency failed to comply with NCP requirement regarding cost
effectiveness but must also demonstrate that such failure constitutes arbitrary and capricious
action)
-------
GE estimates the cost of remediating the Hoboken Factory for continued
commercial/industrial use at $2,276,400 See Attachment 2. Moreover, GE estimates the cost of
demolishing the building to be $4,614,000. /J.'ฐ Thus, the cost of remediating the building to
commercial/industrial standards is $2.36 million -- a full 50% less than the expense of
demolishing the building. Moreover, EPA estimates the residual value of the commercial building
to be $18 million, which further offsets the remedial costs." Thus, taking into account both the
anticipated residual value of the structure and GE's estimates of the different remediation costs,
remediating the building to commercial/industrial standards would result in more than $2.5
million of expected cost savings Finally, and importantly, at the end of renovation to
commercial/industrial standards, there will be left standing a usable structure. This is consistent..
with EPA's current brownfields initiatives to return Superfund sites to productive industrial use
Because remediating the Factory for commercial/industrial use is protective, is
achievable, and is significantly less costly than demolition, it is cost-effective and under the NCP
EPA is required to select remediation for commercial/industrial use as the appropriate remedy for
the Factory
F. EPA Inappropriately Employed a Residential Exposure Scenario in the Risk
Assessment.
EPA is required by the NCP to conduct a nsk assessment that is appropriate for
the site. Residential exposure scenarios are not required, but are appropriate only when that is a
EPA estimates the costs of remediating the building to commercial/industrial standards to be
S3 142.000, and the costs of demolishing the building to be 54.359,000
EPA estimates the value of the raw land, after demolition, to be $1 5 million.
-------
realistic future use of the-property. Here, EPA has usumed the Factory is appropriate for
residential use and has conducted a risk assessment to fit that assumption. There is no
justification for the Agency's approach, however, because it was only through an unlawful
process that thus longstanding industrial property was converted for residential use in the first
place.12
The NCP directs the Agency to conduct a baseline risk assessment for use in
selecting remedial alternatives. 40 C.F.R. ง 300.430(dX4). The explicit language of the NCP
requires a site-specific risk assessment. Notably absent from the NCP is any requirement that t..v
Agency assume a residential exposure scenario, particularly where an industrial exposure scenario
is more appropriate for the site at issue EPA has acknowledged that the NCP does not mandate
an assumption of future residential land use 55 Fed Reg 8666, 8710-11 (Mar 8, 1990)
(preamble to NCP revisions) In fact, the Agency has expressly stated:
The assumption of residential land use is not a requirement of the program but
rather is an assumption that may be made, based on conservative but realistic
exposures, to ensure that remedies that are ultimately selected for the site will be
protective. An assumption of future residential land use may not be justifiable if
the probability that the site u;// support residential use in the future is small
Id. (emphasis added), see also Risk Assessment Guidance for Superrund, Human Health
Evaluation Manual, Part A, Interim Final at 6-7 (July 1989).
i: Even if it were proper for EPA to evaluate residential risk, the Agency has devised an
unreasonably low cleanup goal of 0 09 ^gy'm3 for children for the purposes of the risk assessment :;.,,
which is inconsistent with previous residential cleanup levels advocated by the Agency In doing
so, EPA fails to explain its rationale for rejecting its earlier cleanup goal of 0 31 ^g/m3 as
reflected in the Technical Engineering Evaluation for Mercury Remediation at the Grand Street
Site (prepared by EPA subcontractor Levine-Fncke-Recon) (Mar 1 1, 1997) ("Technical
Engineering Report") and the Agency's own Risk Based Concentration Table (Apr 19, 1996)
-34-
-------
Assuming arguendo that the NCP and the 1990 preamble were ambiguous on this
point, recent Superfund administrative reforms confirm that risk assessments must be based on
realistic exposure scenarios Beginning in early 1995, EPA Administrator Carol Browner
announced a series of Superfund administrative reforms. One of the key areas covered by the
reforms includes implementation of measures for making smarter cleanup choices that protect the
public and the environment at less cost. EPA Press Release, "Superfund Administrative Reforms"
(Oct. 1995) The Agency further stated that it planned to achieve this result, in part, by ensuring
that all risk assessments are "grounded in reality" and make "good use of'real world1 information
about the site and site inhabitants " Id
As part of these ongoing reforms, the Agency's Office of Solid Waste and
Emergency Response has issued a directive regarding "Land Use in the CERCLA Remedy
Selection Process," OSWER Directive No 9355.7-04 at 2 (May 25, 1995), acknowledging
frequent criticism of EPA's preference for residential exposure assumptions. The directive is
aimed, in large measure, at eliminating that criticism by instituting a process to ensure that
assumptions regarding future land use are "reasonable." The directive states, inter alia "For
example, future industrial use is likely to be a reasonable assumption where a site is currently used
for industrial purposes, is located in an area where the surroundings are zoned for industrial use,
and the comprehensive plan predicts the site will continue to be used for industrial purposes " Id
at 8.
Although the City of Hoboken did grant site plan approval for use of the Factory
as residential property -- in effect, a variance from the preexisting industrial use zoning - that
approval was predicated on the incorrect premise that the property was in compliance with all
-35- '
-------
applicable environmental laws. Failure to satisfy a pre-condition to site plan approval such as
compliance with state environmental laws warrants a nullification of the site plan approval.
In fact, the property was not in compliance with environmental laws at the time of
its sale NJDEP had cleared the site under ECRA based on the misrepresentations of David
Pascale, and it is clear that the Department's permission never would have been forthcoming had
the parties involved adhered to the ECRA process, and had NJDEP been informed from the
outset that the Factory had been used for the production of mercury vapor lamps and was to be
converted for residential use 1J Indeed, by letter dated December 20, 1996, NJDEP revoked its
previous ECRA negative declaration approval, based on the contarrunation now known to exist.at
the Site u
13 Regulations promulgated under ECRA contained specific requirements for providing a detailed
description of past operations and processes at an industrial establishment, N J A C 7 26B.
Moreover, standard guidance documents in use at the time established standards for due diligence
that included using standard historical sources back to 1940 and earlier to identify prior site uses
See "Standard Practice for Environmental Site Assessments Phase I Environmental Site
Assessment Process," Sept 15, 1992 (finalized in 1993 as ASTM Standard Practice E1527-93)
See also "The Environmental Due Diligence Handbook," Government Institutes, Inc (March
1991) (recommending review of records to determine whether the property was ever used for
industrial purposes and, if so, for what industries, and whether the property was every used for
manufacturing, processing, or storage of potentially hazardous substances) After the Partnership
purchased the Factory, GSAP partner Keough recalled that Cooper Hewitt was listed in the
successor title search as a prior owner of the property, and easily ascertained by telephoning the
company that it had produced mercury vapor lamps at the Factory Excerpt of Transcript of
GS.AP Meeting, Aug. 15, 1995 (Attachment 3)
Had these basic steps in the ECRA process been taken, the Partnership, and NJDEP,
would have learned that the Factory had been used for the manufacture of mercury vapor lamps
That would have been enough to trigger pre-sale testing for the presence of mercury
14 A copy of thus document was provided to EPA with GE's April 1, 1997 L'AO comments
-36-
-------
Nullification of the site plan approval causes the property to revert to iu pre-
existing industrial use. Since the industrial use of the property was lawfully existing at the time
the R-2 zoning district was established in 1979, the property may continue to be used for
industrial purposes. See Hoboken Ordinance ง 196-50 Other permitted uses in the R-2 district
include a variety of commercial uses. If the presence of mercury had been disclosed prior to the
Planning Board's review of the site plan application, the Planning Board would not have approved
the conversion of the property for residential use and the factory would have remained as an
industrial property
G. EPA Miscalculated The Soil Eiposure Risks; Soil Remediation At The Site la-
Not Necessary.
EPA has also miscalculated the soil exposure risks associated with the Hoboken
Factory EPA inappropriately relied on residential exposure assumptions in the first instance,
rejecting more realistic and more relevant worker exposure scenarios. Even if it were appropriate
to rely upon residential exposure assumptions, here too EPA has erred by overestimating soil
ingestion risks.
As with EPA's derivation of a clean-up level for the interior of the building, the
Agency has improperly based its proposed soil remediation on assumed residential use of the Site,
with exposure of resident children to the soil under the parking lot As discussed above,
residential use of the Site is and has been for nearly 100 years inappropriate, and the soil
remediation calculations based on such a use are needlessly conservative The risk assessment
document used to support the proposed soil remediation also contains more appropriate, but still
-37-
-------
very conservative, calculations based on potential worker exposure related to industrial usage of
the Site (Risk Assessment at 3-12 and 5-5) Even these calculations are excessively conservative
because they assume that workers ingest 50 mg of soil from the site each work day, despite the
fact that the soil in question is underneath an asphalt parking lot Even with these very
conservative assumptions, however, the calculated hazard quotient for worker exposure to site
soil is 0 08 (Risk Assessment at 5-5) Because this value is much less than 10, it demonstrates
that remediation of site soil is not necessary to ensure health protection under appropriate
conditions of future use of the Site, i.e., non-residential use
.Assuming that EPA may appropriately consider residential exposure scenarios for
thjs Site, the Agency is legally obligated to ensure that its assumptions are technically sound and
reflect reality Thus the Agency has failed to do In the nsk assessment EPA assumes, for
instance, that 100 percent of the elemental mercury ingested would be absorbed through the
gastrointestinal ("OF") tract This assumption overstates the bioavailability of elemental mercury
A recent publication by EPA's Science Advisory Board indicates that mercury is poorly absorbed
through the GI tract and that only as much as 20 percent of the ingested mercury would actually
be absorbed Mercury Study Report to Congress, Vol I, Executive Summary, EPA SAB Review
Draft, EPA-452/R-96-OOU (1996) Correction for this lower bioavailability would reduce nsk
estimates by a factor of five."
EPA has also used its default residential soil ingestion rates of 200 and 100 mg'day
for children and adults, respectively, to evaluate potential exposures via this pathway These soil
15 EPA has faced similar criticisms for its incorrect assumptions that lead is readily bioavailable.
including lead compounds found in Superfund mining sites. The Agency has, under criticism,
belatedly revised its lead exposure assumptions.
- 38-
-------
ingestion rates are based on findings of tracer element studies, which did not account for dietary
contributions of the tracer elements, such as mercury Binder et al. 1986; Clausing et al. 1987.
More recent studies have evaluated soil ingestion by children aged 1 to 4 years and adults using a
njass-balance methodology. Stanek et al. 1992. These studies indicate soil ingestion rates for
children ranging from 5 to 200 mg/day with a mean of 50 mg/day and a median of 39 mg/day. Id.
Similarly, studies of adults indicate that mean adult soil ingestion rates are considerably lower than
EPA default values and are on the order of 10 mg/day. Calabrese et al. 1996 Use of these lower
and more scientifically supportable soil ingestion rates would further lower estimated risks due to
this exposure pathway
[V. EPA'S ESTIMATED REMEDIAL COSTS ARE NOT ADEQUATELY
SUPPORTED BY THE ADMINISTRATIVE RECORD AND ARE OVERSTATED.
A. EPA's Estimated Costs Of Permanent Relocation Arc Suspect and
Overstated.
EPA's costs for its preferred remedial alternative are inflated and unsupported in
the administrative record. Accordingly, EPA has failed to comply with the administrative record
requirements of CERCLA and the NCP and has frustrated the ability of GE and other interested
parties to comment meaningfully on those cost estimates
In the FFS, EPA states that the estimated costs associated with the permanent
relocation of the former residents (excluding moving expenses) are $9,915,600 See FFS at, e.g..
Tables 6-4 and 6-5. EPA has provided no analysis in the administrative record to support this
estimate, and thus GE commissioned an appraisal of the property That report, Attachment 4.
estimates the current resale value of the condominium uruts, without contamination, to be
-39-
-------
between $5,791,432 and $6,295,577." The report does not include an estimated value for the
townhouse. Assuming a value of $400,000 for that building, the total value would be
approximately $6 2 million to $65 million ~ only two-thirds of EPA's inflated (and
undocumented) cost estimate.
In fact, even a $6 million value substantially overstates the fair market value of the
condominium units First, American Appraisal Associates assumed that the units had been fully
renovated, although the various units actually were in different stages of renovation when
abandoned, reducing their value
Moreover, EPA's estimate of the value of the units is more than two times the
value of the units as evaluated by the owners themselves in 1995 At that time, the Grand
Street Artists Condominium Association secured insurance on the property in the total amount of
$3,990,000 Insurance in roughly the same amount was carried forward as late as November 2,
1996 See Attachment 5.
Thus, upon initial review. EPA's cost estimates for permanent relocation appear
grossly overstated and point toward conferring a windfall on the condominium owners However
EPA's failure to reveal the underlying analysis or assumptions makes it impossible for GE to
evaluate the nature and full extent of EPA's error
To ensure constitutional due process. CERCLA, like the Administrative Procedure
Act ("APA"), requires EPA to provide affected parties with notice and a meaningful opportunity
16 GE commissioned this appraisal solely to evaluate the accuracy of EPA's unsupported
statement of the costs of permanent relocation GE does not concede -- indeed disputes -- that
permanent relocation is appropriate at this Site, at all, and that the market value of the
condominium units are the appropriate measure for permanent relocation costs.
-40-
-------
to comment on EPA's proposed remedial actions. See CERCLA Section 113(k)(2), 42 U.S.C.
ง 9613(VX2) (establishing public participation procedures); 40 C.F.R. ง 300.430(0(2) (NCP
provision requiring EPA to provide its rationale for preferred remedial action and afford
interested parties an opportunity to comment); see also 5 US C ง 553 (notice and comment
requirements for legislative rulernaJting).17 Despite these clear legal obligations, the FFS is
remarkably devoid of any discussion of the underlying assumptions used to develop the Agency's
cost estimate for permanent relocation with EPA making only passing reference to "confidential
appraisals conducted in July 1996." FFS at 118 and 123-24. Moreover, support for EPA's cost
estimates do not appear elsewhere in the publicly available administrative record
On June 30, 1997, GE submitted a Freedom of Information Act ("FOIA") request
to EPA, pursuant to 5 U S.C ง 552, seeking to obtain information regarding appraisals of the Site
prepared by or on behalf of EPA. By letter dated August 7, 1997, EPA Region II denied GE's
request purportedly on the grounds that such information is exempt as enforcement sensitive
and/or interagency memoranda. GE has appealed that decision. Attachment 6 is GE's appeal
letter, and we incorporate those arguments into these comments Rather than repeat the extensive
arguments presented in that letter brief here, we simply note that the NCP does not allow EPA to
hide behind the cloak of these exemptions to exclude material information from the administrative
record.
EPA has promulgated as part of the NCP regulations commanding that all
documents which "form the basis" for EPA's selection of a response action be included in the
I'nder the APA, failure to comply with these due process safeguards renders a final agency
action void ab mitio E.g., Piclcus v United States Bd of Parole. 507 F 2d 1107 (D C Cir 1974)
(invalidating agency rule for failure to satisfy APA requirements).
41-
-------
"full" administrative record. 40 C.F.R. ง 300 810. This include* dnft documents, internal
memoranda and the day-to-day notes of staff where such documents contain information that waji'1
considered by the Agency and that information is not included in any other document in the
administrative record 40 C F R. ง 300.810(b). Moreover, although EPA claims that certain
documents, such as "privileged" and "confidential" information, may be excluded from the
administrative record, EPA must summarize disclosable portions of such documents to the extent*
feasible 40 C.F.R. งง 300 810(c) and (d). The Agency itself has recognized that the language js|
presently contained in the NCP is not intended:
to exclude from the record all documents containing information which the
considered in choosing the response action but did not rely on Rather, EPA
intends that the "form the basis for selection" language embody general principlesiaiiirclc
of administrative law concerning compilation of administrative records for agency
decisions
58 Fed Reg 53688, 53692-93 (Oct 18, 1993).
EPA's unilateral abrogation of these basic procedural protections prevents GE anc^.
other commemors from fully evaluating EPA's cost assumptions and, consequently, constitutes
arbitrary and capricious agency action on behalf of the Agency subject to judicial scrutiny under
CERCLA Sections 1 13(h) and 0), 42 USC งง 9613(h) and (j) If EPA does not cure this
serious deficiency in the FFS and PRAP, it will not be able to recover response costs for at least
this portion of its preferred remedy nor successfully seek to compel others to bear those costs in ,(|
the first instance under CERCLA Section 106
Despite thus fundamental flaw, GE observes three deficiencies in the cost estimate,
First, EPA's cost estimate grossly overstates the actual out-of-pocket expenses of the owners
The Partnership initially purchased the Site for $1 2 million .Although they invested some
- 42 -
-------
amounts toward renovations, the totaJ of the initial investment plus the costs of renovation is
clearly much less than the nearly $10 million that EPA proposes to pay to the owners. EPA has
based its estimate not on the relatively modest investments made by the former residents, but on
the costs of purchasing new properties. In essence, EPA proposes to pay to a group of
speculative real estate investors - person* who at the very least made a demonstrabty bad
investment and, in fact, purchased their condominium units with specific knowledge of mercury
contamination at the Site for the lost profits of their enterprise That is completely
inappropriate and a misuse of public funds-
Second, EPA has apparently not reduced the cost of permanent relocation to take
into account the amount of insurance coverage available to the displaced former residents. Any^
permanent relocation effort undertaken by EPA is governed by the Uniform Relocation Assistance
Regulations. 49 C F R Part 24, and the Federal Emergency Management Agency ("FEMA")
regulations, 44 C F R Part 221, which must be read in concert with EPA's CERCLA remedial
authority FEMA regulations require an agency to reduce relocation benefits by the amount of
available insurance, and expressly forbid an agency from providing duplicative benefits (either
from other governmental entities or private sources) to displaced persons. 44 C F R. งง 220 4,
221 5 Because the FFS and PRAP do not indicate whether EPA has considered the availability
of other benefits and taken such "duplicative" benefits into account, it is impossible to evaluate the
propriety of EPA's estimate for permanent relocation costs.
The third flaw in EPA's cost estimate is that it assumes, without explanation, that
the residual value of the land after demolition (estimated by EPA to be $1,568.000) will be
available to offset response costs. Under Section 104(j) of CERCLA, 42 U S C ง 9604(j), when
-43-
-------
EPA "takes" property for remedial action, the State, in this case New Jersey, must agree to take nil
title to the property following remediation The FFS and the PRAP do not indicate how the
-------
of the site is unnecessary and, thus, the costs associated with that remediation should be deleted
from the costs of remediating the Factory to current industrial standards Even if EPA ultimately
selects its preferred remedy for the site -- remediation to residential standards - the Agency must
reevaluate the level of soil remediation required, if any, taking into consideration prevailing
scientific risk assumptions, rather than the Agency's outdated, default assumptions- regarding
mercury ingestion of soils.
C. EPA Has Also Overstated The Costs Of Remediating The Building For
Residential Reoccupancy.
The arbitrary and capricious nature of EPA's preferred remedy for the Site is
* .
further highlighted by the Agency's apparent attempt to inflate the costs of alternative remedial
options to make its preferred remedy appear more reasonable and cost-effective In addition to
the serious deficiencies in the risk assessment and PRAP delineated above, EPA has significantly
overstated the costs of remediating the building for residential reoccupancy For example, EPA
asserts in the FFS and the PRAP that remediation to residential standards would cost
approximately 54,368,000 (including renovations) This number is inconsistent with the estimate
of $3,245,000 (including renovations) provided to and at the request of the Agency in the
Technical Engineering Report prepared by Levine-Fricke-Recon only six months ago See
Technical Engineering Report at Table 4 EPA explains the 33 percent increase in the cost
estimate set out in the FFS and PRAP as the cost associated with "several steps" necessary to
remediate the building. FFS at 104-105 Notably, the "additional steps" deemed necessary b> the
Agency (e.g.. Cashing all remaining interior surfaces, including wooden floor joists and support
-45 -
-------
beams and posts, and brick walls, etc., with a tri-sodium phosphate solution to remove din and
grime) are specifically rejected in the Technical Engineering Report as being inappropriate for the
very surfaces for which EPA now suggests they should be used. EPA further states that etching
masonry surfaces with acid or abrasives would be required to remove mercury to the greatest
extent possible. FFS at 64 Yet, nowhere in the Technical Engineering Report does EPA's
contractor identiiy etching the masonry as a viable remediation technology These additional
defects in EPA's cost estimates serve to elucidate the fundamental problems in the FFS and
PRAP. rendering them legally and technically suspect.
V. LIABILITY ISSUES.
GE has previously demonstrated that the current owners of the Factory and GSAP
are liable under CERCLA See GE's Motion for Partial Judgment on Pleadings or, Alternatively.
for Partial Summary Judgment and supporting Brief (filed Sept. 2, 1997), and GE's April 1, 1997
Comments to EPA's UAO." As a result, GE has argued that it is unlawful and improper for EPA
to use Fund monies to pay relocation benefits to liable parties Id. Those same liability issues
apply to the permanent relocation benefits now proposed by EPA. Moreover, GE has explained
that it cannot be held liable for response costs attributable to the intervening acts or omissions of
other parties which have occurred in the half century since GE sold the Factory For these
'* GE's April 1, 1997, comments to EPA's UAO is in the administrative record for the Site On
September 4, 1997, GE forwarded to EPA for inclusion in the record GE's September 2, 1997,
Motion papers GE incorporates both documents by reference into these comments.
-46-
-------
reason*, u WซU. EPA's proposed relocation remedy is arbitrary, capricious, and not in accordance
with law."
VL CONCLUSION
Both the statutory language of CERCLA and the implementing language of the
NCP are straightforward - EPA is legally required to undertake a risk assessment which is
grounded in reality, select a remedy which is cost-effective and makes common sense, and afford
interested parties the opportunity to participate meaningfully in the remedy selection process In
this case, EPA has failed to comply with these legal obligations in its attempt to ensure the
selection of an expedient remedy -- demolition of the Factory and relocation of the residents As
demonstrated above, the risk assessment and the FFS which ostensibly form the basis for EPA's
preferred remedy are so fraught with error and so out of line with the reality of this case and
internationally accepted scientific principles and regulatory standards that the PRAP cannot
withstand scrutiny. Accordingly, EPA must correct the serious deficiencies in both the risk
assessment and the FFS before it can appropriately and fairly evaluate remedial options for the
Site An appropriate comparison of alternatives, based on a realistic risk assessment and the
application of a proper exposure standard, demonstrates that renovating the Factory to
commercial/industrial standards is protective, is viable, and is cost-effective.
:" GE recognizes that some of these issues are currently before the court in the private
contribution action, or may not be resolved until later administrative or judicial proceedings GE
reserves the right to assert these issues in any such proceedings.
ซ
-47-
-------
REFERENCES
American Conference of Governmental Industrial Hygienists (ACGIH). 1996. Documentation of
TLVs, 6th Edition, Revised (CD-ROM version) ACGIH, Cincinnati
Barregard, L , B Hultberg, A Schutz, and G Sallsten. 1988 Enzymuria in workers exposed to
inorganic mercury Int. Arch. Occup. Environ, Health 61 65-69
Binder, S, D Sokal, and D Maughan. 1986. Estimating soil ingestion: the use of tracer
elements in estimating the amount of soil ingested by young children. Arch, Environ. Health
41(6) 341-45.
Cabrese, E.J., E J Stanek, P Pekow, and R.M. Barnes. 1996 Soil ingestion estimates for
children residing on a superfund site Ecotoxicol. Environ. Serf, (accepted for publication)
Clausing, P . B Brunekreef, and J H van Wijnen. 1987 A method of estimating soil ingestion
by children Int. Arch. Occup. Environ. Health 59:73-82
Fawer. R F . Y De Ribaupierre, M P Guillemin, M Berode. and M Lob 1983 Measurement
of hand tremor induced by industrial exposure to metallic mercury. Br. J. Ind. .\fed
40 204-208.
International Commission on Radiological Protection (ICRP) 1975 Report of the Task Group
on Reference \fan. Pergamon Press, Oxford
Lauwerys, R P and J P Buchet 1973 Occupational exposure to mercury vapors and biological
action Arch. Environ. Health 27 65-68.
Liang, Y-X., R-K Sun, Y Sun, Z-Q Chen, and L-H Li. 1993 Psychological effects of low
exposure to mercury vapor Application of a computer-administered neurobehavioral
evaluation system. Env. Res. 60 320-327
Ngim, C H , S C Foo, K.W Boey, and J Jeyaratnam 1992 Chronic neurobehavioral effects of
elemental mercury in dentists. Br. J. Ind. Med. 49 782-790
Piikjvi, L 1989 Cardiovascular reflexes and low long-term exposure to mercury vapour Int.
Arch. Environ. Health 61 391-395
Piikivi, L , and H Hanninen 1989 Subjective symptoms and psychological performance of
chlorine-alkali workers Scand. J, Work Environ. Health 15 69-74
-48 -
-------
Piikivi, L., and U. Tolonen 1989 EEG findings in chJor-tllctli workers subjected to low long
term exposure to mercury vapour Br. J. Ind Mtd. 46:370-375
Reels, H., R. Lauwerys, J.P Buchet, A. Bernard, A. Barthels, M Oversteyns, and J Gaussin.
. 1982. Comparison of renal function and psychomotor performance in workers exposed to
elemental mercury. Int. Arch. Occup. Environ. Health 50:77-93
Roy F. Weston, Inc. 1997. Final Baseline Human Health Risk Assessment: Grand Street Site,
Hudson County, Hoboken, NJ. Prepared for U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Region
n Contract No. 68-W5-0019. April.
Stanek, E J and E.J Cabrese. 1992. Soil ingest ion in children: outdoor soil or indoor dust9 J.
SoilContam. 1(1): 1-28.
U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (USEPA). 1997 Integrated Risk Information System
(IRIS). On-line. Office of Health and Environmental Assessment, National Center for
Environmental Assessment, Cincinnati, Ohio
Williamson, AM., R.K.C. Teo, and J Sanderson 1982 Occupational mercury exposure and its
consequences for behavior Int. Arch. Occup. Environ. Health 50 273-286
-------
Summary of Studies Suggesting Effects of Mercury Exposure At
Fawer et aL (1983)
Fawer et si. (1983) reported an increase in subtle hand tremor (most noticeable
when under load - with a 1.25 kg weight attached to the wrist) in 26 workers exposed to
mercury at levels measured as averaging 26 ng/mj at the time of the study. The workers included
seven glass blowers from a fluorescent lamp factory, 12 workers in a chlor-alkali plant, and seven
workers from an acetaldehyde production facility. A group of 25 workers from the same
factories, but never occupationally exposed to mercury, served as controls. Although the
concentration of mercury in the air averaged 26 ng/m3 at the time of the study, the authors note
that the workers were exposed to higher concentrations in the past, and the clearest predictor of
an effect was duration of exposure, not intensity of current exposure (as measured by blood
mercury). This suggests that previous higher exposures may be the real cause of the subtle effects
seen.
The authors concluded that "these findings might provide some evidence for the
necessity for improved working conditions." The "working conditions" the authors were
referring to relate to the then-current TLV of 50 jig/m1
This study, like the others discussed here, does not take into consideration the
contribution of dermal exposure to mercury that may have occurred, particularly in the past. It is
thus likely that all of the workers studied were exposed to a higher cumulative mercury burden
than is indicated by the 26 ng/m3 air level measured at the time of the study.
-1-
-------
PiUdvi and coworken
These authors studied EEC (Piikivi and Tolonen 1989), cardiovascular reflex
(Piikivi 1989), and subjective symptoms and psychological performance (Piikivi and Hanninen
1989) in Finnish chlor-alkali workers and compared them to matched (by age and sex) control
workers. Most measurements showed no effects, but tome subtle effects on EEC. cardiovascular
reflexes and subjective memory disturbances were reported to be more prevalent among workers
than among matched controls. Air mercury levels were not measured; but average exposure
levels (25-30 fig/m3) were inferred from blood and urine mercury levels.
The conclusions that can be drawn from these three studies are limited. Piikivi.and
Tolonen (1989) note that "no suggestion of a dose effect relation was found in this study," and
since exposure was likely higher in the past, as in the Fawer et al. study, any effects seen may havi
been due to earlier higher exposure.
Piikivi (1989) concludes that "long-term exposure to an average Hg concentration
of 30 ug/m3 of air apparently does not cause notable adverse effects on the autonomic nervous
system The results of the present study reinforce the validity of the atmospheric and biological
threshold limit values proposed previously" (referring to the WHO recommended value of 25
ug/m3). Similarly, Piikivi and Hanninen (1989) conclude that "no significant adverse effects were
produced by the long-term exposure to mercury vapor at an average mercury concentration of 25
^ig/m3 of air."
Ngim et aL (1992)
Ngim et al (1992) report poorer performance on several aspects of a
neurobehavioral test battery among Singapore dentists exposed to mercury than among a control
-2-
-------
group (univenity tuff}. The air mercury level (measured using diffusive personal ซซ
badges) was reported to average 16.7 ug/ms of air. The accuracy of this value is doubtful,
however, because diffusive monitoring badges are only semi-quantitative, and the reported value
.is low compared to the measured mean blood mercury levd of 12.3 yg/I. By comparison, in the
Fawer et al. study, the average blood mercury level (associated with a measured air level of 26
Hg/mJ) was only 8.3 ug/1. This suggests that the true average mercury exposure level in the Ngim
et al. study was more like 26 * 12.3/8.3 * 39 ug/mj of air (and/or there was substantial mercury
exposure not measured by air monitoring, such as dermal absorption due to handling mercury, or
inhalation of aerosolized amalgam paniculate generated by dental drilling/polishing).
AJso, when the subjects were subdivided according to duration and intensity of
ป.
exposure, only those with the longest (mean 13 4 yr) and highest (mean blood mercury 18.6 ug/1)
exposure showed significant effects. By comparison to the measured values in the Fawer et al.
study, the high exposure subgroup would have received average exposure equivalent to:
26 * 18.6/8.3 - 58 ug/mj of air.
This study was not cited in the ACGIH (1996) review, but given the significant
questions raised here, it cannot be considered as supporting an occupational exposure standard
for elemental mercury of less than 25 ug/m1 of air.
Liang et aL (1993)
These authors evaluated psychological effects of mercury exposure in 88 workers
(19 male, 69 female) in a Chinese fluorescent lamp factory compared to 97 controls from an
embroidery factory using a computer-administered, neurobehavioral evaluation system. Airborne
mercury exposure levels in the exposed group showed a wide range (5 to 190 ug/mj, mean
-3-
-------
33 ng/m1). Significant differences between the exposed and control groups were seen in several
neurobehavioral measures (particularly mental arithmetic, two-digit search, and three measures of
psychomotor performance: visual choice reaction time, switching attention, and finger tapping).
The influence of intensity of exposure (air concentration) was not evaluated, but a relation was
seen between neurobehavioral test performance and duration of exposure to mercery (adjusted for
chronological age). The lack of analysis of the influence of intensity of exposure limits the
conclusions that can be drawn, but the fact that some of the measured air concentrations were
very high (up to 190 ng/m1), and the reported relation between duration of exposure and
neurobehavioral test performance suggest that current or previous high exposure may be
influencing the results
This study was also not cited in the ACGIH (1996) review, but given the
significant questions raised here, it likewise cannot be considered as supporting an occupational
exposure standard for elemental mercury of less than 25 ng/mj of air.
The studies discussed above are summarized in the following table.
-4-
-------
Parameters of Mercury Exposure in Studies of Low-level Exposure to Mercury (<5* ง/')
Study
Faweretal (1983)
Piikivi and Tolonen
(1989)
Piikivi and
Hanninen(1989)
Piikivi (1989)
Ngimetal (1992)
n
26
41
60
41
98
Age (yr)
Mean
(sen)
44.0
(23)
38 1
(1.0)
380
(09)
38 1
(1.0)
32 0 (NR)
Range
NR
28-56
26-56
28-56
24-49
Duration of
Exposure (yr)
Mean
(Mm)
153
(26)
156
(14)
137
(07)
156
(14)
74 (0.5)
Range
1-41
5-27
5-28
5-27
0.7-24
AirHg
-------
Liang etal (1993)
342
(0.7)
NR
104(NR)
NR
330
(NR)
5-190
ND
ND
ND
ND
' Some values have been converted from the originally reported units (eg , nmol/mol creatinine) to the units shown here for
consistency
Mean level during examination period of study, long-term average reported to be 30 ng/mJ
n = number of individuals in the study, sem = standard error of the mean, NP = no data, NR = not reported
-------
Project Administration/Management
- Project Development "
- Staffing Requirements
- Insurance
- Permits
Project Coordination
. Mobilization / Demobilization
Equipment and Supplies
- Office / Supply Trailer
- Decontamination Trailer
- Personal Protective Equipment (Level C)
- Mercon Products
- Toilet Facilities
- Small Hand Tools and Machines
- Drums / Containers
- Polysheeting
- Air Monitoring / Sairpling Equipment
- Vacuum Systems (HepaFiltration)
Health and Safety
- HASP &. QA/QC Plan
- Medical Monitoring
- Health and Safety Officer
- Health and Safety Monitor
Remediation / Dismantling
- Installation of a Negative Air System
- Removal of Miscellaneous Furniture &. Appliance
- Removal of Interior Walls (NEty
- Removal of Interior Walls Against Brick
- Removal of Finished Flooring
- Construction of a loading area &. chute system
- Vacuuming of visible elemental mercury
- Application of Mercon products to floors, walls, etc.
- Removal of each layer of subflooring
- Construction of temporary flooring
- Segregation of waste streams
$20,000.00
$5,000.00
$80,000.00
$5,000.00
$115,000.00
$25,500.00
$2,500.00
$6,500.00
$19,500.00
$11,800.00
$1,000.00
$3,000.00
$3,000.00
$2,200.00
$6,000.00
$8,000.00
$5,000.00
$3,000.00
$69,000.00
$40,000.00
$117,500.00
$141,000.00
$129,250.00
$70,500.00
$35,250.00
$122,250.00
$110,500.00
$38,750.00
$321,050.00
$58,750.00
$30,200.00
$250,500.00
$63,500.00
$117,000.00
$1,175,000.00
-------
Waste Samplini &. Analytical Analyiii
- Interior walls, partitions, framing
- Wood floors, subfloors.-insularion Sc ceiling
- Wood Members
- Brick Walls
- Concrete floor
- Draeger Tube analysis
Powenvashing with Tri-sodtum Phosphate (2
Applications)
First Application
Set-up scaffolding, safety
Equipment (purchase)
Material &. supplies
Labor - 3 men x 40 hrs. x $40 = $4,800.00
1/2 man x 40 hrs x $55 = $1.100.00 (supervisor)
$5,900 units x 14 units
Second Application
Labor less 10% "
Materials &. Supplies
Reporting
- Maintenance of Daily Logs / Reports
- Draft Report / Final Report
Transportation &. Disposal
- Interior walls, partitions, framing &. insulation
(expected to be clean)
Estimated 300 tons x $60/ton
- Wood floor, subfloor, insulation and ceiling
(expected to be contaminated with mercury > 260 ppm)
Estimated 700 tons x $360/ton
- Elemental mercury (vacuumed waste) - Non
Recoverable
- Waste water (from Powerwashing)
Estimated 100,000 gallons x $50/gal.
$6,200.00
- Asbestos contained materials
$19,400.00
$12,000.00
$6,000.00
$62.600.00
$120,000.00
$74,000.00
$4.000.00
$78,000.00
$2,500.00
$7,500.00
$18,000.00
$252,000.00
$1,500.00
$50,000.00
$30,000.00
$40,000.00
$198,000.00
$10,000.00
$391,5CO.(X
Total Estimate for Selective Remediation for
Commercial Use - Main Building
(Estimated with a 25% Contingency)
-------
'ownhouse
Remove walls, floors,
irtitions, furniture, vacuum,.
jplicarion of Mercon (similar
i main building)
Transportation &L Disposal
alls, floon, partitions (expected
I) be clean) Estimated at 20 tons
$60/ton
$63,500.00
$1,200.00
'otal Estimate for Selective
.emediation for Commercial
se - Townhouse
Estimated with a 25%
ontingency)
$64,700.00
-------
Project Adm>nlซtrซtlon/Mjmซ9ซmซnt
- Project Development
- Staffing Requirements
- Insurance
- Permits
- Project Coordination
- Mobilization/Demobilization
Equipment & Supplies
- Office/Supply Trailer
- Decontamination Trailer
- Personal Protective Equipment (Level C)
- Mercon Products
- Toilet Facilities
- Small hand tools and machines
- Drums/Containers
- Polysheeting
- Air Monitoring/Sampling Equipment
- Vacuum Systems (Hepa-Filtration)
Health & Safety
- HASP & QA/QC Plan
- Medical Monitoring
- Health and Safety Officer
- Health and Safety Monitor
$225,000
$17,000.00
$3,000.00
$85.000.00
$5,000.00
$95,000.00
$20,000.00
$2,000.00
$5,500.00
$16,000.00
$8,50000
$1.00000
$2,000.00
$3,000.00
$2.000.00
$4,000.00
$5.000.00
$5.000.00
$2,000.00
$59,000.00
$32.000.00
$49,000?
$98,00
Remediation/Dismantling
- Installation of a Negative Air System
- Removal of Miscellaneous Furniture/Appliances
- Removal of Interior Walls (New)
- Removal of Interior Walls Against Brick
$2,060,00
$117,500.00
$141,000.00
$129,250.00
$70.500.00
-------
!. Rernovtl of Finished Flooring
- Construction of loading area & chute system
- Vacuuming of visible elemental mercury
- Application of Mercon products to flooring, walls, etc.
- Removal of each layer of subflooring
- Construction of temporary flooring
- Segregation of waste streams
- Demolition 2/3 by hand, 1/3 conventional
- Demolition basement slab (foundation)
Waste Sampling & Analytical Analysis
- Interior walls, partitions, framing
- Wood floors, subfloors, insulation & ceiling
- Wood Members
- Brick Walls
- Concrete floor
- Draeger Tube analysis
Powerwashinq with Tri-Sodium Phosphate
First Application
Set-up scaffolding, safety
Equipment (Purchase)
Materials & Supplies
Labor - 3 men x 40 hrป x $40 ซ $4,800.00
1/2 man x 40 hra. x $55 * $1,100.00 (Supervisor)
$5,900 unit x 14 units
Reporting
- Maintenance of Daily Logs/Reports
- Draft Report/Final Report
$35,250.00
$122,250.00
$110,500.00
$38,750.00
$321,050.00
$58,750.00
$30,200.00
$715.000.00
$160,000.00
$19,400.00
$12,00000
$6,000.00
$82.600.00
$120.000.00
$9,000.00
$120,000.00
$10,00000
$2.500.00
$7.500.00
-------
.
> *..X" _^..ซ..
TOWNHOUSE
- Rซmovซ walls, fkxxs, partitions, furniture, vacuum,
application of Macon (Simitar to main building)
- Shoring and demolition (wซ believe that the townhouse
shares a common wall with the adjacent private
building. Entire building will have to be done by hand
or small machine.
- Transportation and Disposal
- Walls, floors, partitions, etc. (expected to be
clean) estimated 20 tons @ $60.00 per toa
- Brick (Expected to be contaminated with
Mercury <260 ppm) estimated 287 tons @ $240
per ton
- Concrete (expected to be contaminated with
Mercury <260 ppm) estimated 83 tons @ $240
per ton.
Total estimate for Selective Remediation for Disposal -
Townhouse
(estimated with 25% contingency)
$63,500.00
$150,000.00
$1,200.00
$68.880.00
$19,920.00
$303,500.C
-------
*C)ซD4ATK>N FO* OCMOUTIO'N'
A Disposal
Interior walls, partitions, framing & insulation (expected
to be dean)
Estimated 300 tons x $60/ton
Wood Floor, sub floor, insulation and ceiling (expected
to be contaminated with mercury >260 ppm)
Estimated 700 Tons x $360/Ton
Elemental mercury (vacuumed waste) - Non
Recoverable
Waste Water (from Powerwashing)
Estimated 50,000 gallons x $0.50/gal.
Bricks (Expected to be contaminated with mercury <
260 ppm)
Estimated 4,500 tons x $240/Ton
PPE
Concrete (Expected to be contaminated with mercury
<260 ppm)
Estimated 1200 tons x $240/Ton
Asbestos containing material
$18,000.00
$252,000.00
$1,500.00
$25,000.00
$1,080,000.00
$45,000.00
$288,000.00
$40,000.00
$1.749.500.00
>tal Estimate for Selective Remediation For
smolition - Main building
stimated with a 25% Contingency)
$4.310.500.00
-------
GSAP Meeting
GSA #30746 8/15/95
TAPE BEGINS WITH MEETING IN PROGRESS
KEOUGH: "We cm then come to t mutual agreement on a unit price basis for the
extra work. Okay. And then an officer of the company signed the proposal, okay, and
(Tape Interference)., however, Apex chose to fill it out on their own .... did not sign to
the scope of work. They didn't say they're going to do ... of what our wishes are. They
just filled this out, they put hours; they put the prices down, and they kind of did their own
thing. A new officera district manager [of the] company signs their documents Okay
So this is, you know II think this is worthless in terms of something you want to hang
your hat on. Even though it is a low bid I called this gentleman and explained to him that
we ... this format . meeting tonight which we would decide." (Tape Interference) .
for reasons that are unknown to me .... So any other questions? No? Okay. Let me just
go over some information I found out. I have summed it up in a letter to Ira. Okay. First
of all, there comes a point of .. you may or may not know this, but Ira sent a letter to
this gal's attorney notifying her of the work we've done. essentially .. we found
mercury, and we've got problems, and they may be responsible Okay We never got a
response to that. Okay. The other day when I was wading through, entering into the
townhouse, I found tons of letters and stuff. Okay. A lot of it was your stuff, and a lot of
Bobs and stuff. But I found a letter addressed to Cooper Hewitt Electric Company, and I
remember Cooper Hewitt Electric Company was listed in the title search done when we
bought the property two years ago John Pascale bought it from Cooper Hewitt Electric
GSA 130746 (ft/15/95)
-------
Company back in the sixties. So I went into our office, we have a register of companies in
the states, and I found them in Kentucky. Talked to a womanit's all land of explained
here, that worked for the company at that location for about thirty years, and she
immediately remembered that they made mercury vapor tubes here in this building. The
properthe factory in Hoboken. You know. And so we now have a reason why we're
finding it at this property."
MALE VOICE: "And was it once part of GE?"
KEOUGH: "Cooper Hewin back in the forties had evolved as a GE operating
company You know."
MALE VOICE: "We know we're going to have to go after somebody it's going to
[have to be them]."
KEOUGH: "This is the samethis is Cooper Hewitt Museum too. It's the same
people. So I have contacted today, because of this woman, Elaine [Schrier], told me that
somebody, she wasn't sure of the author or the title, wrote a paper on the relationship
between GE and Cooper Hewitt Electric Company, and some of the work that was done
here in Hoboken. There's some type ofand she recalled it, but she said I don't know,
and she suggested I call the museum and ask the library to do a search And I called up,
and their doing a search ofa quick search didn't reveal anything, but.."
MALE VOICE: "How about the library?"
KEOUGH: "It's the Cooper Hewitt Museum's library which is part of the Smithsonian,
and her terminal is linked to the Smithsonian's complete data base on literature. So her
quick search with regards to anything regarding Cooper Hewitt Electric Company as a
title, or it was a Sperry or something Faraday, uh Sperdi Sperdi Faraday was the company
-------
that did manufacture of these sun lamps, okay, which I think is what evolved from the
mercury vapor tubes. Okay. So she says it's gonnawe may find something out in a
couple of weeks. She's gonna to keep looking. Her quick search didn't reveal anything.
She couldn't hang out on the phone with me. Jerry, Ira's been put on notice. I want him
to immediately send off a letter to Pascale and his attorney, and we may possibly then also
send a letter to our insurance company and the various environmental companies involved
with this project. Not only Pascale's environmental company, but REM Associates. For
all this kind of work, you know, it takes money Okay; and we gotta basically now come
to a decision like on awarding this contract and projecting how much money we're going
to need to do this work."
MALE VOICE: "For clarity sake the on the bid, as I have read through so to be
clear, that does not include the cost of putting down the plywood floor"
KEOUGH "Correct. Correct."
MALE VOICE: "Which we have elected to subcontract on . ."
KEOUGH: "That's right. Because it's been determined that at that point in time when
they removed the encapsulation and abatement was done, the room will be essentially
clean. Okay, so a conventional carpenter can come in and do this work You don't need
a environmental company to do the work. Okay, thereby we can save some money."
MALE VOICE: "Right, but that will be an additional expense."
KEOUGH: "Right. Another additional expense isI put into this document that we,
at our own choosing, may have the low bidder or the bidder who we award this to
bonded. That will be an expense we must bear, okay. And that could be a couple
thousand or two more, I'm not quite sure I don't have . It's usually about,three
3 GSA 130746 (8/1S/95)
-------
Appraisal Report
16 CONDOMINIUM UNITS
722 Grand Street
Hoboken, New Jersey
FAIR MARKET VALUE
Fee Simple Interest
As of January 1, 1996,
and July 1, 1997
American Appraisal Associates
-------
Arr*ricปn Appra/M/ AซOC/*(M'
Sort* 2000
Nซw JซfMy Ot540-6ซ24
Tซiซphont (609) 452-2330
Fปx (009) 452-0734
September 5, 1997
Sidley & Austin
Washington, D.C.
RE: Appraisal of 16 Condominium Units
722 Grand Street
Hoboken, New Jersey
Assessor's ED: Block 85, Lots 14 and 15.1
ซ
At the request of counsel for the General Electric Company, we have completed a limited
appraisal on the above-captioned properties. The information contained in this report is based on
more complete data, analyses and conclusions retained in our office file.
Nature of the Assignment
American Appraisal Associates has been requested by counsel for General Electric Company to
estimate the market value of the fee simple interests is in the appraised properties.
Purpose and Intended Use of the Report
In accordance with the client's request, this report has been prepared to assist with certain
decisions being made in connection with a proceeding before the United States EPA (Region H).
It is entirely inappropriate to use this report for any purpose other than the one stated.
Effective Dates of the Appraisal
The effective valuation dates of the appraisal are January 1, 19%, and July 1, 1997.
Effective Date of the Report
The effective date of this report is September 5, 1997
Inspection Date
The exterior of the properties was inspected on July 1, 1997 No interior inspections of the
subject units were performed at that time because the owners would not permit access.
-------
AmcrUat AfprmtMl Astecimtt paft
Appraisal Development and Reporting Process
This restricted appraisal report complies with the reporting requirements as set forth under
*
Standards Rule 2-2(c) of the Uniform Standards of Professional Appraisal Practice (USPAP) for
a Restricted Appraisal Report. As such, it does not present any discussion of the data, reasoning
and analyses that were used in the appraisal process to develop the appraiser's opinion of value.
Supporting documentation concerning the data, reasoning and analyses is retained in the
appraiser's file. Toe depth of discussion contained in this report is specific to the client's needs
and for the intended use as stated. American Appraisal Associates is not responsible for any
unauthorized use of this report.
Furthermore, in accordance with a prior agreement between the client and American Appraisal
Associates, this report is the result of a limited appraisal process in that certain allowable
departures from specific USPAP guidelines were invoked. The intended user of this report is
notified that the reliability of the value conclusion provided may be impacted to the degree ol:
departure from specific USPAP guidelines. Specifically, to the extent no interior inspection wa*1
made of the subject condominium units, the appraisal process involved a departure from Standard!*
Rule 1.
The research tasks performed to estimate the value, as defined herein, involved a thorough searcMw
for sales of comparable residential condominium units in the subject market area. Comparably
data were researched by investigations of public records, the multiple listing service ant'Mi
discussions with local appraisers, brokers and tax assessors. The data were verified, in somip
cases, with other real estate professionals and/or the grantor, grantee or their representatives.
Definition of Value and Property Interest Appraised
The value results reported herein reflect a range of market values for the subject condominium!
units.
Market Value can be defined as the most probable price a property should bring in a competitiv
and open market under all conditions requisite to a fair sale, the buyer and seller each actin
prudently and knowledgeably, and assuming the price is not affected by undue stimulus. Implic
in this definition is the consummation of a sale as of a specified date and the passing of title frฐ(
seller to buyer under conditions whereby:
< 1 i Bu\ er and seller are typically motivated;
-------
Amtrtcen Appntot Autdalit
(2) Both parties are well informed or well tdvised, and acting in what they
consider their best interests;
ซ
(3) A reasonable time is allowed for exposure in the open market;
(4) Payment is made in terms of cash in U.S. dollars or in terms of financial
arrangements comparabk thereto; and
(5) The price represents the normal consideration for the property sold
unaffected by special or creative financing or sales concessions granted by
anyone associated with the sale.
The subject units were valued as if offered in the open market for a reasonable period of time in
which to find a buyer. We appraised the fee simple interests in the properties as residential
condominiums, free and clear of all liens and encumbrances.
Fee Simple Estate is defined as the absolute ownership unencumbered by any other interest or
estate, subject only to the limitations imposed by the governmental powers of taxation, eminent
domain, police power and escheat.
Special Assumptions
The subject units have been vacated due to the existence of environmental contamination. For the
purpose of this appraisal, it is assumed that no contamination exists at the property and the units
are available for sale and immediate occupancy. Were the contamination to be considered in this
appraisal, the values reported herein would need to be adjusted downward. Also, we have
assumed that all the condominium units have been completely renovated for residential use. If
those renovations are not complete, a downward adjustment to the market value would be
required; at a minimum, this adjustment would be the amount of the cost to complete the
renovations.
No interior inspection of the subject units has been made. Information regarding the genera]
condition, level of finish and quantity and quality of the fixtures was provided by representatives
of General Electric. It is assumed that the information provided is accurate. If this information
were found to be inaccurate, the values reported herein would be subject to revision.
Area/Neighborhood Summary
The City of Hoboken is situated witrun Hudson County, New Jersey, approximately 2 miles west
of downtown Manhattan (New York City). The subject is in an urban, mostly built-up area
-------
Area/Neighborhood Summary
The City of Hoboken is situated within Hudson County, New Jersey, approximately 2 miles wes
ป
of downtown Manhattan (New York City). The subject is in an urban, mostly built-up area
Little vacant land remains available for additional development in the subject's immediau
neighborhood. The economic outlook for both the immediate and long-term future of the subject
area is continued stability.
The subject's neighborhood is developed predominately with older industrial and residential
properties. Portions of Hoboken have recently been revitalized and some older industrial
buildings have been renovated/converted to residential use. The demand for residential property
in the area is substantial due to its proximity to New York City.
.
The market for residential condominiums has improved following a period of stability from 1994
to 1996 Local brokers indicate that values increased from 1996 to midyear 1997 by
approximately 10% to 15%. According to local brokers, there is strong to moderate demand for
new residential construction in the area. Additionally, minimal vacant residential land is available
for such construction. The preceding factors should have a positive impact on the marketability
of the subject properties.
Property Review
A brief exterior inspection was made of the subject building, which is a former manufacturing
facility convened to large residential "loft" units. Descriptions of the subject building are based
on information provided by the client representatives (General Electric).
The five-story bnck structure's first floor/basement is unfinished. The second through fifth floors
each have four residential units. The subject units range in size from 2,572 to 2,736 square feet
and each has a different floor plan. Parking is available on the northwest side of the building.
The area and quality of the units are summarized on the following chart:
-------
Amtrkm Appraisit Associate
Unit
2A
2B
2C
2D
3A
3B
3C
3D
4A
4B
4C
4D
5A
5B
5C
5D
Gross Area
Sq. Ft.
2,736
2,603
2,592
2,676
2,572
2,756
2,592
2,634
2,572
2,722
2,592
2,634
2,572
2,722
2,572
2,634
Interior
Quality*
Low
Low
Average
Avenge
High
Average
Average
Average
Average
High
High
High
High
Average
High
Average
*Based on information provided by client
Constructed in the early 1900s, the building was formerly used to manufacture mercury vapor
lamps and other products containing mercury. It is noted that the subject building is reported to
have mercury contamination. For the purpose of our study, no contamination or its possible
effects on market value have been considered.
Property History
The subject building was converted to residential units in 1994. Most of the 16 units were sold
for about $80,000 per unit during 1995 as raw loft space. The purchasers then designed their own
floor plans and had their interior finish constructed. Unit 2C was the only unit to be sold after
bavins some interior finish constructed. This unit sold on March 30, 1995, for a reported sale
price of 5287,000.
-------
America* Afprmistl As*ociau*
Highest and Best Use
For the purpose of this report, we have assumed that the highest and best use of the subject
building was for residential use. We have not made a specific determination of this fact.
Valuation Process
In the appraisal of the subject properties, the sales comparison approach was considered the only
meaningful method of valuation. To determine an applicable range of values for die subject units,
discussions with local brokers and comparable sales and listings were considered. The sales,
although not exactly comparable due to the unique nature of the subject units, are believed to be
the best available for use in this analysis. These comparables are summarized on the following
chart:
-------
Appnisal Ast+ei*tt
Comparable Condominium Sato
Site
1
2
3
4
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
Location
4569th Si
Hoboken
72 Park Ave.
Hoboken
98 Park Av*.
Hoboken
98 Park Av*.
Hoboken
98 Park Ave.
Hoboken
98 Park Ave.
Hoboken
205 Park Ave.
Hoboken
113 Grand St.
Hoboken
222 Grand St.
Hoboken
722 Grand St.
Jersey City
1021 Grand St.
Hoboken
1021 Grand St.
Hoboken
1101 Bloomfield
Jersey City
1101 Bloomfield
Hoboken
1101 Bloomfield
Hoboken
1101 Bloomfield
Hoboken
1248 Bloomfield
Hoboken
Unit Unit Six*
f - So. Ft
43
7-C
2-A
2-6
3-A
PH
10
1
2-E
2-C
1-E
PH-E
A
A
C
O
1
1586
1777
1160
1647
1150
3000
1650
2250
1500
2592
1131
1459
2680
2680
2410
2300
1650
Sal*
Date
Nov-95
Jul-96
Mar-96
Mar-96
Sep-96
Feb-97
Mar-96
Asking
Asking
Mar-95
Sep-95
May-95
Jan-95
Asking
Feb-95
Under
Contract
Oct-95
Summary
Sal* Price par
Pile* Sq.Ft
s s
210.000
285,000
195,000
310,000
212.000
469.000
280.000
425,000
335,000
287,000
193.591
225.000
475.000
479,900
285,000
425,000
235.000
132.24
160.38
168.10
188.22
184.35
156.33
169.70
188.89
223.33
110.73
171.17
154.22
177.24
179.07
118.26
184.78
142.42
^^OA^ffl^vntB
2 bed/1 balh Townhouse styt*
1 block from subject
2 bed/ 2 bath Penthouse unit
wtth Wo* csflna & NYC vt*w
2 b*oV2 ba
-------
The preceding sales and listings reflect a range of sale prices from approximately $111 to $223
per square foot. Excluding the upper and lower extreme unit values, as is customary, narrows
the preceding range to $132 to $189 per square foot. These sales were adjusted as of January
1996 on the basis of information provided by representatives of General Electric with regard to
the interior of a typical unit. The adjustments were based on a typical unit and did not include
an adjustment for interior quality which will be considered subsequent to this analysis. An
adjustment grid is contained within Exhibit A of this report.
After adjustment, the sales reflect a range of unit values for a typical unit from $i 16 to $167 per
square foot. Based on a review of the preceding transactions and discussions with local real estate
professionals (summarized in Exhibit B), it is concluded that the subject units with a low quality
of finish would fall at the low end or below the adjusted range and the high-quality units would
fall at the upper end of the range.
Following is a summary of the concluded value ranges for the subject units as of January 1, 19%:
-------
Pat* 9
Unit
^
2-A
2-8
2-C
2-0
3-A
3-9
3-C
,3-0
4-A
'4-B
J4-C
'4-0
'5-A
.5-8
5-C
5-0
Total
Price
TotaJ,
Afti
So. Ft
2,736
2,603
2.592
2,676
2.572
2,756
2.592
2.634
2.572
2.722
2,592
2.534
2.572
2.722
2.572
2.634
for Low and
Range Summary
*
Overall
Rating
Low
Low
Average
Average*
High
Average
Average
Average
Average
High
High
High
High
Estimated
H3o.FL
105
105
12S
125
135
125
125
125
125
135
140
140
140
Average | 125
High 135
Average 125
High Ranoe
as of January 1996
Range
t
115
115
135
135
145
135
135
135
Low High
Range Range
t s
287,280
273,315
324,000
334.500
347.220
344.500
324.000
329.250
135 1 321.500
145. 367,470
145 362.880
145 368.760
1 50 i 360.080
135^ 340.250
145 347.220
135 329250
314.640
299,345
349,920
361,260
372.940
372,060
349.920
355.590
347.220
394.690 1
375.840!!
361,930"
365.800 !,
367.470;i
372.940 1[
355.590
5.361.475 5,757.15,5'
-------
Amtrlca* Appraisal Ajxxieut .
As stated previously, the values of residential condominiums within the subject market have
increased over the period from 19% to midyear 1997 by approximately 10% to 15%. Considering
the size and unique nature of the subject units and because of comments made by brokers in
discussions concerning the property, a 10% upward time adjustment was determined to be most
reasonable and was applied to the 1996 values to estimate the values as of July 1, 1997. These
values are summarized as follows:
-------
SV*ป** -^- - Tซ^" ~
^ "^ "^^B
! Price Range Summary
;,
|i Unit
1 f
12-A
2-B
i2ซC
2-0
3-A
J3-8
!s-c
[3-0
'4-A
4-8
4-c
4-0
5-A
5-B
5-C
5-0
Total
Total
Area
Sq. Ft
2,736
2.603
2.592
2,676
2.572
2.756
2,592
2.634
2,572
2,722
2,592
2.634
2.572
2.722
2.572
2.634
for Low and
Overall
Rjtinf
Low
Low
Average
Average
High
Average
Average
Average
Average
High
Estimated
1/Sq. FL
116
116
136
139
135
136
138
138
138
135
High 154
High j 154
High > 1 54
Average 1 38
High 135
Average : 1 38
High Range
^i
fag* 11
as of July 1997
Range
s
127
127
149
149
145
149
149
149
149
160
160
160
165
149
160
149
Lew
Range
ft
316.006
300,647
356.400
367.950
347,220
376.950
356.400
362.175
353.650
367.470
399.168
405,636
396,088
374.275
347.220
362.175
5.791.432
High
Range
ft
346,104
329.260
364.912
397.366
372.940
409.266
364,912
391.149*
381.942!
434.159,
413,424:'
420.123
424.380 !
404.217,
410.234
391.149:
6.295.577 ,
-------
Apprdstl
Reconciliation
Based upon the analyses referenced herein, the estimated Market Value Ranges of the fee simple
interests in the properties appraised as of January 1, 1996, are as follows:
Unit
1
2A
2B
2C
2D
3A
3B
3C
3D
value Kange
*
237,000 to 3 15, 000
273, 000 to 299,000
324.000 to 350,000
335. 000 to 361, 000
347. 000 to 373 ,000
345 .000 to 372, 000
324,000 to 350,000
329.000 to 356.000
unit
*
4A
4B
4C
4D
5A
5B
5C
5D
value Range
i
322,000 to 347,000
367,000 to 395,000
363. 000 to 376,000
369.000 to 382,000
360.000 to 386.000
340,000 to 367,000
347,000 to 373,000
329.000 to 356.000
Furthermore, the Market Value Ranges of the units as of July 1, 1997, are as follows:
Lnit
#
2A
2B
2C
2D
3A
3B
3C
3D
v aJue Range
S
3 16, 000 to 346, 000
30 1,000 to 329, 000
356,000 to 385.000
368,000 to 397,000
347,000 to 373,000
379,000 to 409,000
356,000 to 385,000
362 .000 to 39 1.000
Unit
1
4A
4B
4C
4D
5A
5B
5C
5D
Value Kange
S
354,000 to 382,000
367,000 to 434.000
399, 000 to 4 13, 000
406. 000 to 420,000
396,000 to 424,000
374,000 to 404,000
347, 000 to 4 10,000
362. 000 to 39 1.000
This is a limited appraisal because no interior inspection of the subject units was performed.
Should additional information about the subject units be made available, the values reported herein
would be subject to adjustment.
Special Assumptions
The following special assumptions pertain to this appraisal:
The subject units have been vacated due to the existence of environmental contamination. For the
purpose of this appraisal, it is assumed that no contamination exists at the property and the uruts
are available for sale and immediate occupancy Were the contamination to be considered in this
appraisal, the values reported herein would need to be adjusted downward. Also, we have
assumed that all the condominium units have been completely renovated for residential use. If
-------
Ass^tittn
13
assumed that all the condominium units have been completely renovated for residential use. If
those renovations are not complete, a downward adjustment to the market value would be
required; at a minimum, this adjustment would be the amount of the cost to complete the
renovations.
No interior inspection of the subject units has been made. Information regarding the general
condition, level of finish and quantity and quality of the fixtures was provided by representatives
of General Electric. It is assumed that the information provided is accurate. If this information
were found to be inaccurate, the values reported herein would be subject to revision.
This report was prepared in accordance with, and is subject to, our Assumptions and Limiting
Conditions and General Service Conditions, which are attached to and form an integral pan of this
report.
No investigation was made of the title to or any liabilities against the property appraised.
Respectfully submitted,
AMERICAN APPRAISAL ASSOCIATES, INC.
September 5, 1997
034090
Investigation and Report by
Christopher Ef. Murphy
State Certification No. RG-01289
Reviewed By
By Joseph Rusm. MAI
Certified General Appraiser.
State of Ne\v Jersey *RGOO?59
Anthonv Wells. ASA
Anthony J. Wells, ASA
Vice President
Real Estate Advisory Group
-------
Exhibit A
Adjustment Grid
(2 Pages)
-------
ADJUSTMENT GRID
I 1M.M
Superior
-1000%
Superior
-1000%
Equal
000%
Equal
000%
Equal
000%
Equal
000%
-2000%
$12831
3
96
Park Ave
2-A
Hoboken
Mar 96
$195.000
1.160
$iei.io
Equal
000%
S1M.10
Equal
000%
~|1M.10
Superior
-1000%
Superior
1000%
Equal
000%
Equal
000%
Equal
000%
Equal
000%
2000%
$134.48
4
96
Park Ave
28
Hoboken
Mar-96
$310.000
1.647
$1M.22
Equal
000%
I1M.22
Equal
000%
tlU.22
Superior
1000%
Superior
-1000%
Equal
000%
Equal
000%
Equal
000%
Equal
000%
-2000%
$15058
5
96
Park Ave
3-A
Hoboken
Sap 96
$212.000
1.150
$1*4.35
Equal
000%
I1M.3S
Equal
000%
$1*4.35
Superior
-1000%
Superior
-1000%
Equal
000%
Equal
000%
Equal
000%
Equal
000%
-2000%
$14740
8
96
Park Ave.
Penttouee
Hotwiiian
Feb-97
$440.000
3,000
HM.M
Equal
000%
S1MJ3
Equal
000%
f1MJ9
Equal
000%
Superior
-1000%
Equal
0.00%
Equal
0.00%
Equal
000%
Equal
0.00%
10.00%
$14.70
7
209
Park Aw*.
10
Mobofcafi
MeiM
$200uQQ(
raao
UMLta
Equal
000%
tttt.7*
Equal
0.00%
**.!
St^ertor
-10.00%
Superior
-1040%
EqueJ
0.00%
Equal
0.00%
Equ-
0.00%
Equal
000%
-20.00%
ซiปrซ
e
113
Grand Si
1
Hobohaq
ASMMO
$423.000
*
uao
$1NJI
Superior
10.00%
HTM*
Superior
-1000%
S1SXM
Equal
0.00%
Superior
-9.00%
Equal
0.00%
Equal
0.00%
Equal
0.00%
Equal
0.00%
3.00%
$145.38
c
222
Giana-fti
a-c
T"
fr*T V
Superior
*M%
OMJi
Superto
wjon
Ma\M
Superior
ซL00%
Superior
-*.00%
Equal
040%
wJ9^fik
040%
040%
t&40%
$1ป77
as ol January 1996 based on a typical unH
I
i
-------
ADJUSTMENT GRID'
Sale Number
Location.
UntlNumtw
City
Sale Dale.
;Salซ Price:
Building Sizes:
Square Feel:
Price Per Sq Ft.:
' Adjustments
1 Conditions of Sale:
(Adjusted Unit Price:
Time
1 Time Adjusted Unit Price:
Unit Size
; Location:
A(je/ Condition
.Quality of Finish:
Amenities:
Other Features:
Sum of Adjustments:
Adjusted value
Per Souare Foo4.
10
Sub/eel SWfl
Grand SI
2C
Hoboken
Mar 95
$287.000
2.592
(11073
Equal
000%
$110.73
Inferior
500%
$m.2ซ
Equal
000%
Equal
000%
Equal
000%
Equal
000%
Equal
000%
Equal
000%
000%
$11626
1 1
1021
Grand SI
1 E
Hoooken
Sep-95
$193.591
1.131
$171.17
Equal
000%
$171.17
Inferior
500%
$179.73
Superior
-1000%
Equal
000%
Equal
000%
Equal
000%
Equal
000%
Equal
000%
-1000%
$16175
12
1021
Grand Si
PH E
Hoboken
May 95
$225.000
1.459
$15472
Equal
000%
$164.22
Inferior
500%
$161.ป3
Superior
1000%
Equal
000%
Equal
000%
Equal
0.00%
Equal
000%
Equal
000%
1000%
$14573
13
1101
loomfiek) Ave
A
Hoboken
Jan 95
$475.000
2.680
$177.24
Equal
000%
$17724
Inferior
500%
$166.10
Equal
000%
Superior
-1000%
Equal
000%
Equal
000%
Equal
000%
Equal
000%
-1000%
$167 49
14
1101
loomfiek) Ave
A
Hoboken
ASKING
$479.900
2.680
$179.07
Superior
-1000%
$161 16
Superior
-1000%
$145.04
Equal
000%
Superior
1000%
Equal
000%
Equal
000%
Equal
000%
Equal
000%
-10.00%
$13054
" " 15
1101
loomAoUAv*
C
Hobofcan
Feb-06
$263.000
2,410
1 116.26
Equal
OOO%
$1112*
Inferior
500%
1124.17
Equal
000%
Superior
-10.00%
Equal
000%
Interior
10.00%
Equal
OOO%
Equal
000%
000%
$124.17
" 16
1101
toonaaWAva
O
Hobokan
rxlar Contact
$425.000
2.300
$164.76
Equal
000%
$1*4.7*
Supwtor
-1000%
tmw
Eou*
000%
Supwtor
1000%
Equal
0.00%
Equal
0.00%
Equal
000%
Equal
000%
1000%
114967
17
1244
toom*ซWAv*
1
Hobohen
Oct-ป5
$235.000
1.850
$142.42
Equal
000%
$142.42
Interior
500%
$14ป.Sป
Suparior
1000%
Suparior
-1000%
Equal
000%
Equal
000%
Equal
000%
Equal
OOO%
-2000%
$110.64
American Ap\
I
^
cr
5
<%
&
5
-------
Exhibit B
Broker/Investor Survey Notes
(3 Pages)
-------
Page 1
Broker/Investor Survey Notes
16 Condominium Loft Units
722 Grand Street
Hoboken, New Jersey
Survey Date: July 1997
Contact
Norm* De Ruggiero Sales
Associate at Riverside Realty
(20D-653-3933
Bob De Ruggiero - Local
Investor/Developer
(20D-617-7111
Jerry Losquadro - Sales
Associate at Murphy Realty
Better Homes & Gardens
(20D-798-3300
Comments
Knows the subject units very well. Very unique units, not much
in the way of comps. Sent data sheet on her new listing at 113
Grand Street. She said each of subject units is different. She
feels value of a unit today is in the $350,000 to $400,000 range.
Condominium market is now best it has been in years. Stable
values from 1994 to 1995. Values have increased from 10% to
15% from mid 1996 to the present. This spring-summer is very
busy.
Has listings on several industrial buildings in subject
neighborhood. He feels the way to value subject units is on $/sq.
ft. basis. Condominiums typically trade in the $160 to $190 per
sq. ft. range. Subject units would be on lower end of range due
to large size and inferior location. Knows the subject units very
well. Not much in the way of comps.
Knows the subject units very well. Very unique units, no real
comps, but said use upper end condo sales-large units. Jersey
City has the Wells Fargo Building. MLS had a sale and one
listing but they were very low. Jersey City is far more inferior
in comparison with Hoboken. He feels value today is in the
$350,000 to $450,000 range, assuming nice finish, 2 bedroom/2
bath units with good kitchen.
Condo market is now best it has been in years. Stable prices
from 1994 to 1996. 1997 has seen big increase. Values are up
from 10% to 15% from late 1996 to the present. This spring
summer is very busy.
-------
Amtrica*
Pott 2
Dave Bagon- Sales Associate Knows the subject units very well. Artists bought raw space for
at ReMax- Gold Coast Really $80,000 range and spent from $100,000 to $200.000 to finish
them. Some are very plain, some are spectacular. He said he
would list a 2,600 sq. ft. unit there with good finish for $300,000
to $350,000. He feels over $350,000 to $400,000 is a hard sell
due to competition with Brownstone rowhouses. Subject
neighborhood is not as good u hot area to the south and east of
subject. No real comps unless one goes to NYC (Sobo/
Chelsea/the Village/Tribecka). He said use upper end condo
sales-large units.
Values are up from 10% to 15% from mid 1996 to the present.
This spring-summer is very busy.
Marta Logusz- Sales
Associate at Hudson Harbor
Realty
(201 )'-420-1200
Pam Weiner- Sales Associate
at Coun St. Realr\
(20D-420-6656
Knows the subject units very well. Artists/jewelry designers
bought raw space. She said newer condos sell for Si70 to $220
per sq. ft. Most condos sell in the $150 to $190 per sq.''ft.
range. Some of the subject units are amazing and could be worth
$400,000 or more. No real comps unless one goes to NYC
(Soho/Chelsea/the Village/Tribecka). Use Wells Fargo Building
in Jersey City sales and upper end condo sales-large units.
Values are up around 10% from mid 1996 to the present. They
are very busy.
She and husband owned Subject Unit 2-C, the only unit that was
finished and sold before the mercury contamination in the
building became public information. They bought it wit:
intention of renting it out, which they did. The tenant bought thซ
unit from them. She felt it was a fair price, but that the marke
has improved since then. She would put that unit on the market
now for around $350,000. She said her unit was not one of the
nicer ones - second floor facing street. Firush was nice, but no
elaborate.
Very unique units, not much in the way of comps. She provide*
data on a new sale she sold at 1101 Bloomfield Avenue, "Th<
Columbia." She feels this building is far superior 11
design/location to the subject building. She said the best units ii
the subject building today are worth in the $350.000 to $400, OCX
range. She would list them for under $400.000.
She agrees that the condo market is now best it has been in years
Stable prices from 1994 to 1995 Values have increased trcr
10^ to 15Tฃ from 1996 to present. This summer has been bus;.
-------
Amtrican Appraisal Associates
Past
Nancy Wykstra- Sales
Associate at BurgdorffRealry
(20D-963-4400
Marie - Manager at
Burgdorff Really
(20D-963-4400
Daniel DePalma - Sales
Associate at Riverside Realry
(20D-653-3933
Debrah Muriaugh - Sales
Associate at Murphy Realry
(20D-798-3300
Hugh MaGuire - Local .
Appraiser and Assessor for
Hoboken
She knows of the subject units. She said subject neighborhood
is not the best. It is mixed industrial and next to the high school.
She feels units are worth less than $400,000. She said $350,000
to $390,000 sounds more reasonable. She said "The Columbia"
at 1101 Bloomfield Avenue is a renovated lodge house that has
very large units and would have the best comps. but they are
superior units in a better building and location.
She knows of the subject units. She said subject neighborhood
is not as good as other areas to the east and south. She would list
the subject units for under $400,000. She said "The Columbia"
at 1101 Bloomfield Avenue is a much better building.
He said there are no good comps, but said $140 to $160/sq. ft.
sounded reasonable.
She has seen the subject units. She feels they would be worth
low to mid S300K range.
She said unlike surrounding areas, there was no decline in sale
prices from 1994 to 1995. Stable prices from 1994 to 1995.
Values have increased from 10% to 15% from 1996 to present.
This summer has been very busy.
He said the only real comparable units are in New York City but
use big units, upper end of sales range. He agreed that most
condominiums sell for $150 to $180 per sq. ft. He also agreed
the subject units should be at lower end of this range. He felt
that values in the mid $300K range sounded reasonable.
-------
Amtrict* Afprmbfl A nปti*u
Exhibit C
Assumptions and Limiting Conditions
(4 Pages)
-------
Amtnca* Apprmisal Associates
Assumptions and Limiting Conditions
*
Every attempt has been made to prepare this appraisal report in conformance with the current
regulations set forth by the Uniform Standards of Professional Appraisal Practice of The Appraisal
Foundation ("USPAP").
We have provided a Restricted Appraisal Report, intended to comply with the reporting
requirements set forth by the Uniform Standards of Professional Appraisal Practice ("USPAP")
for a Restricted Appraisal Report. As such, the report presents only summary discussions of the
data, reasoning, and analyses used in the appraisal process to develop American Appraisal's
opinion of value. Supporting documentation concerning the data, reasoning, and analyses has
been retained as pan of our work papers. The depth of discussion contained in the repoYt is
specific to your needs as the client and for the intended use stated. American Appraisal is not
responsible for unauthorized use of its report.
As agreed upon with the client prior to the preparation of the appraisal, this is a Limited Appraisal
because it invokes the Departure Provision of the Uniform Standards of Professional Appraisal
Practice. As such, information pertinent to the valuation has not been considered and/or the full
valuation process has not been applied. Depending on the type and degree of limitations, the
reliability of the value conclusion provided herein may be reduced. Specifically, at the request
of the client, the content of this appraisal report has been limited to those data presented herein.
As such, it represents something less than a full and complete appraisal report. However, the
substance of the appraisal investigation meets all of the requirements of a full and complete
appraisal assignment and a complete record of all analyses and conclusions leading to the opinion
of value stated herein has been retained in the appraiser's files.
No responsibility is assumed for matters legal in nature. No investigation has been made of the
title to or any liabilities against the property appraised. In this appraisal, it is presumed that,
unless otherwise noted, the owner's claim is valid, the property rights are good and marketable,
and there are no encumbrances which cannot be cleared through normal processes.
To the best of our knowledge, all data set forth in this report are true and accurate. Although
gathered from reliable sources, no guarantee is made nor liability assumed for the accuracy of any
data, opinions, or estimates identified as ^eing furnished by others which have been used in
formulatm2 this analvsis.
-------
Amtrk** Apprmistt Assodmtt
Land areas and descriptions used in this appraisal were obtained from surveys or public records
and have not been verified by legal counsel or a licensed surveyor.
No soil analysis or geological studies were ordered or made in conjunction with this report, nor
were any water, oil, gas, or other subsurface mineral and use rights or conditions investigated.
Substances such as asbestos, urea-formaldehyde foam insulation, other chemicals, toxic wastes,
or other potentially hazardous materials could, if present, adversely affect the value of the
property. Unless otherwise stated in this report, the existence of hazardous substance, which may
or may not be present on or in the property, was not considered by the appraiser in the
development of the conclusion of value. The stated value estimate is predicated on the assumption
that there is no material on or in the property that would cause such a loss in value. No
responsibility is assumed for any such conditions, and the client has been advised that the
appraiser is not qualified to detect such substances, quantify the impact on values, or develop-thc
remedial cost.
No environmental impact study has been ordered or made. Full compliance with applicable
federal, state, and local environmental regulations and laws is assumed unless otherwise stated,
defined, and considered in the report. It is also assumed that all required licenses, consents, or
other legislative or administrative authority from any local, state, or national government or
private entity organization either have been or can be obtained or renewed for any use which the
report covers.
It is assumed that all applicable zoning and use regulations and restrictions have been complied
with unless a nonconformity has been stated, defined, and considered in the appraisal report.
Further, it is assumed that the utilization of the land and improvements is within the boundaries
of the property described and that no encroachment or trespass exists unless noted in the report.
The Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA) became effective January 26, 1992. We have not
made a specific compliance survey and analysis of this property to determine whether or not it is
in conformity with the various detailed requirements of the ADA. It is possible that a compliance
survey of the property together with a detailed analysis of the requirements of the ADA could
reveal that the property is not in compliance with one of more of the requirements of the act. If
so, this fact could have a negative effect on the value of the property Since we have no direct
evidence relating to this issue, v-e did not consider the possible noncompl'iance with ihe
requirements of ADA in estimating the \alue of the property
-------
Anurtcan Apprwtttt Aoeci** Page 3
We have made a physical inspection of the exterior of the property and noted visible physical
defects, if any, in our report. This inspection was made by individuals generally familiar with
real estate and building construction. However, these individuals are not architectural or
structural engineers who would have detailed knowledge of building design and structural
integrity. Accordingly, we do not opine on, nor are we responsible for, the structural integrity
of the property including its conformity to specific governmenttl code requirements, such as fire,
building and safety, earthquake, and occupancy, or any physical defects which were not readily
apparent to the appraisers during their inspection.
The value or values presented in this report are based upon the premises outlined herein and are
valid only for the purpose or purposes stated.
*
The date of value to which the conclusions and opinions expressed apply is set forth in this report.
Unless otherwise noted, this date represents the last date of our physical inspection of the
property. The value opinion herein rendered is based on the sums of the national business
economy and the purchasing power of the U.S. dollar as of that date.
The following special assumptions pertain to this appraisal:
The subject units have been vacated due to the existence of environmental contamination.
For the purpose of this appraisal, it is assumed that no contamination exists at the
property and that the units are available for sale and immediate occupancy. Were the
contamination to be considered in this appraisal, the values reported herein would need
to be adjusted downward. Also, we have assumed that all the condominium units have
been completely renovated for residential use. If those renovations are not complete,
a downward adjustment to the market value would be required; at a minimum, this
adjustment would be the amount of the cost to complete the renovations.
No interior inspection of the subject units has been made. Information regarding the
general condition, level of finish and quantity and quality of the fixtures was provided
by representatives of General Electric. It is assumed that the information provided is
accurate. If this information were found to be inaccurate, the values reported herein
would be subject to revision.
Testimony or attendance in court or at any other hearing is not required by reason of this appraisal
unless arrangements are previously made within a reasonable time in advance therefor.
-------
America* Afpnttd Arocfecn paft 4
One or more of the signatories of this appraisal report is a member or candidate of the Appraiul
Institute. The Bylaws and Regulations of the Institute require each member and candidate to
control the use and distribution of each appraisal report signed by them.
Possession of this report or any copy thereof does not carry with it the right of publication. No
portion of this report (especially any conclusion to use, the identity of the appraiser or the firm
with which the appraiser is connected, or any reference to the American Society of Appraisers,
or the designation awarded by this organization) shall be disseminated to the public through
prospectus, advertising, public relations, news, or any other means of communication without the
written consent and approval of American Appraisal Associates, Inc.
-------
Appraisal Associate!
Exhibit D
Certificate of Appraiser
(1 Page)
-------
Affrmtttt Axtofiatts
Certificate of Appraiser
I certify that, to the best of my knowledge and belief:
The statements of fact contained in this report are true and correct.
The appraisal contained in this report was made by Christopher D. Murphy, a
subcontractor; American Appraisal Associates, Inc., is, however, solely responsible
for the analyses, opinions and conclusions contained in this report.
The reported analyses, opinions and conclusions are limited only by the reported
assumptions and limiting conditions.
Neither Christopher D. Murphy nor American Appraisal Associates, Inc., has a
present or prospective interest in the property that is the subject of this report, and
neither has a personal interest or bias with respect to the panics involved.
Compensation for Christopher D. Murphy and American Appraisal Associates, Inc.,
is not contingent on any action or event resulting from the analyses, opinions or
conclusions in, or the use of, this report.
The analyses, opinions and conclusions were developed, and this report has been
prepared, in conformity with the requirements of the Uniform Standards of
Professional Appraisal Practice of The Appraisal Foundation.
I have made a personal cursory exterior inspection of the exterior of the property that
is the subject of this report.
Christopher D. Murphy
Subcontractor
State Certification No. RG01289
-------
ttricut Appraisal Associate
Exhibit E
Qualifications of Appraisers
(3 Pages)
-------
Aป*rtt** 4wv*fro/ Associates
Petti
Ctf
Anthony J. Wells, ASA
Vice President
Anthony J. Wells serves u a Vice President for the Milwaukee
Real Estate Advisory Group of American Appraisal A!
Inc. ("AAA").
Mr. Wells joined the Regulated Industries Group in 1966. After
a two-year term of active duty in the U.S. Army, he rejoined AAA
as office production manager, maintaining the real estate data
base. In 1972, he was promoted to real estate appraiser. After
transferring to the Industrial Valuation Group for two years of
cross-training, he returned to Real Estate Valuation Group as a
senior appraiser. He advanced to engagement manager status in
1980. Mr. Wells assumed management responsibilities in 1987,
was named a principal in 1993 and Assistant Vice President in
1994, and was appointed to his current position in 1995.
Mr. Wells is one of the country's leading appraisers in industri-
al/commercial real estate valuation. He has served as project
manager on several major engagements providing valuation
services to corporate clients nationwide, in Mexico, and the
Philippines. Mr. Wells has appraised a wide variety of property
associated with, but not limited to, the following industries: steel
mills, railroads, oil companies, aircraft engine/assembly plants,
electric power, metal fabrication, and consumer products. His
experience in unique properties includes movie studios, televi-
sion/radio stations, large hotels, and airport properties.
Mr. Wells has given deposition and testimony concerning the
valuation of large industrial facilities and airlines:
General Motors Corporation - May/June 1991
Continental Airlines - October 1991
Security Pacific National Bank - April 1992
American Airlines - April 1992
Ladish Corp. - April 1993
University of Wisconsin - Milwaukee
Bachelor of Business Administration-Finance
-------
American Appraisal Associates
'-It.
State Certifications
Professional Affiliations
Valuation and
Special Courses
Publications
Speeches
Certified General Real Estate Appraiser, State of Arizona,
#30660
Certified General Real Estate Appraiser, State of California,
#AG017048
Certified Appraiser, State of Colorado, #CGO 1316669
Geoenl Certified Appraber, State of Coonecticat, 4CQ0838
Certified Appraiser, State of Michigan. # 1201002253
Certified General Real Property Appraiser, State of Minnesota,
#4001728
Real Estate General Appraiser, State of New York,
#46000010337
Certified General Appraiser, State of Wisconsin, #188
American Society of Appraisers, Senior Member
ASA Designation - Urban Real Property
President, Wisconsin Chapter, 1990-1991; Vice President,
Wisconsin Chapter, 1989-1990; Secretary, Wisconsin Chapter,
1988-1989; Treasurer, Wisconsin Chapter, 1987-1988
Industrial Development Research Council, Professional Associate
American Society of Appraisers
Completed all courses and exams required for ASA designation
Appraisal Institute
Basic Appraisal Principles, Course LA
Capitalization Theory and Techniques, Course IB
Case Study - Urban Properties, Course 2
Condemnation, Course 4
Real Estate Appraisal Principles, Course 1A1
Standards of Professional Practice
"Appraisal of an Industrial Land Development," Real Estate
VaJ nation Guide. E.H. Boeckh
"The Black Art of Appraisal," Credit Union Executive Society
Mr. Wells has spoken to the Appraisal Institute1! Wisconsin
Chapter on large plant depreciation, the Industrial Developmenl
Research Council on the development of a valuation curve tc
monitor ad valorem taxes and industrial real estate valuation, and
before tax managers of major corporations in the St Louis arซ
concerning industrial property valuation. He met with the Henley
Group's international real estate managers to discuss valuation ol
real estate in foreign lands; in October 1989 he spoke to the Credii
Union Executive Society on "The Black Art of Appraisal." He
has spoken before the Institute of Property Taxation concerning
ditTerer.iiauon of rjai and personal property.
Mr. Wells has spoken 10 the Institute of Property Taxation and ic
the American Bar Ass-ocia -on on the valuation of large industrial
-------
Christopher D. Murphy Professional Qualifications
Education
University of Miami, Coral Gables, Florida
B B.A.- Finance
Appraisal Institute Courses
Real Estate Appraisal Principles Bask Valuation Procedures
Capitalization Theory and Techniques Capitalization Theory and Techniques
Advanced Income Capitalization Standards of Professional Practice A and B
Professional Experience
Murphy Appraisal, Ml. Laurel, New Jersey
Involved in the appraisal of a broad range of commercial and industrial properties throughout the
northeastern United States Involved in the analysis of properties for the purpose of sale,
purchase, financing, and corporate planning.
American Appraisal Associates, Princeton. New Jersey
Valuation Consultant, involved in the preparation of narrative and summary appraisal reports
covering a broad range of commercial, industrial, and multi-family residential properties
throughout the United States. Involved in analysis for sale, financing, corporate planning, and
allocation.
Professional Licenses and Certifications
State of New Jersey
Certified General Appraiser Number RG-01289
Licensed Real Estate Salesperson
Slate of Petvisyhutua
Certified General Appraiser Number GA-001212-R
State of Ohio
Certified General Appraiser Number 407575
Professional Affiliations
Appraisal Institute
Associate Me.-.iber
-------
Apprtttal Attoctant
General Service Conditions
-------
Appraisal Attociatu
General Service Conditions
*
The services provided by American Appraisal Associates, Inc., have been performed in
accordance with professional appraisal standards. Our compensation was not contingent in any
way upon our conclusions of value. We imtmed, without independent verification, the accuracy
of all data provided to us. We have acted as an independent contractor and reserved the right to
use subcontractors. All files, workpapers or documents developed by us during the course of the
engagement are our property, subject to attorney work product protection as provided by law.
We will retain this data for at least five years.
Our report is to be used only for the specific purposes stated herein and any other use is invalid:.
You may show our report in its entirety to those third parties who need to review the information
contained herein. No one should rely on our report as a substitute for their own due diligence;>
No reference to our name or our report, in whole or in part, in any document you prepare and/or
distribute to third panics, may be made without our prior written consent.
We reserve the right to include your company/firm name in our client list, but we will maintain
the confidentiality of all conversations, documents provided to us and the contents of our reports,
subject to legal or administrative process or proceedings. These conditions can only be modified
by written documents executed by both parties.
American Appraisal Associates, Inc., is an equal opportunity employer.
-------
AffOPDO)LKW TMI POUCV.
Mr* ft MtrlN* IM C*.
tox M*
, NJ Mtfl-ซtM
trwtf tirซซt Artlitt.
Cซ*4ซซlftlM Mt*ซIซ!. Int.
1111
i.iH.eoo
AH risk lMbjซ^ t*
T>< POJCY BE TERtMATm TK CCKPANV WU OT^ T>< COTIONAL NTDOT COITra 8Q.OMT _
WRTTW MOnCt AND W1L SOONOTWCAT10NOF AKV CHAMQES TO t> POUCy THAT WOULD AfFICT THAT
NTDCST. N AOCCK)ANCC WITH T> POUCY PROVI90NS OR AS (COURED BY LAW.
ll Sซซซซtiซri
Uflll
ซlvซri!4ซ CA
GSA 00184
GSA000184
-------
CCT ป1 '99 04i2Qpn wlu.I*i M. OCซC*XUY*ป CO.
WILLIAM Hi CONNOLLY * CO.
GRAND SfrREET ARTISTS
CONDOMINIUM ASSOCIATION, INC.
PROPERJTY INSURANCE
11/2/35 11/2/98
Blanket BuiWinc,* $3,700,000
Loteof Income and Exua Expense $ 100.000
Blanket All Risk Real Property ->
(iubject to policy tsrms fl< conditions) " .
Replacemer ' J- . j
Agreed Am- l ' ~
Building Ore increased Cost
ofConstruci.cn $ 1 00.000 *
Off Premi*et Power lnterr(jptlon $ 10,000
D^uctible: S 1.000
BOILER & MACHINERY INSURANCE
Property Damage Comprehensive $4,000.000
Deductible $ 1.000
Butinetc Interruption/Extra Expense
Including Off Premises Utility Failure $ 100,000
Water Damase $ 25,000
Hazardous Substances $ 25,000
1 ALTERNATIVE LIMIT OF $280,0^0 IS AVAILABLE
10/30M
GSA 37147
-------
FttjUU. CT06431
MOM: 00V 373-32JO DU Com*- 9*239-3210
Tat: (303) 373-2O3 DU COM. ซซ229-2tfU
August 20, 1997
Ms. Jeralene Green
Freedom of Information Officer
U.S. Environmental Protection Agency
401 M Street, S.W.
Washington, D.C. 20460
Re: Freedom of Information Act Appeal: Q2-RIN-1S43-97
Dear Ms. Green:
Pursuant to 5 U.S.C. ง 552(aX6) and 40 C.F.R. ง 2 114, General Electric
Company ("GE") hereby appeals the denial of its Freedom of Information Act ("FOIA") request,
02-RIN-l 543-97. Anne Cromwell of GE submitted this FOIA request to the Environmental
Protection Agency, Region II ("EPA") on June 30, 1997, which requested "a January 1996
technical report prepared by the EPA Region 2 office that includes an appraisal of the property at
722 Grand Street, Hoboken, NJ" (Attachment 1). By letter dated August 6, 1997, Walter E.
Mugden, Regional Counsel, EPA Region II, notified GE that EPA did in fact have appraisal
reports dated July 1996 but was withholding the requested records on the basis they are
purportedly "exempt from mandatory disclosure by virtue of the 5 U.S.C. 552(bX5), (7XA) and
(7XC) exemptions" ("Denial") (Attachment 2). GE received the Denial on August 7, 1997, and
accordingly, this appeal is timely. For the reasons described below, the Region's initial
determination should be overturned and the withheld documents provided to GE.
Specifically, GE requests the release of all three documents in the itemized list of
records being withheld, plus other relevant records EPA apparently has failed to identify. EPA
has withheld the records claiming that they are (1) "inter-agency or intra-agency memorandums or
letters which would not be available by law to a party ... in litigation with the agency," 5 U.S.C.
ง 552(bX5), and (2) "records or information compiled for law enforcement purposes" that (a)
"could reasonably be expected to interfere with law enforcement proceedings," id. ง
552(bX7XA), or (b) "could reasonably be expected to constitute an unwarranted invasion of
personal privacy." Id. ง 552(bX7XQ Based on EPA's limited description of the withheld
records and on its admission that these documents do contain real estate appraisals for the Grand
Street property, GE believes that these documents are not exempt from disclosure; and, even
assuming the overall document falls within the claimed exemptions, that EPA must at least
disclose the actual appraisals themselves as segregable portions of these records. Withholding
these records serves no legally cognizable purpose, whereas the release of these records would be
in the public interest and in accord with governmental regulations and policy directives.
-------
MJ. Jenlene Green
Auguft 20, 1997
Page 2
Although ฃPA his 20 working days from receipt of this appeal to make a final
determination, 40 C.F.R. ง 2.117(b), GE respectfully requests that this appeal be expedited As
more fully explained below, EPA has issued a proposed remedial action plan (TRAP") for the
Grand Street Artists She ("She"), which has been proposed for listing on the National Priorities
List ("NPL"), under the Comprehensive Environmental Response, Compensation and Liability
Act ("CERCLA"), 42 U.S C. ง 9601 eua^ GE befieves that the release of these records will
provide information necessary, and indeed crucial, to evaluate and comment upon EPA's PRAP
Because GE must shortly submit comments on the PRAP, an immediate and timely resolution of
this appeal is requested.
Backfroand
Some background regarding the Site1 and the PRAP is necessary to place the
Denial in context. In 1996, EPA, with the assistance of the Army Corps of Engineers ("ACOE")
temporarily relocated the former residents of the She. Contemplating an ultimate permanent
relocation of the former residents, in early 1997, EPA proposed to list the Site on the NPL so that
EPA could use its remedial authority for permanent relocation.1 Most recently, EPA issued a
Focused Feasibility Study ("FFS") and the PRAP, which proposes demolition of the building and
permanent relocation of the former residents. In the FFS, EPA estimates the cost of permanent
relocation to be approximately $10 million. EPA has provided no support for this cost estimate,
but states in a footnote that the estimate was based on "April 1996, EPA appraisals not reflective
of appraisals to be conducted concurrent to remedial design."
The S10 million estimate is inconsistent with the very limited information regarding
appraisals that EPA has placed in the administrative record for this Site. The only information in
the record that purports to support EPA's estimate of permanent relocation costs is a
memorandum dated September 6, 1996, from Thomas J. Geronikos, Army Corps of Engineers
("ACOE"), to the Chief of the Real Estate Section of the East Brunswick, New Jersey Field
Office of EPA (Attachment 3).J This memorandum supposedly transmitted two competing
1 The Site is a former factory, owned by General Electric more than half a century ago, which a
group of artists, the Grand Street Artists Partnership (the "Partnership"), converted from an
industrial facility to residential condominium units for purchase by the Partnership members.
After failing to conduct a proper due diligence and proceeding with the conversion of the factory
after multiple discoveries of mercury inside the building, the Partnership members in residence at
the Site were vacated from the building in January 1996.
1 As of the date of this appeal, EPA has not yet issued a final rule listing the Site on the NPL.
5 Geronikos is the recipient of the letters transmitting the real estate appraisals that are being
(continued
-2-
-------
Mi. Jeralene Green
August 20,1997
Ptge3
appraisal reports, which arc not included in the administrative record, plus a unit-by-unit
comparison of the two reports, which is included. Both appraisals estimate the total value of all
units plus the Townhouse unh to be substantially less than $6 million. Even taking into account
the purchase of the adjacent parking lot and other expenses associated with permanent relocation,
the S10 million figure is unsupportable by the materials in the record.
In light of the limited and contradictory information placed in the administrative
record, GE submits that EPA is improperly withholding records crucial to justifying the
expenditure of public funds. First, as stated, EPA has provided no support for its S10 million
estimate of the cost of permanent relocation and must do so under CERCLA and the National
Contingency Plan, especially in the face of inconsistent data in the administrative record. Second,
the FFS cites April 1996 appraisals as support for the $10 million figure, whereas EPA claims in
the Denial that the only existing appraisals are dated Lily. 1996. These glaring inconsistencies
suggest that EPA is cloaking relevant records. Third, EPA's invocation here of blanket FOIA
exemptions to avoid public scrutiny of its PRAP serves only to cast further doubt on the Region's
proper and legal administration of the Site. Against this background, and coupled with the legal
arguments below, GE is entitled to access to these records.
Argument
The FOIA's purpose is to provide full disclosure of government records to the
public. United States Dep't of Justice v Tax Analysts. 492 US 136, 141-43 (1989V Department
of the Air Force v Rose. 425 U.S. 352, 361 (1976). Because "public disclosure is not always in
the public interest," Baldrige v Shapiro. 455 US. 345, 352 (1982), however, Congress created a
limited number of exemptions from disclosure that must be narrowly construed. Rose, 425 U S
at 361. In addition, these exemptions are only permissive, and agencies are expected to disclose
technically exempt records when "no important purpose would be served by withholding the
records." 40 C.F.R. ง 2.119(a); see id (disclosure is "encouraged"); Chrysler Corp. v. Brown.
441 U.S. 281, 290-94 (1979). Even when an exemption does apply, however, the statute directs
agencies to disclose "(a]ny reasonably segregable portion of a record .. . after deletion of the
portions which are exempt under [section (b)OM9)]." 5 U.S.C ง 552(b).
In this case, EPA has withheld purely factual reports submitted to the ACOE by
outside commercial contractors concerning real estate appraisals needed to justify EPA's
expenditure of public funds. EPA has withheld these records in their entirety and without any
effort to comply with federal policy of maximum disclosure under FOLA. GE believes that EPA
must disclose these records because they are not exempt under FOLA. At a minimum, however,
EPA must release any and all segregable portions of the records to GE.
1 ( continued)
withheld
-3-
-------
Ms Jeralene Green
August 20, 1997
Page 4
A. The Letters Are Not Exempt from Disclosure Under Exemption 5J
EPA appears to allege that the withheld documents &D within the so-called
"deliberative process" privilege under 5 U.S.C. ง SS2(bX5). As a general matter, the privilege
permits an agency to refuse disclosure where the documents "reflect rncommfrtdations and
deliberations comprising [the] process by which governmental decisions and policies are
formulated." NLRB v Sean. Roebuck A Co.. 421 U.S. 132, 150 (1975) (internal quotations an
citation omitted). In addition, the privilege only permits nondisclosure where disclosure would
inhibit candor in the decision-making process. Army Times Publishing Co v Department of Ajf
Force. 998 F 2d 1067, 1070(DC. Cir. 1993).
These records are clearly not exempt. First, this exemption, by its terms, applies
only to "inter-agency or intra-agency" documents. Federal Open Market Comrn v. MerriH), 443
US. 340, 352 (1979) Here, the withheld records are not inter-agency or intra-agency
memoranda or letters, but are merely reports prepared by outside consultants and transmitted to
the ACOE Such records do not merit protection because disclosure would not inhibit the
outsiders' candor American SocV of Pension Actuaries v Pension Benefit Guar Corp, No. 82-
2806, slip op. at 3 (D.D.C. July 22, 1983); sec Knight v POD No. 87-480, slip op. at 2-3
(D.D.C. Dec. 7, 1987) (correspondence with contractors not intra-agency). The appraisal of
property is a common occurrence in the commercial world. It is inconceivable that disclosing thi
steps in what should be a rote process would inhibit the candor of a commercial contractor
retained to provide this essentially factual information.
Second, there is nothing "deliberative" about these documents These are purely
factual reports prepared by real estate appraisers. To be "deliberative," records must not only b<
pre-decisional, but also must "express[] opinions on legal or policy matters." Vaughn v Rosen.
523 F.2d 1136, 1143-44 (DC. Cir. 1975). These records do not express opinions at all, but
merely provide cost appraisals for real estate - analyses routinely done thousands of times every
year by non-legal and non-government professionals that have neither legal nor policy
components. Such purely factual material is not deliberative and would "generally be available f
discovery." EPA v. Mink. 410 U.S. 73, 87-88 (1973); see also Assembly of Cซl v United Statt
Pep1! of Commerce. 968 F 2d 916, 921 -22 (9th Cir. 1992) (holding adjusted census figures to b
factual and therefore not exempt).
Third, even if the reports were considered "deliberative," disclosure would not
inhibit candor in the decisionmaking process. Federal policy requires agencies faced with
technical exemptions to determine whether disclosure of the records "foreseeably harms" some
governmental interest. Army Times Publishing, 998 F.2d at 1072; see Attorney General's
Memorandum for Heads of Departments and Agencies Regarding Freedom of Information Act,
4-5 (Oct. 4, 1993) In this case, the role of the real estate appraiser should be completely
objective There would be no incentive for the appraiser to falsify or amplify the appraisals of r<
-4-
-------
Ms. Jenlene Greco
August 20, 1997
PtgeS
estate, and no benefit would inure to EPA in so doing. Thus, these records cannot properly be
withheld.
Finally, even if the reports qualified for this exemption, EPA has effectively waived
the deliberative process privilege with respect to any appraisals. As with any prrvflega, tfat
deliberative process privilege can be waived through the authorized disclosure to a non-federal
party. North Dtltoti v Andrut. 581 F.2d 177, !79(8thCir. 1978V Mead Pita Central Inc v
Department of Air Force. 566 F.2d 242, 253-54 (D.C. Or. 1977). Here, EPA has released the
one record related to these appraisals that is arguably deliberative" - the ACOE September 1996
memorandum to EPA transmitting and comparing the appraisal reports and recommending to
EPA one over the other. As discussed above, this document is in the public administrative record
By releasing this record to the public, EPA has waived the privilege with respect to any
underlying appraisal reports.
EPA has also waived the privilege by expressly referring to and incorporating real
estate appraisals in the FFS. A deliberative record may lose its protection if a final decisionmaker
adopts or incorporates by reference the otherwise exempt record. In particular, implicit
incorporation or adoption may be found where a decisionmaker accepts a recommendation
without providing a basis for that decision. American Soc*y of Pension Actuaries v IRS, 746 F
Supp. 188, 191 (D.D.C. 1990). Here, EPA expressly adopted as the basis for its permanent
relocation cost estimate "April 1996" appraisals, without providing the actual appraisal figures or
an explanation of the reliability of those figures. Because EPA expressly incorporated by
reference appraisals conducted in 1996, EPA has waived any privilege with respect to those
appraisals.
Because these letters are not exempt from disclosure, EPA must release them to
GE.
B. The Letters Are Not Exempt From Disclosure Under Exemption 7.
The requested appraisal reports are not exempt either from disclosure by 5 U S C
ง 552(bX7XA) or (7)(C). In order to be exempt under section 552(bX7), records must contain
"information compiled for law enforcement purposes." LL These appraisals do not relate in any
way to "law enforcement." They provide EPA with factual information which is being used by
EPA in carrying out an essentially administrative function selection of a Superfund remedy that
EPA has proposed will provide for the provision of permanent relocation. Not only is the
Superrund remedy selection process an essentially public process, but EPA is required by the
statute and its own regulations to establish a public record supporting its choice of remedy and to
demonstrate the cost-effectiveness of its proposed remedy.
-5-
-------
Ms. Jeralene Green
August 20, 1997
Page 6
Even assuming these records were "compiled for law enforcement purpose*, * EPA
cannot categorically withhold them. Under section 552(bX7), cs with section 552(bX5), EPA
miy withhold such records only if disclosure could resuh in some "foreseeable harm." Attorney
General's Memorandum at 4-5 (Oct. 4, 1993). Subsection (bXT) delineates the types of
foreseeable harm that may justify withholding eoforcemcnt-rdated records. 5U.S.C. ง
552(bXTKAKF). In this case, EPA aOeges disclosure 'could reasonably be expected to interfere
with enforcement proceedings" and "could reasonably be expected to constitute an unwarranted
invasion of personal privacy." li ง 552(bX7XA), (C). Neither harm foreseeably exists in this
case.
First, as discussed above, there are no "enforcement proceedings" with which
disclosure of the real estate appraisals could interfere. The appraisals are related to EPA's
proposed provision of permanent relocation to displaced individuals. Selection of a remedy under
CERCLA is an administrative function, not "law enforcement." Under Section 121(a) of
CERCLA, EPA is required to select a remedy that provides for "cost-effective" response, and-is
required to "evaluate] the cost effectiveness of proposed alternative remedial actions." This is
essentially a comparative analysis and, critically, it must be fully exposed to public scrutiny.
Under section 11300(1) of CERCLA, EPA is required to establish an administrative record
supporting the selection of a response action. EPA is required to provide for public participation
in the remedy selection process, CERCLA section 113(kXlXB), including providing public notice
"accompanied by a brief analysis of the [proposed] plan." CERCLA section 113(kXl)(B)(i) Th<
analysis of costs is particularly important when EPA proposes permanent relocation, because
permanent relocation is authorized only when it is "more cost-effective than and environmentally
preferable" to other remedial alternatives, or may otherwise be necessary to protect the public
health or welfare. " CERCLA section 101(24) (emphasis added). In short, EPA can only
select a remedy and permanent relocation in particular - after engaging in a public
administrative process that includes justification of the Agency's cost estimates.
The National Contingency Plan ("NCP") promulgated to implement these statutory
authorities makes clear EPA's obligation to expose its cost estimates to public critique. Under the
NCP, cost is one of the "primary balancing criteria" that EPA uses to evaluate alternative
remedies. 40 C.F.R. ง 300.430(f). EPA is required further to "establish an administrative record
that contains the documents that form the basis for the selection of a response action." 40 C.F.R.
ง 300 800(a). That record should include "[d]ocuments containing factual information, data and
analysis of the factual information, and data that may form a basis for the selection of a response
action." 40 C.F R. ง 300.810(aXl). Since costs are a critical component of the remedy-selection
process, particularly when permanent relocation is proposed, there is no way that EPA can satisfy
its administrative record obligations without providing to the public the basic information
supporting its choice of the remedy. In this case, the appraisals are critical to EPA's proposed
remedial action, particularly since the only information that EPA has placed in the record is
millions of dollars apart from the cost figure announced in the PRAP In short, the remedy
-6-
-------
Ms. Jenlene Green
August 20, 1997
Page?
selection process is an essentially public, administrative process, not a law enforcement process,
and EPA is bound by statute and its own regulations to divulge just the type of information rt is
attempting to shield in this instance.
Second, no conceivable "harm' could flow from the disclosure of the* appraisals.
The only potential result of disclosure - the one EPA is dearly and Impropaly trying to avoid -
is a challenge to EPA's PRAP Inasmuch is EPA wiD be spending public monies, however, such a
result is the necessary and indeed desired result in a democratic and open government Even if
EPA believes, looking toward some future action to recover the cost of permanent relocation,
that disclosure might harm such proceedings, the only "harm" again would be scrutiny of EPA's
actions, and EPA in no event would be justified in withholding data that would form the basis of
its cost-recovery claims against private parties.
Finally, disclosure of the appraisal reports could not "constitute an unwarranted
invasion of personal privacy." The fair market value of real estate is a matter of public
information The public has ready access to similar information through public real estate records,
including property deeds and tax appraisals. Moreover, the information was not obtained from a
private source, but was objectively determined by an impartial third party. Thus, there can be no
reasonable expectation of privacy for this information. It cannot be the type of personal
information that FOIA was intended to protect.
Even if the information were deemed to implicate a privacy interest, EPA must
determine whether a disclosure of personal information is otherwise warranted. In so doing, EPA
must conduct a balancing of the private and public interests involved. Massey v FBI, 3 F 3d 620,
624-25 (2d Cir. 1993). In this case, disclosure serves the public interest of "'openfing] agency
action to the light of public scrutiny.1" Nation Magazine v U.S. Customs Serv.. 71 F.3d 885, 894
(DC. Cir. 1995) (quoting Rose. 425 U.S. at 372), sec US Dep*t of Justice v Reporter* Tomm
for Freedom of Press. 489 U.S. 749, 773 (1989) ("Official information that sheds light on an
agency's performance of its statutory duties falls squarely within [FOIA's] statutory purpose")
Here, the public interest in scrutinizing EPA's use of public money and performance of hs
administrative functions outweighs any private interests implicated by disclosure of the requested
appraisal reports. The open decision-making required under CERCLA mandates disclosure of
this informatioa
Thus, the withheld appraisal reports are not exempt from disclosure, and EPA
should release them to GE.
7-
-------
Ms. JeraJene Green
August 20, 1997
Ptge 8
C. At a Minimum EPA Must Disclose Segregtble Portions of the Requested
Porresnond*
The mere fact that a record contains exempt information does not authorize EPA
to withhold the entire record. FOIA mandates disclosure of "[ajny reasonably segregable portion
of a record ... after deletion of the portions which are exempt* 5 U.S.C. ง 552(b) EPA has
withheld entire documents on the grounds they contain exempt information. Even assuming the
correctness of EPA's determination that the exemptions ched apply (which GE maintains is not
correct), EPA must redact only such information as is exempt and then provide GE with the
remaining portions of the appraisal reports. Proper redaction of the records would provide GE
with the factual information necessary to evaluate EPA's proposed expenditure of public funds,
and would better permit GE to understand EPA's basis for withholding certain portions. EPA has
improperly withheld entire records and should, at a minimum, release segregable portions of thoซ
records.
D. The Public Interest Favors Disclosure
Finally, the FOIA exemptions are not mandatory, and even if a record falls within
an exemption, it can be disclosed at the Agency's discretion if "no important purpose would be
served by withholding the records." 40 C.F.R. ง 2.119(a), Chrysler Corp.. 441 U.S. at 290-94
The President and the Attorney General have established an express policy under FOIA of
"maximum responsible disclosure of government informatioa" Attorney General's Memorandurr
at 4-5, sfiฃ President's Memorandum for Heads of Departments and Agencies Regarding Freedon
of Information Act (Oct. 4, 1993). To that end, the Attorney General, applying a "presumption c
disclosure," will no longer defend in district court agency nondisclosures based solely on a
"substantial legal basis," and encourages discretionary disclosures of exempt records whenever
possible. Attorney General's Memorandum at 4.
In the Denial, EPA has not even attempted to justify withholding the appraisal
reports. Indeed, no important purpose would be served by withholding them, and, conversely, tr.
public interest would be greatly served by their disclosure. EPA Region ITs proper use of public
monies in the provision of permanent relocation compels the disclosure of these records.
-8-
-------
Ms. Jeralene Green
August 20, 1997
Page 9
Relief Requested
For the foregoing reasons, GE respectfully requests that the records listed in the
appendix to the Denial be released in their entirety.
*
Please fed free to contact me should you need additional information. Thank you
for your prompt attention to this appeal.
Sincerely yours,
Leonard H. Shen
Enclosures
-9
-------
All* 99'f7 I 1 >9I PR TO
DC
309
Junt 30, 1997
VIA FACSIMILE # (212) 637-5046
A U.S. MAE-
US. Environmental Protection Agency
Freedom of Inform ation Officer
290 Broadway, 26th Floor (CD)
New York, New York 10007
Ann.: Ms. Shantefla Jackson
Re: Hoboken Grand Street Mercury Sitft
Dear Ms. Jackson:
This is a request for information pursuant to the Freedom of Information Act, U.S.(
Section 552, and 40 CFR Part 2. and any other statutes, rules, or regulations entitling me u
the information/documentation requested.
Specifically I request a copy of a January 1996 technical report prepared by the EP
Region 2 office that includes an appraisal of the property at 722 Grand Street, Hoboken, h
I understand the Agency is required by Law to provide a written response to this
request within ten (10) dayi. Please call me immediately if any of the dctcnptioa provide.
above requires inierpretatioo,
Thซ undersigned will pay all reasonable costs of complying with thij request that i
due to the United States.
Very Truly Youra,
Anne E. Cromwell
cc. Jane Gardner
David Thompson
-------
ATTACHMENT 2
ai'S? 1710.9 P* TO SIDLIYtAUtTlN DC
UNITeO tTATCS ENVWOfMENTAl PROTlCnON AQENCY
RMlONt
tMMOAOWAY
NEWYOWC.NY 1000M1M
CKBTUI1D MAIL
zcizrt USQUZSTED
Anna ฃ. cromvell, Paralegal Consultant.
General Electric Company
3135 Baa ton Turnpike/ W1-L8
Fairfield, Connecticut 06431
Re: rrซซdoa of Infomation Raquast, &XM f 02-BZV-1S43-97
Dซar Ma. cronvell:
This is in raapans* to your stcond Pr*ซdon of Information
Act ("roiA") rซquซซt regarding 722 Grand Straซt Mercury sitซ,
Hoboken, Kev Jซrsซy datad June 30, 1997. Thซ United Statoa
Environaental Protection Agency, Region II ("EPA") does not have
any appraisals for the Grand Street Mercury Site ('Site') dated
January 1996. However, EPA does have appraisals for the Site
dated July 1996, and EPA therefore assuae* that you are seeking
the July 1996 appraisals.
we are unable to provide you vith the requested records
because they are exenpt froa mandatory disclosure by virtue of
the 5 U.S.C. 5S2(b)(S), (7) (A) and (7) (c) exemptions. An
iteaized lict of the records which are being withheld, along with
the basis for withholding is provided on the enclosure to this
letter. '
You nay appeal this denial by addressing, within 30 days of
your receipt of this letter, your written appeal to Freedo* of
Information officer (A-101) , United states Environmental
Protection Agency, 401 N Street, S.W., Washington, D.C. 20460.
Your appeal should refer to the KIN number listed above, the date
of this determination, and ay name, title and address.
-------
ซ ป7 17,ซ F. TO ป.DLtr.ftUปT,H ,
Pleas* contact, catnsrina Garypis at (212) 637-3131, should
you hava any questions concern ing this Bat tar.
Sinear*ly yours,
Walter B. Hugdan
Regional Counsel
Enclosures: Index of vithheld docunanta
cc: i/Leonard Shen
General Electric Coapany
Mail Stop W1L
313? Baa ton TurnpiJte
Fairfield, Connecticut 06431
Jane Gardner
General Electric Coapany
Hail Stop WXL
3135 Easrton Turnpike
Fairfield, Connecticut 06431
Langley Shook, Esq.
Sidley & Austin
1722 Sye Street, M.W.
Washington, DC 20006
-------
8H43 Fft T0 iiDi.iYa.AufTIN DC V.*
OCPAATMCKT OF THI AfUIV
AUMOW MlTajCT. OK AIWT COftM OF
P.O. eox ms
ALTMOM.MO Z1S0.171I
CfiNAB-RE-EC2JO-12a) 6 September 1996
MEMORANDUM FOfc ChieC Red Estate Section, Ntw Jersey Field Office Ease Brunswick.
New Jersey*
SUBJECT: 722 Grand Avenue, Hobokfn, New Jersey
1. Attached are two (2) cc?ies of appraiseJrcpora for each iiuir^^
Grind A venue, Hobokea, New Jersey. The appraisal* were performed by Anthony Lame
Realty Services sad Nationwide Consulting Company, IDC.
2. Both reports were found to be icoeptabte ioMcordance withtbeicopeofthecoctrtct A
review of each will reveal a difference in the estimated values of each unit* which reflects the
perceptions of each appraiser relative to the value of each individual unit as if "clean." This
difference is consistent with perceptions of various individual! in the marketplace and reflects
what is to be considered the range of value for subject condominium unhs.
3. Based upon my review, I believe that the values indicated by Anthony Lcma are closer to the
"obtainable' sales price for subject units "as clean," and If available for sale on the market. The
Nationwide report buttresses the estimate of value prepared by Lama. A unit-by-wit
comparison is attached.
4. TV r^wvx i>wซi.jrttg fh* vmW of tte atfurmre for any tuft otfagr ftan regktefttUl mud
reflecting its fee simple value as a ttefle use property is currently under review at NAD. This
rcpon will bซ forjซ^wd^ to yoซM soon as his approved. There were two reports of the property
ooaiingkonit basis Cor the sole itasoo of establishing a range of value^ A deuty m receiving
this second report has resulted in the rather unseemly delay for the delivery of these reports.
Please cocrvcy ray deepest apologies to. the patient and sซi*ปrtrw employee* of the
Environmental Protection Agency, and thank them for me for their patience.
End Thcdnas/.Ocrooikoc, MAI, ASA
0 Acting OueC Appmtal Branca
4005^9
-------
TO SIDLIYftAUSTlN
.ป. MA RJBOIOJT iz - RICOIM MIBO VZTCKUD
7/1/9* Lattar froa L. Coughlan and A. Lซna (Anthony F.
Realty 8ซrvioซซ( Inc.) to T. GซronlXoป (Xrvy Corp* of
>MX* fom wivnoxปzmt s u.t.c. 552(b)(5), (?) (x> and
(C)
7/1/96 L*ttซr from L. coughlan ind A, L*aa (Anthony F. Laaa
Realty Sarvic**^ Inc.) to T' GtronUco* (Amy Corps of
BASIS ro* VZTnotDZWOt 5 U.S.C. 552(D)(S>, (7) (A) 4nd
t
7/9/96 Lซtt*r fro* 0, Noonan (Nปtlonwida Conrultirvj Company,
Inc.) to w. Eppป (Amy Corps of Snginaara)
BA8ZP FOR WITHSOLBJW: 5 U.S.C. 552 (b) (5). (7) (A) and
-------
flU ?'? ttt43
TO tIDLlYปAUlTlN DC P.
APlSON OF UNIT VAL1TFA
$24*000
$31*000
010,000
$310,000
$315.000
$315,000
$310400
$310.000
$365.000
$360.000
$355,000
$355,000
$400.000
$420.000
$410,000
2A
2B
2C
2D
3A
3B
3C
3D
4A
4B
4C
40
5A
SB
5C
5D
$351.000
S247.000
S30SJOOO
$325.000
$316,000
$299,000
S3 10,009
$299,000
$324.000
$390.000
$364.000
$390.000
$464.000
$459,000
$490.000
400530
-------
ATTACHMENT 4
Administrative Record Index
-------
REMOVAL ACTION BRANCH
AUAUMSTKA11VE KELURD
GRAND STREET SITE
HOBOKEN, HUDSON COUNTY, NEW JERSEY
Prepared for:
Jack Harmon, On-Scene Coordinator
U. S. EPA Region 77
Removal Action Branch
Edison, New Jersey 08837
Prepared by:
Region II Superfund Technical Assessment and Response Team
Roy F. Weston, Inc
Federal Programs Division
Edison, New Jersey 08837
DCN #: START-02-F-00134
TDD #: 02-95-12-0009
March 1996
-------
GRAND STREET SITE
ADMINISTRATIVE RECORD FILE
CONTENTS
BACKGROUND & SITE IDENTIFICATION SECTION 1.0
REMOVAL RESPONSE SECTION 2.0
HEALTH ASSESSMENTS SECTION 3.0
PUBLIC PARTICIPATION SECTION 4.0
TECHNICAL SOURCES AND GUIDANCE DOCUMENTS SECTION 5.0
ENFORCEMENT SECTION 6.0
FEBRUARY 12, 1997'- REVISION i
-------
GRAND STREET MERCURY SITE
ADMINISTRATIVE RECORD FILE
INDEX OF DOCUMENTS
1.0 SITE IDENTIFICATION
1.1 Background - RCRA and other information
P.
P.
P.
P.
P.
P.
P.
100001-
100005
100006-
100007
100018-
100023
100024-
100256
100257-
100258
100259-
100260
100261-
100262
100263-
100266
Instructions for the Installation of Cooper Hewitt
Electric Lamps, Type Double P, For Direct Current
Circuits, Cooper Hewitt Electric Company, Eighth
and Grand Streets, Hoboken, N.J., undated.
Installation and Operation of Direct Current
Uviarc Laboratory Outfits and Uviarc Test
Cabinets, Cooper Hewitt Electric Company, Hoboken,
N.J., a General Electric Organization, undated.
Instruction Book, Cooper Hewitt Lamps, Type P -
Straight Tubes, Type P - U-Shaped Tubes, and Type
P - M-Shaped Tubes, Cooper Hewitt Electric
Company, Hoboken, N.J., undated.
A Complete Treatise on Industrial Illumination
with Mercury Vapor Lamps, by Mr. George J. Taylor,
B.S., S.M., E.E., Commercial Engineering
Department, General Electric Vapor Lamp Company,
Hoboken, N.J., undated.
Figure 3 - Quality Tool & Die Proposed Sample
Location Map, prepared by Jenny Engineering
Corporation, undated.
Quality Tool & Die Case Summary, undated.
(Attachment: Letter to Mr. David Pascale, Quality
Tool & Die, Inc., from Mr. Kenneth T. Hart,
Assistant Director, Industrial Site Evaluation
Element, New Jersey Department of Environmental
Protection and Energy (NJDEPE), re: Negative
Declaration by operator dated December 4, 1992,
February 8, 1993 .)
Quality Tool & Die Case Summary, undated.
Pages from the Sampling and Testing Plan, undated.
-------
P. 100267- Production Facilities List, prepared by Quality
100273 Tool & Die Co., Inc., undated.
P. 100274- Certificate of Incorporation of Quality Tool & Die
100289 Co., Inc., prepared by Roger R. Sciorsci, Esq.,
February 24, 1940. (Attachments: (1) Annual Report
by a Domestic Corporation, Quality Tool & Die Co.,
Inc., March 15, 1940, (2) Notice to file an Annual
Report, Quality Tool & Die Co., Inc., August 21,
1959, (3) Certificate of Change of Agent of
Quality Tool & Die Co., Inc., July 1, 1963, (4)
Form 12 - Certificate of Change of Location of the
Principal Office of the Quality Tool & Die Co.,
Inc., June 1, 1966, (5) Form 11 - Certificate of
Change of Agent, Quality Tool & Die Co., Inc.,
June 1, 1966, and, (6) Certificate of Change of
Registered Office or Registered Agent, or both,
Quality Tool & Die Co., Inc., undated.)
P. 100290- Amended Certificate of Incorporation Before
100315 Payment of Capital Stock of Excelsior Tool & Die
Co., Inc., and Certificate of Incorporation of
Majoda Tool & Manufacturing Corp., January 29,
1952. (Attachments: (1) Notice to file Annual
Report, Majoda Tool & Manufacturing;Corp., August
31, 1959, (2) Certificate of Change'of Agent and
Location of Principal Office of Majoda Tool &
Manufacturing Corp., December 2, 1963, (3) Form 12
- Certificate of Change of Location of the
Principal Office of The Majoda Tool &
Manufacturing Corp., June 17, 1963, (4) Form 11 -
Certificate of Change of Agent, June 17, 1963, (5)
Form 12 - Certificate of Change of Location of the
Principal Office of The Majoda Tool &
Manufacturing Corp., November 18, 1966, (6) Form
11 - Certificate of Change of Agent, November 18,
1966, (7) Certificate of Change of Registered
Office or Registered Agent, or Both, June 19,
1974, (8) Certificate of Change of Registered
Office or Registered Agent, or Both, July 18,
1979.)
P. 100316- Report of Examination of Title: Title Vested in
100323 Fee Simple in John J. Pascale and Quality Tool &
Die Co., Inc., prepared by Law Office of S. Paul
Epstein, December 7, 1973. (Note: This document
is CONFIDENTIAL. It can be located in the
Superfund Record Center at 290 Broadway - 18th
Floor, N.Y., N.Y., 10007.)
-------
P. 100324- Indenture between Ms. Marie Pascale, divorced and
100328 Mr. John Pascale, Sr., divorced, of Plots 14 and
15A City Block 85, and by street address 720 to
732 Grand Street, and 727 to 733 Adams Street,
Hoboken, New Jersey, January 30, 1974.
(Attachments: Deed and State of New Jersey
Affidavit of Consideration.) (Note: This document
is CONFIDENTIAL. It can be located in the
Superfund Record Center at 290 Broadway - 18th
Floor, N.Y., N.Y., 10007.)
P. 100329- Deed (w/ attachments) between Grantor, Mr. John
100334 J. Pascale and Quality Tool & Die Co., Inc., and
Grantee, Mr. David P. Pascale, for Parcel 1: 720
- 732 Grand Street, and Parcel 2: 727 -733 Adams
Street, Hoboken, New Jersey, May 24, 1979. (Note:
This document is CONFIDENTIAL. It can be located
in the Superfund Record Center at 290 Broadway -
18th Floor, N.Y., N.Y., 10007.)
P. 100335- Summary Notice, Quality Tool & Die Co., Inc., July
100335 2, 1990.
P. 100336- Environmental Update to Clients, Co-Counsel, and
100337 Friends, from Mr. Edward A. Hogan, Chairman,
Department of Environmental Law, Porzio, Bromberg,
& Newman, re: New ECRA Policy for
Decontamination/Decommissioning of Building
Interiors, January 8, 1993.
P. 100338- Letter to Mr. Robert Schiffmacher, and Mr. Matthew
100339 Schley, c/o Robert Kaye, Esq., Chasan, Leyner, et
al., from Mr. James A. Rogers, President, Rogers
Environmental Management, re: Quality Tool & Die
Co., Inc., Due Diligence/Pre-Purchase Review,
January 12, 1993.
P. 100340- Letter to Mr. Robert Schiffmacher, c/o Robert
100341 Kaye, Esq., Chasan, Leyner, et al., from Mr. James
A. Rogers, President, Rogers Environmental
Management, re: Quality Tool & Die Co.; Hoboken,
N.J., Due Diligence/Pre-Purchase Review, January
19, 1993.
P. 100342- Letter to Mr. Robert Schiffmacher, c/o Robert
100371 Kaye, Esq., Chasan, Leyner, et al.,ffrom Mr.
Alfred LoPilato, Health and Safety Manager, Rogers
Environmental Management, Inc., re: Quality Tool
and Die Co.; Hoboken, N.J., February 9, 1993.
(Attachments: (1) Letter to Mr. David Pascale,
Quality Tool & Die Co., Inc., from Mr. Maurice
-------
p.
Migliarino, Section Supervisor, Bureau of
Environmental Evaluation and Cleanup
Responsibility Assessment, NJDEPE, re: Quality
Tool & Die Co., Inc., September 22, 1992, (2)
Letter (w/ attachments) to Mr. Michael Buriani,
Case Manager, NJDEPE, from Mr. Michael Edelson,
Scarpone & Edelson, re: Quality Tool & Die Co.,
Inc., December 15, 1992, and, (3) Letter (w/
attachments) to Mr. Michael Buriani, Case Manager,
NJDEPE, from Mr. Michael Edelson, Scarpone &
Edelson, re: Quality Tool & Die Co., Inc.,
December 10, 1992.)
100372- Facsimile transmittal page to Mr. Alfred LoPilato,
100376 Rogers Environmental Management, Inc., from Mr.
Jonathan B. James, Chasan, Leyner, Tarrant &
Lamparello, re: attached letter, February 11,
1993. (Attachment: Letter (w/ attachments) to
Jonathan B. James, Esq., Chasan, Leyner, Tarrant &
Lamparello, from Mr. Val Mandel, Scarpone &
Edelson, re: Sale of Commercial Real Estate in
Hoboken by David P. Pascale, February 10, 1993.)
100377- Letter to Mr. Michael Buriani, Division of
100403 Responsible Party Site Remediation, NJDEPE, from
Ms. Rose M. Mehrtens, Project Manager, Rogers
Environmental Management, Inc., re: Former ECRA
Case #90362, February 4, 1994. (Attachments: (1)
Letter to Ms. Rose Mehrtens, Rogers Environmental
Management, Inc., from Mr. Maurice Migliarino,
Section Supervisor, Bureau of Environmental
Evaluation and Cleanup Responsibility Assessment,
NJDEPE, re: Quality Tool & Die Co., '-Inc., February
17, 1994, (2) Letter to Mr. David Pascale, Quality
Tool & Die Co., Inc., from Mr. Kenneth T. Hart,
Assistant Director, Industrial Site Evaluation
Element, NJDEPE, re: Negative Declaration by
operator dated December 4, 1992, February 8, 1993,
(3) Letter (w/attachments) to Mr. Michael Buriani,
Case Manager, NJDEPE, from Mr. Michael Edelson,
Scarpone & Edelson, re: Quality Tool & Die Co.,
Inc., January 28, 1993, (4) Industrial Site
Evaluation Element, Bureau of Environmental
Evaluation and Cleanup Responsibility Assessment,
Report of Inspection, prepared by Mr. Michael
Buriani, July 17, 1990.)
100404- Letter to Mr. Steven Keough, Grand Street Artist
100405 Partnership, from Mr. Christopher Kirby, Project
Manager, Environmental Waste Management
Associates, Inc., re: Proposal for Professional
-------
p.
p.
p.
p.
p.
100406-
100411
100412-
100412
100413-
100414
100415-
100433
100434-
100434
100435-
100439
100440-
100440
100441-
100616
Services, 722 Grand Street, Hoboken, N.J., May 24,
1995.
Handwritten letter to all partners, from Shun-Yi
Chen and Ching-Huang Chung, re: Cleaning process
at 722 Grand Street, October 26, 1995.
Letter to Mr. Steve Keough, Grand Street Artist
Partnership, from Mr. David W. Williamson,
President, D.W.W. Enterprises, Inc., re:
Completion of services, October 30, 1995.
Letter to Mr. Steven Keough, Grand Street Artist
Partnership, from Mr. John Szalkowski, Senior
Environmental Scientist, Environmental Waste
Management Associates, Inc., re: Progress Report,
722 Grand Street, Hoboken, N.J., November 1, 1995.
Facsimile transmission form to Mr. Stephen R.
Spector, Spector & Dimin, P.A., from Mr. Stephen
A. Jaraczewski, Detail Associates, Inc., re:
Enclosed draft report for the airborne
determination of mercury vapor presence, November
13, 1995. (Attachment: Report: Mercury Vapor
Survey, 722 Grand Street, Hoboken, N.J., prepared
by Detail Associates, Inc., November 8, 1995.)
Letter to Mr. John Szalkowski, Environmental Waste
Management Associates, Inc., from Mr. David W.
Williamson, President, D.W.W. Enterprises, Inc.,
re: Mercury Remediation, Apartment 4A, 722 Grand
Street, Hoboken, N.J., November 16, 1995.
Lettejr to Mr. Stephen Keough, Grand Street
Partnership, from Mr. John Szalkowski, Senior
Environmental Scientist, Environmental Waste
Management Associates, Inc., re: Mercury
Contamination, 722 Grand Street, Hoboken, N.J. ,
November 20, 1995.
Handwritten memo on Communications Center
Notification Report, to Mr. Jim Dalon, from Mr.
Stan Delikat, re: Request for Assistance, December
22, 1995.
Letter to Virginia Curry, Esq., U.S. EPA, Region
II, from Ms. Jane W. Gardner, Counsel-Remediation
Programs, General Electric, re: Hoboken--Request
for Newark Lamp Plant Cleanup Plan, February 21,
1996. (Attachment: Report: Newark Cleanup Plan for
the Newark Plant, Newark, New Jersey,(Appendix Q -
-------
Site Drawings Missing) prepared by GE Company,
prepared for State of New Jersey Department of
Environmental Protection, April 30, 1985.)
2.0 REMOVAL RESPONSE
2.1 Sampling and Analysis Plans
P. 200001- Plan: Quality Assurance Sampling Plan for Sgfc-
200139 Surface Soil, undated. (Attachments: (1) Figure 1
- Preliminary Site Locations, Grand Street Mercury
Site, Hoboken, N.J-, prepared by U.S. EPA
Environmental Response Team, March 27, 1996, (2)
Table 1 - Field Sampling Summary, undated, and,
(3) Appendix A - Superfund Program Representative
Sampling Guidance, Volume 1: Soil, Interim Final,
Quality Assurance Sampling Plan, prepared by The
U.S. EPA Committee on Representative Sampling for
the Removal Program, prepared for the
Environmental Response Branch, U.S.lEPA,
Headquarters, March 1996.)
P. 200140- Mercury Abatement/Encapsulation Specifications,
200142 Grand Street Artist Partnership, 722 Grand Street,
Hoboken, N.J., prepared by Environmental Waste
Management Associates, Inc., undated.
P. 200143- Arizona Instrument, Certificate of Instrument
200143 Calibration (w/ attachment), inspected by D.
Carmen, December 29, 1995.
P. 200144- Arizona Instrument, Certificate of Instrument
200145 Calibration (w/ attachment), inspected by D.
Carmen, January 12, 1996.
P. 200146- Arizona Instrument, Certificate of Instrument
200147 Calibration (w/ attachment), inspected by D. Hunt,
January 30, 1997. '
P. 200148- Mercury Abatement/Encapsulation Specifications,
200171 Apartments 5A & 5D, 722 Grand Street, Hoboken,
N.J., prepared by Environmental Waste Management
Associates, Inc., prepared for Grand Street Artist
Partnership, August 25, 1997.
2.2 Sampling and Analysis Data/Chain of Custody Forms
P.
200172-
200176
Urine Mercury Testing, 722 Grand Street, Hoboken,
N.J., December 29, 1995.
-------
200177-
200182
P.
P.
P.
P.
P.
P.
200183-
200259
200260-
200418
200419-
200425
200426-
200435
200436-
200437
200438-
200450
Memorandum Report to Mr. Rodney Turpin, U.S.
EPA/ERT Work Assignment Manager, through Mr. Vinod
Kansal, REAC Analytical Section Leader, from Mr.
Michael Morganti, REAC Task Leader, re: Executive
Summary Report Volume 1 - Grand Street Mercury
Site. Hoboken. N. J. r February 13, 1996.
Memorandum Report to Mr. Rodney Turpin, U.S.
EPA/ERT Work Assignment Manager, through Mr. Vinod
Kansal, REAC Analytical Section Leader, from Mr.
Michael Morganti, REAC Task Leader, re: Phase 1
Air Monitoring and Sampling, Volume 2 - Trip
Reportf Grand Street Mercury- Site, Hoboken, N.J.r
February 14, 1996.
Report: Volume 3, Final Report, Grand Street
Mercury Site, Phase II - Air Sampling, 722 Grand
Street,. Hoboken, N.J.f prepared by Roy F. West on,
Inc., prepared for U.S. EPA/ERT, February 1996.
Report: Sampling Trip Report, Grand Street
Mercury Site, prepared by Mr. Thomas O'Neill, Roy
F- Weston, Inc., prepared for U.S. EPA, Region II,
April 8, 1996.
Analytical Report. Grand Street Mercury
Report:
Site. Hoboken. N.J.
Inc.
prepared by Roy F. Weston,
prepared for U.S. EPA-ERT, May 1996.
Chain of Custody Record, Roy F. Weston, Inc., U.S.
EPA, Region II START, July 23, 1996.
GE/EPA Meeting, GE Mercury Remediation Projects,
GE Demolition Cost Estimate for Grand Street Site,
Hoboken, N.J., February 6, 1997. (Attachments: (1)
GE Lighting, Mercury Encapsulation Projects,
Jackson Lamp and Glass Plants, Newark Lamp Plant,
Cuyahoga Lamp Plant, February 6, 1997, and, (2)
Directions to Grand Street Mercury Site, undated.)
Letter to Mr. Jack Harmon, Task Monitor, Removal
Action Branch, U.S. EPA, Region II,'from Mr.
Thomas O'Neill, Roy F. Weston, Inc., re: Grand
Street Site Air Monitoring Data Sheets, May 12,
1997.
2.7 Correspondence
P- 200598- Letter to Mr. Mike Salter, Grand Street Artist
200623 Partnership, from Mr. Gary Annibal, CIH, Enpak
Services Company, Inc., re: Mercury Sampling in
200451-
200597
-------
p.
200624-
200629
P.
200630-
200631
P.
200632-
200649
200650-
200651
P.
200652-
200653
Hoboken, N.J., March 28, 1995. (Attachment: An
Industrial Hygiene Survey of Mercury Levels
conducted at 720-732 Grand Street, Hoboken, N.J.,
March 11, 1995).
Memorandum to Ms. Janet Smolenski, Bureau of Field
Operations, Case Assignment Section, from Mr. J.
Doyle, re: Quality Tool and Die, Urinalysis
Testing of Residents for Accelerated Levels of
Mercury Poisoning, undated. (Attachments: (1)
NJDEP, Communications Center Notification Report,
December 22, 1995, (2) Newspaper article, "Mayor
wants to probe into contaminated condos", from the
Trenton Times, December 31, 1995, and, (3) Case
Assignment Tracking List, Quality Tool and Die
Co., Inc., April 24, 1990.)
Memorandum to Mr. Stephen D. Luftig, Director,
Office of Emergency and Remedial Response,'U.S.
EPA, Region II, from Ms. Kathlen Callahan,
Director, Emergency and Remedial Response, U.S.
EPA, Region II, re: Request for Concurrence in a
Nationally Significant Removal Action at the Grand
Street Mercury Site in Hoboken, New Jersey,
December 29, 1995.
Letter to Mr. Jeff
Prevention Branch,
Tom ONeill, START,
Weston, Inc., re:
Monitoring Survey,
(1) Attachment A -
undated, and, (2)
December 27, 1995,
Bechtel, OSC, Response and
U.S. EPA, Region II, from Mr.
Project Manager,-i Roy F.
Grand Street Site, Mercury Vapor
January 2, 1996. (Attachments:
Mercury Vapor Survey Results,
Attachment B - Photographs from
Mercury Vapor Survey, undated.)
Memorandum to Ms. Kathleen Callahan, Director,
Emergency & Remedial Response Division, U.S. EPA,
Region II, from Mr. Stephen D. Luftig, Director,
Office of Emergency and Remedial Response, U.S.
EPA, Region II, re: Concurrence on a Nationally
Significant Removal Action at the Grand Street
Mercury Site, Hoboken, NJ, January 4, 1996.
Letter to the Residents of 722 Grand Street,
Hoboken, from Ms. Kathleen Callahan, Director,
Emergency Response and Remedial Division, U.S.
EPA, Region II, re: Relocation Assistance, January
11, 1996. (Attachment: Notice to Grand Street
Partnership Properties, Hoboken, New
Jersey, January 9, 1996.)
-------
200654- Memorandum to Mr. Elliot Laws, Assistant
200660 Administrator, Office.of Solid Waste and Emergency
Response, U.S. EPA, Region II, from Ms. Kathleen
Callahan, Director, Emergency and Remedial
Response Division, U.S. EPA, Region II, re:
Removal Action at 722 Grand Street, Hoboken, New
Jersey, January 12, 1996. (Attachments: (1)
Memorandum to Mr. William J. Muszynski, P.E.,
Acting Regional Administrator, U.S. EPA, Region
II, from Ms. Kathleen Callahan, Emergency and
Remedial Response Division, U.S. EPA, Region II,
re: Temporary Relocation Expenses for Certain
Residents of 722 Grand Street, Hoboken, New
Jersey, undated; (2) Letter to Ms. Janet Filameno,
from Mr. William J. Muszynski, Acting Regional
Administrator, U.S. EPA, Region II, re: the U.S.
EPA's commitment to assist with temporary
relocation required as a result of the mercury
contamination at 722 Grand Street, Hoboken NJ,
January 12 , 1996; (3) Letter to Ms. China
Marks, from Mr. William J. Muszynski, Acting
Regional Administrator, U.S. EPA, Region II, re:
the U.S. EPA's commitment to assist with temporary
relocation required as a result of the mercury
contamination at 722 Grand Street, Hoboken,
January 12, 1996; (4) Letter to Ms. Meredith
Lippman and Mr. John Steadwell, from Mr. William
J. Muszynski, Acting Regional Administrator, U.S.
EPA, Region II, re: the U.S. EPA's commitment to
assist with temporary relocation required as a
result of the mercury contamination1 at 722 Grand
Street, Hoboken, January 12, 1996; and (5) Letter
to Mr. David Greisbauer, from Mr. William J.
Muszynski, Acting Regional Administrator, U.S.
EPA, Region II, re: the U.S. EPA's commitment to
assist with temporary relocation required as a
result of the mercury contamination at 722 Grand
Street, Hoboken, January 12, 1996.)
200661- Letter to Mr. Jeff Bechtel, OSC, Response and
200673 Prevention Branch, U.S. EPA, Region II, from Mr.
Tom O'Neill, Superfund Technical Assessment and
Response Team (START) Project Manager, Roy F.
Weston, Inc., re: Grand Street Site, Sampling Trip
Report, January 5, 1996, January 15, 1996.
(Attachment: Report: Sampling Trip Report, 722
Grand Street, prepared by Mr. Thomas O'Neill, Roy
F. Weston, Inc., prepared for U.S. EPA, Region II,
January 5, 1996)
-------
P. 200674- Memorandum to Mr. Rajeshmal Singhvi, U.S. EPA/ERT,
200688 through Mr. Vinod Kansal, REAC Analytical Section
Leader, from Jay Patel, REAC Inorganic Group
Leader, re: Grand Street Mercury Site Results for
samples Collected February 6-8, 1996, February 14,
1996.
P. 200689- Letter to Mr. Jack Harmon, OSC, Removal Action
200730 Branch, U.S. EPA, Region II, from Mr. Thomas
O'Neill, Project Manager, Roy F. Weston, Inc., re:
Grand Street Site, Sampling Trip Report, February
6-8, 1996, February 26, 1996. (Attachment: Report:
Sampling Trip Report, Grand Street Mercury Site,
prepared by Mr. Thomas O'Neill, Roy F- Weston,
Inc., prepared for U.S. EPA, Region II, February
26, 1996.)
P- 200731- Letter to 722 Grand Street Resident, from Irmee
200734 Huhn, U.S. EPA, re: update on EPA's involvement at
722 Grand Street, April 11, 1996.
P- 200735- Memorandum to Mr. Rodney Turpin, U.S. EPA/ERT Work
201014 Assignment Manager, through Mr. Vinod Kansal, REAC
Analytical Section Leader, from Mr. Michael
Morganti, REAC Task Leader, re: Subsurface Soil
Sampling, Grand Street Mercury Site, Hoboken,
N.J., May 15, 1996.
P. 201015- Letter to Mr. Jack Harmon, OSC, Removal Action
201039 Branch, U.S. EPA, Region II, from Mr. Thomas
O'Neill, Project Manager, Roy F. Weston, Inc., re:
Grand Street Site, June 4, 1996. (Attachment:
Report: Investigation of Lead in Paint and Mercury
in Brick and Flooring Utilizing the Spectrace 9000
XRF at the Grand Street Mercury Site, Hoboken,
Hudson County, N.J., prepared by START, Roy F.
Weston, Inc., prepared for U.S. EPA, Region II,
June 4, 1996.)
P. 201040- Letter to Mr. Jack Harmon, Task Monitor, Removal
201045 Action Branch, U.S. EPA, Region II, from Mr.
Thomas O'Neill, Project Manager, Roy F. Weston,
Inc., re: Grand Street Site, Sampling Trip Report,
July 23, 1996, July 26, 1996. (Attachment: Report:
Sampling Trip Report, Grand Street Mercury Site,
prepared by Mr. Thomas O'Neill, Roy F. Weston,
Inc., prepared for U.S. EPA, Region II, July 24,
1996.)
10
-------
201046-
201070
201071-
201074
201075-
201079
201080-
201134
201135-
201147
Transmittal memo to Mr. Jack Harmon, Removal
Action Branch, U.S. EPA, Region II, from Ms.
Jennifer Leahy, Inorganic Data Reviewer, START
Region II, Roy F. Weston, Inc., re: Grand Street,
Hoboken, N.J., Mercury Validation Results and Soil
Matrices, August 23, 1996. (Attachment: Memorandum
to Mr. Jack Harmon, U.S. EPA, Region II, from Ms.
Jennifer Leahy, START Data Review Team, re: QA/QC
Compliance Review Summary, August 23, 1996, (2)
Report: Sampling Trip Report, Grand Street Mercury
Site, prepared by Mr. Thomas O'Neill, Roy F.
Weston, Inc., prepared for U.S. EPA, Region II,
July 24, 1996, (3) Chain of Custody Record, Roy F.
Weston, Inc., U.S. EPA Region II, START, July 23,
1996, and, (4) Analytical Data Report, prepared by
Accredited Laboratories, Inc., prepared for Roy F.
Weston, Inc., July 23, 1996.)
Letter to 722 Grand Street Resident, from Irmee
Huhn, U.S. EPA, re: summary of new events since
the last update of April 1996, September 3, 1996.
Fax Transmittal to Ms. Catherine Garypie, Esq.,
U.S. EPA, Region II, from Ms. Jane W. Gardner,
Counsel-Remediation Programs, General Electric
Company (GE), re: attached reference to GE Vapor
Lamp and Cooper-Hewitt, September 12, 1996.
(Attachment: The Electric-Lamp Industry:
Technological Change and Economic Development from
1800 to 1947r written by Arthur A. Bright,
Jr.,(pages 428 through 430).)
Letter to Mr. Jack Harmon, OSC, Removal Action
Branch, U.S. EPA, Region II, from Mr. Thomas
O'Neill, Project Manager, Roy F. Weston, Inc., re:
Grand Street Site, Mercury Contamination
Investigation Final Report, October 7, 1996.
(Attachment: Report: Final Report, Mercury
Contamination Investigation, Grand Street Mercury
Site, Hoboken, Hudson County, N.J.,-prepared by
START, Roy F. Weston, Inc., prepared for U.S. EPA,
Region II - Removal Action Branch, October 2,
1996. )
Letter to Mr. Jack Harmon, OSC, Removal Action
Branch, U.S. EPA, Region II, from Mr. Thomas
O'Neill, START Project Manager, Roy F. Weston,
Inc., re: Grand Street Site, Sampling Trip Reports
for August 13, 21, and 22, and September 5 and 6,
1996, October 8, 1996. (Attachment: (1) Report:
Sampling Trip Report, Grand Street Mercury Site,
11
-------
prepared by Mr. Thomas O'Neill, Roy F. Weston,
Inc., prepared for U.S. EPA, Region II, October 8,
1996, (2) Report: Sampling Trip Report, Grand
Street Mercury Site, prepared by Mr. Thomas
O'Neill, Roy F. Weston, Inc., prepared for U.S.
EPA, Region II, October 8, 1996.)
201148 Letter to Mr. Jack Harmon, OSC, Removal Action
201153 Branch, U.S. EPA, Region II, from Mr. Thomas
O'Neill, START Project Manager, Roy F. Weston,
Inc., re: Grand Street Site Amended Basement
Sample Results, October 21, 1996. (Attachment:
Evaluation of Inorganic Data for the Contract
Laboratory Program, Appendix A.2: Data Assessment
Narrative, Grand Street Mercury Site, reviewed by
Ms. Smita Sumbaly, January 1992.)
201154- Letter to Mr. Jack Harmon, OSC, Removal Action
201158 Branch, U.S. EPA, Region II, from Mr. Thomas
O'Neill, START Project Manager, Roy F. Weston,
Inc., re: Grand Street Site, Sampling Trip Report,
October 15, 1996, October 29, 1996. (Attachment:
Report: Sampling Trip Report, Grand Street Mercury
Site, prepared by Mr. Rodolfo Hafner, Roy F.
Weston, Inc., prepared for U.S. EPA, Region II,
October 22, 1996.)
201159- Memorandum to Mr. Richard Caspe, Director,
201168 Emergency and Remedial Response, U.S. EPA, Region
II, from Mr. Stephen D. Luftig, Director, Office
of Emergency and Remedial Response, U.S. EPA,
Region II, re: Grand Street Mercury Site, Hoboken,
N.J., Relocation Benefits, November 12, 1996.
(Attachments: Memorandum to Ms. Catherine
Garypie, Assistant Regional Counsel, Office of
Regional Counsel, U.S. EPA, Region II, re:
Relocation Issues at the Grand Street Mercury
Site, Hoboken, New Jersey, September 11, 1996 and
Memorandum to Mr. Stanley L. Laskowski, Acting
Regional Administrator, U.S. EPA, Region 3, from
Ms. Jean C. Nelson, General Counsel, re: Legal
Authority to replace demolished building at
Superfund Sites, December 16, 1993.'
201169- Transmittal memo to Mr. Jack Harmon, OSC, Removal
201182 Action Branch, U.S. EPA, Region II, from Ms. Smita
Sumbaly, Data Reviewer, and Mr. Thomas O'Neill,
START Project Manager, Roy F. Weston, Inc., re:
Grand Street Mercury Site, Data Validation
Assessment, December 9, 1996. (Attachment: (1)
Memorandum to Mr. Jack Harmon, OSC, U.S. EPA,
12
-------
Region II, from Ms. Smita Sumbaly, START Data
Review Team, re: QA/QC Compliance Review Summary,
November 27, 1996, (2) Evaluation of Inorganic
Data for the Contract Laboratory Program, Appendix
A.2: Data Assessment Narrative, Grand Street
Mercury Site, reviewed by Ms. Smita Sumbaly,
January 1992, (3) Nonconformance Summary, undated,
(4) Metals Analysis Results, prepared by IEA,
prepared for Weston TAT, October 25, 1996, and,
(5) Chain of Custody Form, October 15, 1996.)
201183- Letter to Mr. Richard L. Caspe, Director,
201184 Emergency and Remedial Response Division, U.S.
EPA, Region II, from Mr. George W. Crimmins,
Business Administrator, Office of the Business,
Administrator, re: 722 Grand Street Mercury Site,
Hoboken, N.J., December 19, 1996.
201185- Letter to Mr. Robert Drasheff, Director,
201185 Department of Human Services, City of Hoboken,
from Ms. Lisa P. Jackson, Project Manager,
Emergency and Remedial Response Division, re:
Superfund Policy Directive Regarding Land Use,
December 19, 1996.
201186- Letter to Mr. Jack Harmon, Task Monitor, Removal
201217 Action Branch, U.S. EPA, Region II, from Mr.
Thomas O'Neill, Project Manager, Roy F. Weston,
Inc., re: Grand Street Site, Sampling Trip Report,
December 12, 1996, December 20, 1996. (Attachment:
Report: Sampling Trip Report, Grand Street Mercury
Site, prepared by Mr. Thomas O'Neill, Roy F.
Weston, Inc., prepared for U.S. EPA, Region II,
December 20, 1996.)
201218- Letter to Mr. George W. Crimmins, Director,
201219 Department of Administration, from Mr. Richard L.
Caspe, Director, Emergency Remedial and Response
Division, U.S. EPA, Region II, re: 722 Grand
Street Mercury Site, Hoboken, N.J., January 9,
1997.
201220- Letter to Mr. Jack Harmon, OSC, Removal Action
201229 Branch, U.S. EPA, Region II, from Mr. Thomas
O'Neill, START Project Manager, Roy'F. Weston,
Inc., re: Grand Street Site Wipe Sample Results,
January 31, 1997. (Attachment: Table 1 - Wipe
sample Results, Grand Street Mercury Site,
Hoboken, N.J., undated, (2) Attachment A -
Laboratory Data, Analytical Data Report for
Mercury in Wipes, prepared by Enviro-Probe, Inc.,
13
-------
p.
p.
P-
prepared for Roy F. Weston, Inc., December 13,
1996, (3) Chain of Custody Record, Roy F. Weston,
Inc., U.S. EPA Region II, START, December 12,
1996, (4) Chain of Custody Form for Wipe Samples,
December 13, 1996, (5) MDL Determination for
Mercury in Drinking Water, July 7, 1995, and, (6)
Facsimile transmittal to Ms. Smita Sumbaly, Roy F.
Weston, Inc., from Subhash, Enviro-Probe, Inc.,
re: Calibration for Mercury, January 16, 1997.)
201230- Memorandum to Grand Street Mercury Site File, from
201235 Mr. John F. Hansen, Project Manager, U.S. EPA,
Region II, re: Grand Street Mercury, Site, EPA
Visit to GE Lighting Facility, February 6, 1997,
February 13, 1997.
201236- Letter to Mr. Jack Harmon, Task Monitor, U.S. EPA,
201254 Region II, Removal Action Branch, from Mr. Thomas
O'Neill, Project Manager, Roy F. Weston, Inc., re:
Work and Sampling Plan - Grand Street Mercury Site
- Risk Assessment, February 27, 1997. (Attachment:
Plan: Sampling QA/QC Work Plan, Grand Street
Mercury Site/725 Adams Street, Risk Assessment,
Hoboken, Hudson County, N.J., prepared by START,
Roy F. Weston, Inc., prepared for U.S. EPA, Region
II - Removal Action Branch, February 27, 1997.)
201255- Letter to Mr. Jack Harmon, Task Monitor, Removal
201262 Action Branch, U.S. EPA, Region II, from Mr.
Thomas O'Neill, Project Manager, Roy F. Weston,
Inc., re: Sampling Trip Report - 725 Adams Street,
March 11, 1997. (Attachment: Report: Sampling Trip
Report, 725 Adams Street, Hoboken, N.J., prepared
by Mr. Thomas O'Neill, Roy F. Weston, Inc.,
prepared for U.S. EPA, Region II, March 4, 1997.)
Letter from Mr. John F. Hansen, Project Manager,
New Jersey Remediation Branch, U.S. EPA, Region
II, re: the review and approval of the document
entitled, "Technical Engineering Evaluation for
Mercury Remediation at the Grand Street Site",
dated March 11, 1997, sent March 18, 1997.
201264- Transmittal memo to Mr. Jack Harmon, OSC, Removal
201296 Action Branch, U.S. EPA, Region II, from Ms. Smita
Sumbaly, Data Reviewer, and Mr. Thomas ONeill,
Project Manager, START Region II, Roy F. Weston,
Inc., re: Grand Street Mercury Site, Data
Validation Assessment, March 25, 1997.
(Attachment: Memorandum to Mr. Jack;Harmon, OSC,
U.S. EPA, Region II, from Ms. Smita Sumbaly, START
201263-
201263
14
-------
Data Review Team, re: QA/QC Compliance Review
Summary, March 24, 1997, (2) Evaluation of
Inorganic Data for the Contract Laboratory Program
(w/ attachments), Appendix A.2: Data Assessment
Narrative, Grand Street Mercury Site, reviewed by
Ms. Smita Sumbaly, January 1992.)
P. 201297- Letter to Mr. Jack Harmon, Task Monitor, Removal
201443 Action Branch, U.S. EPA, Region II, from Mr.
Thomas O'Neill, Project Manager, Roy F. Weston,
Inc., re: Grand Street Air Monitoring Data Sheets,
May 12, 1997. (Attachments: (1) Daily Mercury
Vapor Survey Results, 722 Grand Street, Hoboken,
N.J., various dates, and (2) Region II START,
Mercury Vapor Survey Results, various dates.)
4.0 FEASIBILITY STUDY
4.3 Feasibility Study Reports
P. 400001- Report: Mercury Exposure Among Residents of a
400006 Building Formerly Used for Industrial Purposes,
New Jersey, January 1995.
P. 400007- Report: Center for Disease Control and Prevention,.
400026 Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report, Vol. 45,
No. 20. May 24, 1996.
P. 400027- Appraisal Review, prepared by Nationwide
400032 Consulting Company, Inc. , prepared for Baltimore
District, U.S. Army Corps, of Engineers, June 7,
1996 (Note: This document is CONFIDENTIAL. It is
located at the U.S. EPA Superfund Records Center,
290 Broadway, 18th Floor, N.Y., N.Y. 10007..)
P. 400033- Appraisal Review, prepared by Lama Realty
400037 Services, prepared for Baltimore District, U.S.
Army Corps, of Engineers, June 7, 1996 (Note:
This document is CONFIDENTIAL. It is located at
the U.S. EPA Superfund Records Center, 290
Broadway, 18th Floor, N.Y., N.Y. 10007..)
P. 400038- Appraisal Review, prepared by Lama Realty
400040 Services, prepared for Baltimore District, U.S.
Army Corps, of Engineers, July 2, 1996 (Note:
This document is CONFIDENTIAL. It is located at
the U.S. EPA Superfund Records Center, 290
Broadway, 18th Floor, N.Y., N.Y. 10007..)
15
-------
P. 400041- Report: Appraisal of Real Property, Industrial
400120 Buildings, 720-722 Grand Street, Hoboken, Hudson
County, N.J., prepared by Anthony F. Lama Realty
Services, Inc., prepared for Baltimore District,
U.S. Army Corps, of Engineers, July 2, 1996 (Note:
This document is CONFIDENTIAL. It is located at
the U.S. EPA Superfund Records Center, 290
Broadway, 18th Floor, N.Y., N.Y., 10007..)
P. 400121- Report: Appraisal of Real Property, 720-722
400257 Grand Street, Hoboken, Hudson County, N.J.,
prepared by Anthony F. Lama Realty Services, Inc.,
prepared for Baltimore District, U.S. Army Corps.
of Engineers, July 2, 1996 and July 24, 1996.
(Note: This document is CONFIDENTIAL. It is
located at the U.S. EPA Superfund Records Center,
290 Broadway, 18th Floor, N.Y., N.Y., 10007..)
P. 400258- Report: Appraisal of 720-732 Grand Street,
400355 Hoboken, N.J., Block: 85 Lots: 14 and 15.1 (17
Condominium Units) prepared by Nationwide
Consulting Company, Inc., prepared for Baltimore
District, U.S. Army Corps, of Engineers, July 9,
1996 (Note: This document is CONFIDENTIAL. It is
located at the U.S. EPA Superfund Records Center,
290 Broadway, 18th Floor, N.Y., N.Y., 10007..)
P. 400356- Report: Technical Engineering Evaluation for
400439 Mercury Remediation at The Grand Street Sitef
prepared by Levine Fricke Recon Inc., prepared for
Roy F. Weston, Inc., March 11, 1997.
P. 400440- Report: Final Baseline Human Health Risk
400578 Assessment, Grand Street Site, Hudson County.
Hoboken. N J. prepared by Roy F. Weston, Inc.,
prepared for U.S. EPA, Region II, Removal Action
Branch, April 1997.
4.6 Correspondence
r
P. 400579- Memorandum to Chief, Real Estate Section, New
400580 Jersey Field Office, East Brunswick, N.J., from
Mr. Thomas J. Geronikos, MAI, ASA, Acting Chief,
Appraisal Branch, U.S. Army Corps of Engineers,
re: 722 Grand Avenue, Hoboken, N.J., September 6,
1996.
16
-------
GRAND STREET MERCURY SITE
ADMINISTRATIVE RECORD FILE UPDATE
INDEX OF DOCUMENTS
FEASIBILITY STUDY
Correspondence
400581 Letter to Catherine Garypie, Esq., Office of
400584 Regional Counsel, New Jersey Superfund Branch,
U.S. EPA, Region II, from Robert E. Murray, Esq.,
Murray, Murray, Corrigan, & Garcia, re: 722 Grand
St., Hoboken, NJ, Mercury Contaminated Site,
requested information submitted on behalf of the
City of Hoboken in response to correspondence
dated September 11, 1997, September 22, 1997.
-------
7.0 ENFORCEMENT
7.1 Enforcement History
P. 700001- January 17, 1997 Meeting Outline, General Electric
700216 Co. and U.S. EPA Region II, "Hoboken", prepared by
General Electric, prepared for U.S. EPA, Region
II, January 17, 1997.
7.3 Administrative Orders
P. 700217- Letter to Mr. John Welch, Jr., Chief Executive
700245 Officer, General Electric Company, and Mr. John
Pascale, Sr., from Mr. Richard Caspe, Director,
Emergency and Remedial Response Division, U.S.
EPA, Region II, re: Grand St. Mercury Superfund
Site - Unilateral Administrative Order, Index No.
II-CERCLA-97-0108, February 24, 1997. (Attachment:
Unilateral Administrative Order for Removal
Response Activities, In the Matter of Grand Street
Mercury Site, Hoboken, New Jersey, vs. General
Electric Company and John Pascale, Sr.,
Respondents, February 24, 1997.)
^
P. 700246- Letter to Catherine Garypie, Esq., Assistant
700264 Regional Counsel, U.S. EPA, Region II, from Mr.
John F. Semple, Sterns & Weinroth, re: Grand
Street Mercury Superfund Site - Unilateral
Administrative Order, Index No. II-CERCLA-97-0108,
March 28, 1997.
P. 700265- Letter to Catherine Garypie, Esq., Office of
700334 Regional Counsel, U.S. EPA, Region II, from Ms.
Jane'W. Gardner, Manager and Counsel - Remediation
Programs, General Electric Company, re: Grand
Street Artists Partnership Site, Hoboken, N.J.,:
General Electric Companys Comments on Unilateral
Administrative Order, Index No. II-CERCLA-97-0108,
April 1, 1997. (Attachments: (I) Attachment 1 -
GEs Specific Comments on the Proposed Order,
undated, (2) Letter (w/ attachment) to Catherine
Garypie, Esq., Office Of Regional Counsel, U.S.
EPA, from Ms. Kathryn B. Thompson, Sidley &
Austin, re: Grand Street Artists Partnership Site,
Hoboken, N.J., General Electric Companys Comments
on Unilateral Administrative Order, Index No. II-
CERCLA-97-0108, April 1, 1997, (3) Attachment 2 -
Comments on U.S. EPA Fire Analysis for 722 Grand
Street in Hoboken, N.J., prepared by PTI
Environmental Services, prepared for U.S. EPA,
Region II, undated, (4) Attachment 3 - Letter to
17
-------
'Sperti Faraday, Inc., Cooper Hewitt Electric
Company Division, from Mr. Bill Rice, re:
Replacement Bulb for p!06 sunlamp, October 5,
1994, (5) Attachment 4 - Grand Street Artists
Partnership Meeting Minutes, November 4, 1995, (6)
Attachment 6 - Letter to Ira Karasick, Esq. from
Mr. Stephen R. Spector, Spector & Dimin, P.A., re:
Grand Street Artists Partnership, November 7,
1995, (7) Attachment 7 - Letter to Ching-Huang
Chung and Shun Yi Chen, from Mr. Jack Harmon, On-
Scene Coordinator, U.S. EPA, Region II, re: The
Grand Street Mercury Site, Hoboken, N.J., undated,
(8) Attachment 8 - Group Meeting of Grand Street
Artists Members, March 31, 1996, (9) Attachment 9
- Letter to Mr. David Pascale, c/o Michael
Edelson, Esq., Hellring, Lindeman, Goldstein &
Siegal, from Mr. Richard J. Gimello, Assistant
Commissioner, NJDEP, re: Industrial Establishment:
Quality Tool & Die Co., Inc., Negative Declaration
Approval dated February 8, 1993, December 20,
1996, and, (10) Attachment 10 - Letter to Patricio
Martinez-Lorenzo, Esq., from Mr. Henry Guzman,
Assistant Regional Counsel, U.S. EPA, Region II,
re: Juncos Landfill Superfund Site, May 10, 1993.)
P. 700335- Unilateral Administrative Order for^Removal
700342 Response Activities, In the Matter of Grand Street
Mercury Site, Hoboken, N.J., vs. Geheral Electric
Company and Mr. John Pascale, Sr., May 6, 1997.
7.5 Affidavits
P. 700343- U.S. EPA, Region II, Redacted Administrative
700393 Deposition, In the Matter of Grand Street Mercury
Site, Hoboken, N.J., 10:15 A.M., April 16, 1996.
P. 700394- Administrative Deposition, In the Matter of Grand
700443 Street Mercury Site, Hoboken, New Jersey,
transcript of testimony taken by Waga and
Spenelli, certified shorthand reporters, on April
16, 1996. (Note: This document is CONFIDENTIAL.
It can be located in the Superfund Record Center
at 290 Broadway - 18th Floor, N.Y., N.Y., 10007=)
P. 700444- U.S. EPA, Region II, Redacted Administrative
700465 Deposition, In the Matter of Grand Street Mercury
Site, Hoboken, N.J., 2:00 P.M., April 16, 1996.
P. 700466- Administrative Deposition, In the Matter of Grand
700486 Street Mercury Site, Hoboken, New Jersey,
transcript of testimony taken by Waga and
18
-------
Spenelli, certified shorthand reporters, on April
16, 1996. (Note: This document is CONFIDENTIAL.
It can be located in the Superfund Record Center
at 290 Broadway - 18th Floor, N.Y., N.Y., 10007.)
P. 700487- U.S. EPA, Region II, Redacted Administrative
700515 Deposition, In the Matter of Grand Street Mercury
Site, Hoboken, N.J., April 18, 1996.
P- 700516- Administrative Deposition, In the Matter of Grand
700543 Street Mercury Site, Hoboken, New Jersey,
transcript of testimony taken by Waga and
Spenelli, certified shorthand reporters, on April
18, 1996. (Note: This document is CONFIDENTIAL.
It can be located in the Superfund Record Center
at 290 Broadway - 18th Floor, N.Y., N.Y., 10007.)
P. 700544- U.S. EPA, Region II, Redacted Administrative
700581 Deposition, In the Matter of Grand Street Mercury
Site, Hoboken, N.J., April 19, 1996.
P- 700582- Administrative Deposition, In the Matter of Grand
700618 Street Mercury Site, Hoboken, New Jersey,
transcript of testimony taken by Waga and
Spenelli, certified shorthand reporters, on April
19, 1996. (Note: This document is CONFIDENTIAL.
It can be located in the Superfund Record Center
at 290 Broadway - 18th Floor, N.Y., N.Y., 10007.)
P. 700619- U.S. EPA, Region II, Redacted Administrative
700643 Deposition, In the Matter of Grand Street Mercury
Site, Hoboken, N.J., May 31, 1996. \
P. 700644- Administrative Deposition, In the Matter of Grand
700667 Street Mercury Site, Hoboken, New Jersey,
transcript of testimony taken by Waga and
Spenelli, certified shorthand reporters, on May
31, 1996. (Note: This document is CONFIDENTIAL.
It can be located in the Superfund Record Center
at 290 Broadway - 18th Floor, N.Y., N.Y., 10007.)
P. 700668- U.S. EPA, Region II, Redacted Administrative
700714 Deposition, In the Matter of Grand Street Mercury
Site, Hoboken, N.J., June 11, 1996.
P. 700715- Administrative Deposition, In the Matter of Grand
700758 Street Mercury Site, Hoboken, New Jersey,
transcript of testimony taken by Waga and
Spenelli, certified shorthand reporters, on June
11, 1996. (Note: This document is CONFIDENTIAL.
It can be located in the Superfund Record Center
19
-------
700759-
700882
700883-
701019
701020-
701030
P.
701031-
701075
at 290 Broadway - 18th Floor, N.Y., N.Y., 10007.)
U.S. EPA, Region II, Redacted Administrative Sworn
Statement In the Matter of Grand Street Mercury
Site, Hoboken, N.J., July 1, 1996.
Administrative sworn statement (with Exhibits
attached), In the Matter of The Grand Street
Mercury Site, Hoboken, New Jersey, taken by
Britton & Associates, on July 1, 1996. (Note:
This document is CONFIDENTIAL. It can be located
in the Superfund Record Center at 290 Broadway -
18th Floor, N.Y., N.Y., 10007.)
Telecopy Cover Letter to Catherine Garypie, Esq.,
from Michael Edelson, Esq., re: Grand Street
Mercury Superfund Site, November 19, 1996.
(Attachments: (1) Declaration of Ms. Rose
Sinclair, November 6, 1996, and (2) Counterclaim
of Rogers Environmental Management, Inc., November
6, 1996)
Administrative Deposition of Mr. John J. Pascale,
In the Matter of Grand Street Artists vs. General
Electric Company, February 12, 1997.
7.7 Notice Letters and Responses - 104(e)'s
P. 701076- Documents submitted with Mr. David P- Pascale's
705186 response to November 7, 1996 EPA Supplemental
Request, in answer to request no. 1, undated.
(Attachment: Letter (w/ attachments) to Catherine
Garypie, Esq., Assistant Regional Counsel, U.S.
EPA, Region II, from Mr. Michael Edelson, Bellring
Lindeman Goldstein & Siegal, re: Grand Street
Mercury Superfund Site (the "Site") , 722 Grand
Street,.Hoboken, N.J., December 18, 1996.)
P. 705187- Exhibits to a lawsuit filed by Spector & Dimin
705802 against the Grand Street Artists Partnership,
undated.
P. 705803- Request for Information Letter to Mr. John Welch,
705805 Jr., Chief Executive Officer, General Electric
Company, c/o Jane W. Gardner, Esq., from Ms.
Kathleen C. Callahan, Director, Emergency and
Remedial Response Division, U.S. EPA, Region II,
re: 722 Grand Street Mercury Site, Hoboken, New
Jersey, Request for Information Pursuant to
Comprehensive Environmental Response, Compensation
and Liability Act, 42 U.S.C. Section 9601, et
20
-------
seq., February 2, 1996.
P. 705806- Request for Information Letter to Mr. John Welch,
705817 Jr. , Chief Executive Officer, General Electric
Company, c/o Jane W. Gardner, Esq., from Ms.
Kathleen C. Callahan, Director, Emergency and
Remedial Response Division, U.S. EPA, Region II,
re: 722 Grand Street Mercury Site, Hoboken, New
Jersey, Request for Information Pursuant to
Comprehensive Environmental Response, Compensation
and Liability Act, 42 U.S.C. Section 9601, et
seq., February 5, 1996. (Attachments: (1)
Instructions for Responding to Request for
Information; (2) Request for Information; and (3)
Certification of Answers to Request for
Information.)
P- 705818- Letter to Ms. Marissa Wiggett, Emergency and
706212 Remedial Response Division, U.S. EPA, Region II,
from Mr. Dennis O. Correia, Technical Manager -
Environmental, General Electric Company, re:
Response of General Electric Company to 104(e)
Request for Information, Re: 722 Grand Street
Site, Hoboken, N.J., March 8, 1996. (Attachments:
Index of Attachments, undated) (Note: This
document is CONFIDENTIAL. It is located at the
U.S. EPA Superfund Records Center, 290 Broadway,
N.Y., N.Y. 10007.)
P- 706213- Request for Information Letter to David and
706225 Sherrill Pascale, from Ms. Kathleen C. Callahan,
Director, Emergency and Remedial Response
Division, U.S. EPA, Region II, re: 722 Grand
Street Mercury Site, Hoboken, New Jersey, Request
for Information Pursuant to Comprehensive
Environmental Response, Compensation and Liability
Act, 42 U.S.C. Section 9601, et seq'., March 17,
1996. (Attachments: (1) Instructions for
Responding to Request for Information; (2)
Request for Information; and (3) Certification of
Answers to Request for Information.)
P. 706226- Request for Information Letter to KBD Inc., c/o
706238 Mr. James C. Shepherd, President, from Ms.
Kathleen C. Callahan, Director, Emergency and
Remedial Response Division, U.S. EPA, Region II,
re: 722 Grand Street Mercury Site, Hoboken, New
Jersey, Request for Information Pursuant to
Comprehensive Environmental Response, Compensation
and Liability Act, 42 U.S.C. Section 9601, et
seq., March 17, 1996. (Attachments: (1)
21
-------
Instructions for Responding to Request for
Information; (2) Request for Information; and (3)
Certification of Answers to Request for
Information.)
p. 706239- Request for Information Letter to Mr. John
706251 Pascals, from Ms. Kathleen C. Callahan, Director,
Emergency and Remedial Response Division, U.S.
EPA, Region II, re: 722 Grand Street Mercury Site,
Hoboken, New Jersey, Request for Information
Pursuant to Comprehensive Environmental Response,
Compensation and Liability Act, 42 U.S.C. Section
9601, et seq., March 29, 1996. (Attachments: (1)
Instructions for Responding to Request for
Information; (2) Request for Information; and (3)
Certification of Answers to Request for
Information.)
P. 706252- Request for Information Letter to Mr. George
706260 Sperti, from Ms. Kathleen C. Callahan, Director,
Emergency and Remedial Response Division, U.S.
EPA, Region II, re: 722 Grand Street Mercury Site,
Hoboken, New Jersey, Request for Information
Pursuant to Comprehensive Environmental Response,
Compensation and Liability Act, 42 U.S.C. Section
9601, et seq., March 29, 1996. (Attachments: (1)
Instructions for Responding to Request for
Information; (2) Request for Information; and (3)
Certification of Answers to Request for
Information.)
P. 706261- Request for Information Letter to Mr. John
706276 Pascale, Jr., from Ms. Kathleen C. Callahan,
Director, Emergency and Remedial Response
Division, U.S. EPA, Region II, re: 722 Grand
Street Mercury Site, Hoboken, New Jersey, Request
for Information Pursuant to Comprehensive
Environmental Response, Compensation and Liability
Act, 42 U.S.C. Section 9601, et seq., April 11,
1996. (Attachments: (1) Instructions for
Responding to Request for Information; (2) Request
for Information; and (3) Certification of Answers
to Request for Information.)
P. 706277- Letter to Ms. Marissa Wiggett, U. S. EPA, Region
706289 II, from Mr. Michael Edelson, Hellring Lindeman
Goldstein & Siegal, re: 722 Grand Street Mercury
Site, Hoboken, N.J., April 12, 1996. (Attachment:
Response (w/ attachments) of Mr. David Pascale to
request for information forwarded with the March
17, 1996 letter of Ms. Kathleen C. Callahan,
22
-------
Director, Emergency and Remedial Response
Division, U.S. EPA, Region II, April 9, 1996.)
P. 706290- Request for Information Letter to Mr. John
706291 Welch, Jr., Chief Operating Officer, General
Electric Company, c/o Jane W. Gardner, Esq., from
Ms. Kathleen C. Callahan, Director, Emergency and
Remedial Response Division, U.S. EPA, Region II,
re: 722 Grand Street Mercury Site, Hoboken, New
Jersey, response to Request for Information (dated
February 5, 1996) Pursuant to Comprehensive
Environmental Response, Compensation and Liability
Act, 42 U.S.C. Section 9601, et seq., May 10,
1996.
P- 706292- Answers to Request for Information Pursuant to
706301 CERCLA letter dated April 11, 1996, prepared by
Mr. John J. Pascale, Jr., May 10, 1996.
P. 706302- Request for Information Letter to Mr. John
706312 Welch, Jr., Chief Operating Officer, General
Electric Company, c/o Jane W. Gardner, Esq., from
Ms. Kathleen C. Callahan, Director, Emergency and
Remedial Response Division, U.S. EPA, Region II,
re: 722 Grand Street Mercury Site, Hoboken, New
Jersey, Request for Information Pursuant to
Comprehensive Environmental Response, Compensation
and Liability Act, 42 U.S.C. Section 9601, et
seq., May 10, 1996. (Attachments: (1)
Instructions for Responding to Request for
Information; (2) Supplemental Request for
Information; and (3) Certification of Answers to
Request for Information.)
P. 706313- Letter to Catherine Garypie, Esq., Office of
706389 Regional Counsel, U.S. EPA, Region II, from Jane
W. Gardner, Esq., re: Grand Street Properties,
Hoboken, June 7, 1996. (Attachments: (1) Civil
Case Information Statement (CIS), filed by Mr.
George Weiner, September 28, 1995, (2) Civil
Action Complaint, George Weiner; Louis Nel and
Janet Filameno, husband and wife; and Gerald
Norton and Katherine Parker, husband and wife,
Plaintiffs, vs. Grand Street Artists Partnership,
Defendant, September 26, 1995, (3) Exhibit "A" -
Grand Street Artists Partnership Agreement,
prepared by Chasan, Leyner, Tarranti & Lamparello,
P.C., August 3, 1993, (4) Civil Action Order to
Show Cause, George Weiner, Louis Nel and Janet
Filameno, husband and wife, and Gerald Norton and
Katherine Parker, husband and wife, Plaintiffs,
23
-------
vs. Grand Street Artists Partnership, Defendant,
October 2, 1995, (5) Civil Action Consent Order,
George Weiner; Louis Nel and Janet Filameno,
husband and wife; and Gerald Norton and Katherine
Parker, husband and wife, Plaintiffs, vs. Grand
Street Artists Partnership, Defendant, November 8,
1995, and, (6) Civil Action Certification of
Stephen R. Spector (w/ attachments), George
Weiner, Louis Nel and Janet Filameno, husband and
wife, and Gerald Norton and Katherine Parker,
husband and wife, Plaintiffs, vs. Grand Street
Artists Partnership, Defendant, September 26,
1995.) -
P. 706390- Letter to Mr. Warren G. Millar, from Ms. Catherine
706395 Garypie, Assistant Regional Counsel, U.S. EPA,
Region II, re: Grand Street Mercury Superfund
Site, Hoboken, N.J., Subpoena Ad Testificandum and
Subpoena Duces Tecum, June 14, 1996. (Attachments:
(1) Subpoena Ad Testificandum and Subpoena Duces
Tecum, In the Matter of Grand Street Mercury
Superfund Site, 722 Grand Street, Hoboken, N.J.,
prepared by Ms. Jeanne M. Fox, Regional
Administrator, U.S. EPA, Region II, prepared for
Mr. Warren G. Millar, Respondent, June 12, 1996,
and, (2) Affidavit of Service, served by Ms.
Orelia Lewis, Section Secretary, June 14, 1996.)
P. 706396- Letter to Mr. John J. Pascale, Sr.,.from Ms.
706402 Catherine Garypie, Assistant Regional Counsel,
U.S. EPA, Region II, re: Grand Street Mercury
Superfund Site, Hoboken, N.J., Subpoena Ad
Testificandum and Subpoena Duces Tecum, June 14,
1996. (Attachments: (1) Subpoena Ad Testificandum
and Subpoena Duces Tecum, In the Matter of Grand
Street Mercury Superfund Site, 722 Grand Street,
Hoboken, N.J., prepared by Ms. Jeanne M. Fox,
Regional Administrator, U.S. EPA, Region II,
prepared for Mr. John J. Pascale, Sr., Respondent,
June 12, 1996, and, (2) Affidavit of Service,
served by Mr. Gerard B. Connolly, Civil
Investigator, June 19,- 1996.)
?. 706403- Letter to Ms. Marissa Wiggett, Emergency and
706412 Remedial Response Division, U.S. EPA, Region II,
from Mr. Dennis O. Correia, Technical Manager -
Environmental, General Electric Company, re:
Supplemental Response of General Electric Company
to 104(e) Request for Information re: 722 Grand
Street Site, Hoboken, N.J., June 21', 1996.
(Attachment: Attachment #1 - Securities and
24
-------
Exchange Commission, Form 10-K, General Electric
Company, for the fiscal year ended December 31,
1995.)(Note: This document is CONFIDENTIAL. it is
located at the Superfund Records Center, 290
Broadway, 18th Floor, N.Y., N.Y., 10007.)
P. 706413- Redacted Letter to Ms. Marissa Wiggett, Emergency
706461 and Remedial Response Division, U.S. EPA, Region
II, from Mr. Dennis O. Correia, Technical Manager
- Environmental, General Electric Company, re:
Response of General Electric Company to 104(e)
Request for Information re: 722 Grand Street Site,
Hoboken, N.J., June 21, 1996. (Attachment: Index
of attachments from General Electric's second
104(e) Response, undated.)
P. 706462- Letter to Ms. Marissa Wiggett, Emergency and
706516 Remedial Response Division, U.S. EPA, Region II,
from Mr. Dennis 0. Correia, Technical Manager -
Environmental, General Electric Company, re:
Response of General Electric Company to 104(e)
Request for Information re: 722 Grand Street Site,
Hoboken, New Jersey, June 21, 1996. (Attachments:
Letter (with attachments) to Ms. Marissa Wiggett,
Emergency and Remedial Response Division, U.S.
EPA, Region II, from Mr. Dennis 0. Correia,
Technical Manager - Environmental, General
Electric Company, re: Supplemental Response of
General Electric Company to 104(e) Request for
Information re: 722 Grand Street Site, Hoboken,
New Jersey, June 21, 1996.) (Note: This document
is CONFIDENTIAL. It can be located in the
Superfund Record Center at 290 Broadway - 18th
Floor, N.Y., N.Y., 10007.)
P. 706517- Letter to Catherine Garypie, Esq., Assistant
706529 Regional Counsel, U.S. EPA, Region II, from Mr.
Robert P- Stein, Camhy, Karlinsky, & Stein LLP,
re: Grand Street Mercury Site: Hoboken N.J.,
August 2, 1996. (Attachment: (1) Attachment G -
Report of Underground Tank Removal, Quality Tool &
Die Co., Inc., prepared by Jenny Engineering
Corporation, undated, and (2) Page #277 -
Laboratory Analysis - EP Toxicity Test, Leachate
Analysis (from Vol. 45, no. 98), prepared by Mr.
M. Mullen, Industrial Corrosion Management, Inc.,
prepared for Jenny Engineering for Quality Tool &
Die Co., Inc., October 31, 1989.)
25
-------
706530-
706567
706568-
706574
706575-
706580
P.
706581-
706586
P.
706587-
706604
P.
706605-
706622
Documents provided to U.S. EPA by representatives
of General Electric Company, re: Cooper Hewitt
Electric Company Certificates of Incorporation and
Annual Reports between 1910 and 1924, August 7,
1996.
Letter to General Electric Company, CT Corporation
System, Registered Agent, from Mr. Richard Caspe,
Director, Emergency and Remedial Response
Division, U.S. EPA, Region II, re: General Notice
of Potential Liability, Grand Street Mercury
Superfund Site, 722 Grand Street, Hoboken, N.J.,
August 12, 1996. (Attachment: List of PRP's,
undated.)
Letter to Mr. David Pascale, from Mr. Richard L.
Caspe, Director, Emergency and Remedial Response
Division, U.S. EPA, Region II, re: General Notice
of Potential Liability, Grand Street Mercury
Superfund Site, 722 Grand Street, Hoboken, N.J.,
August 12, 1996. (Attachment: List of PRP's,
undated.)
Letter to Mr. John J. Pascale, Sr., from Mr.
Richard L. Caspe, Director, Emergency and Remedial
Response Division, U.S. EPA, Region II, re:
General Notice of Potential Liability, Grand
Street Mercury Superfund Site, 722 Grand Street,
Hoboken, N.J., August 12, 1996. (Attachment: List
of PRP's, undated.)
Request for Information Letter to Angstrom
Technologies, Inc. c/o Gael Morris, from Mr.
Richard L. Caspe, Director, Emergency and Remedial
Response Division, U.S. EPA, Region II, re: 722
Grand Street Mercury Site, Hoboken, New Jersey,
Request for Information Pursuant to( Comprehensive
Environmental Response, Compensatioh and Liability
Act, 42 U.S.C. Section 9601, et seq!. , August 14,
1996. (Attachments: (1) Instructions for
Responding to Request for Information; (2)
Supplemental Request for Information; and (3)
Certification of Answers to Request for
Information.)
Request for Information Letter to Angstrom
Technologies, Inc. c/o The Corporation, from Mr.
Richard L. Caspe, Director, Emergency and Remedial
Response Division, U.S. EPA, Region II, re: 722
Grand Street Mercury Site, Hoboken, New Jersey,
Request for Information Pursuant to Comprehensive
26
-------
Environmental Response, Compensation and Liability
Act, 42 U.S.C. Section 9601, et seq., August 14,
1996. (Attachments: (I) Instructions for
Responding to Request for Information; (2)
Supplemental Request for Information; and (3)
Certification of Answers to Request for
Information.)
P. 706623- Request for Information Letter to Antex
706640 Corporation c/o Mr. Ken Masser, from Mr.
Richard L. Caspe, Director, Emergency and Remedial
Response Division, U.S. EPA, Region II, re: 722
Grand Street Mercury Site, Hoboken, New Jersey,
Request for Information Pursuant to Comprehensive
Environmental Response, Compensation and Liability
Act, 42 U.S.C. Section 9601, et seq., August 14,
1996. (Attachments: (1) Instructions for
Responding to Request for Information; (2)
Supplemental Request for Information; and (3)
Certification of Answers to Request for
Information.)
P. 706641- Request for Information Letter to Sperti Drug
706662 Products c/o Mr. William J. Walsh, from Mr.
Richard L. Caspe/ Director, Emergency and Remedial
Response Division, U.S. EPA, Region II, re: 722
Grand Street Mercury Site, Hoboken, New Jersey,
Request for Information Pursuant to Comprehensive
Environmental Response, Compensation and Liability
Act, 42 U.S.C. Section 9601, et seq., August 14,
1996. (Attachments: (1) Instructions for
Responding to Request for Information; (2)
Supplemental Request for Information; and (3)
Certification of Answers to Request for
Information.)
P- 706663- Request for Information Letter to Natmar, Inc.
706680 c/o Mr. Ken Masser, from Mr. Richard L. Caspe,
Director, Emergency and Remedial Response
Division, U.S. EPA, Region II, re: 722 Grand
Street Mercury Site, Hoboken, New Jersey, Request
for Information Pursuant to Comprehensive
Environmental Response, Compensatioh and Liability
Act, 42 U.S.C. Section 9601, et seq., August 14,
1996. (Attachments: (1) Instructions for
Responding to Request for Information; (2)
Supplemental Request for Information; and (3)
Certification of Answers to Request for
Information.)
27
-------
706681- Request for Information Letter to Faraday, Inc.,
706702 c/o Mr. Dennis Riley, Registered Agent, from Mr.
Richard L. Caspe, Director, Emergency and Remedial
Response Division, U.S. EPA, Region II, re: 722
Grand Street Mercury Site, Hoboken, New Jersey,
Request for Information Pursuant to Comprehensive
Environmental Response, Compensation and Liability
Act, 42 U.S.C. Section 9601, et seq., August 14,
1996. (Attachments: (1) Instructions for
Responding to Request for Information; (2)
Supplemental Request for Information; and (3)
Certification of Answers to Request for
Information.) l
706703- Documents given to U.S. EPA by General Electric,
706846 re: Grand Street, Hoboken, N.J. Site, Potentially
Responsible Parties, September 18, 1996.
706847- Request for Information Letter to Grand Street
706859 Artist Partnership c/o Ira Karasick, Esq., from
Mr. Richard L. Caspe, Director, Emergency and
Remedial Response Division, U.S. EPA, Region II,
re: 722 Grand Street Mercury Site, Hoboken, New
Jersey, Request for Information Pursuant to
Comprehensive Environmental Response, Compensation
and Liability Act, 42 U.S.C. Section 9601, et
seq., November 7, 1996. (Attachments: Instructions
for Responding to Request for Information and
Certification of Answers to Request' for
Information.) i
706860- Request for Information Letter to David and
706872 Sherrill Pascale, from Mr. Richard L. Caspe,
Director, Emergency and Remedial Response
Division, U.S. EPA, Region II, re: Supplemental
Request for Information Pursuant to Comprehensive
Environmental Response, Compensation and Liability
Act, 42 U.S.C. Section 9601, et seq., November 7,
1996. (Attachments: (1) Instructions for
Responding to Request for Information; (2)
Supplemental Request for Information; and (3)
Certification of Answers to Request for
Information.)
706873- Request for Information Letter to Westinghouse
706888 Electric Company, c/o Mr. Michael H. Jordan,
Chairman and CEO, from Mr. Richard'L. Caspe,
Director, Emergency and Remedial Response
Division, U.S. EPA, Region II, re: 722 Grand
Street Mercury Site, Hoboken, New Jersey, Request
for Information Pursuant to Comprehensive
28
-------
Environmental Response, Compensation and Liability
Act, 42 U.S.C. Section 9601, et seq., November 15,
1996. (Attachments: Instructions for Responding to
Request for Information and Certification of
Answers to Request for Information.)
P. 706889- Letter to Ms. Marissa Wiggett, Emergency and
706897 Remedial Response Division, and Catherine Garypie
Esq., Assistant Regional Counsel, U.S. EPA, Region
II, from Mr. John F. Semple, Sterns & Weinroth,
re: Response to EPA's Request for Information
Pursuant to 42 U.S.C. Section 9604, et seqf
November 15, 1996. (Attachments: (1) Responses to
EPA's Section 104(e) Request, from Mr. John J.
Pascale, Sr., November 14, 1996, and (2)
Certification of Answers to Request for
Information, signed by Mr. John Pascale, Sr.,
November 14, 1996.)
P. 706898- Letter to Ms. Marissa Wiggett, Emergency and
706928 Remedial Response Division, U.S. EPA, Region II,
from Mr. Robert P. Stein, Cahmy, Karlinsky & Stein
LLP, re: attached Response of Grand Street Artists
to 104(e) Request for Information Relating to 722
Grand Street, Hoboken, New Jersey, December 11,
1996. (Note: This document is CONFIDENTIAL. It
can be located in the Superfund Record Center at
290 Broadway - 18th Floor, N.Y., N.Y., 10007.)
P. 706929- Redacted Letter to Ms. Marissa Wiggett, Emergency
706960 and Remedial Response Division, U.S. EPA, Region
II, from Mr. Robert P- Stein, CamhyJ Karlinsky, &
Stein, LLP, re: Response of Grand Street Artists
to lQ4(e) Request for Information Relating to 722
Grand Street, Hoboken, N.J., December 11, 1996.
(Attachments: (1) Responses to Request for
Information from the Grand Street Artists,
undated, and, (2) Certification of Answers to
Request for Information, signed by Stephen Keough,
undated.)
P. 706961- Letter to Catherine Garypie, Esq., Assistant
706964 Regional Counsel, U.S. EPA, Region II, from Mr.
Michael Edelson, Hellring, Lindeman, Goldstein, &
Siegal, re: Grand Street Mercury Site, Hoboken,
N.J., December 30, 1996. (Attachments: (1)
Supplemental Response of Mr. David P. Pascale to
Request for Information, December 24, 1996, and,
(2) Floor Plan of Cooper Hewitt Electric Co.,
Hoboken, N.J., prepared by M.P. Rolka, Factory
Insurance Association, August 16, 1955.)
29
-------
7.8 Correspondence
706965-
706966
706967-
706967
P.
706968-
707206
707207-
707207
707208-
707208
Redacted record of telephone interview conducted
by Mr. Gerard B. Connolly, Investigator, U.S. EPA,
Site: Grand Street Mercury, February 6, 1996.
Record of telephone interview conducted by Mr.
Gerard B. Connolly, Investigator, U.S. EPA, Site:
Grand Street Mercury, February 6, 1996. (Note:
This document is CONFIDENTIAL. It can be located
in the Superfund Record Center at 290 Broadway -
18th Floor, N.Y., N.Y., 10007.)
Letter to Catherine Garypie Esq., Assistant
Regional Counsel, U.S. EPA, Region II, from Mr.
Langley R. Shook, Sidley & Austin, re: Hoboken,
N.J., Mercury Site, June 27, 1996. (Attachments
(1) Page 123 from "Modern Glass Working and
Laboratory Technique", written by M.C. Nokes, and,
(2) "A Complete Treatise on Illumination with
Mercury Vapor Lamps, written by Mr. George J.
Taylor.)
Letter to Mr. Jack Harmon, On-Scene Coordinator,
U.S. EPA, Region II, from Jane W. Gardner, Esq.,
Acting Manager, Remedial Programs, General
Electric Company, re: Grand Street Properties
Site, Hoboken, NJ/ August 27, 1996.
Letter to Catherine Garypie, Esq., Assistant
Regional Counsel, U.S. EPA, Region II, from
Michael Edelson, Hellring Lindeman Goldstein &
Siegal, re: Grand Street Mercury Superfund Site,
722 Grand Street, Hoboken, New Jersey, September
3, 1996.
9.0 NATURAL RESOURCE TRUSTEES
9.4 Correspondence
P. 900001- Memorandum for the record from Ms. Lisa Rosman,
900001 National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration
(NOAA) Associate CRC, re: Grand Street Mercury,
Hoboken, N.J., May 13, 1997.
30
-------
10.0 PUBLIC PARTICIPATION
10.1 Comments and Responses
P. 10.00001- Letter to Docket Coordinator, U.S. EPA,
10.00025 Headquarters, CERCLA Docket Office, from
Langley R. Shook, Esq., and Margaret S. Bass,
Esq., Sidley & Austin, re: U.S. EPA Proposed Rule,
NPL Nomination, 61 Fed. Reg., 67678 (Dec. 23,
1996), February 21, 1997. (Attachment: Comments on
the National Priorities List Nomination of the
Grand Street Mercury Site, Hoboken, New Jersey.)
10.2 Community Relations Plans
P- 10.00026- Letter to Ms. Katherine Parker, from Ms. Joanne M.
10.00027 Wireman, Community Relations Manager, ICF Kaiser,
re: Meeting to discuss the community's concerns
regarding the Grand Street Mercury Site, February
14, 1997.
P- 10.00028- Letter to Ms. Janet Filameno, from Ms. Joanne M.
10.00029 Wireman, Community Relations Manager, ICF Kaiser,
re: Meeting to discuss the community's concerns
regarding the Grand Street Mercury Site, February
14, 1997.
P. 10.00030- Letter to Ms. Donna Cahill, Environment Committee
10.00030 of Hoboken, from Ms. Joanne M. Wireman, Community
Relations Manager, ICF Kaiser, re: Meeting on
Wednesday, February 19, at 7:00 p.m. to discuss
the community's concerns regarding the Grand
Street Mercury Site, February 14, 1997.
P. 10.00031- Letter to Mr. Gary Garetano, Assistant Director,
10.00031 Hudson Regional Health Commission, from Ms. Joanne
M. Wireman, Community Relations Manager, ICF
Kaiser, re: Meeting on Thursday, February 20, at
10:30 a.m. to discuss the community's concerns
regarding the Grand Street Mercury Site, February
14, 1997. l
P. 10.00032- Letter to Mr. Frank J. Spano, Principal, Hoboken
10.00032 High School, from Ms. Joanne M. Wireman, Community
Relations Manager, ICF Kaiser, re: Meeting on
Thursday, February 27, at 10:00 a.m. to discuss
the community's concerns regarding the Grand
Street Mercury Site, February 14, 1997.
P. 10.00033- Letter to Mr. Eugenic Notaro, from Ms. Joanne M.
10.00033 Wireman, Community Relations Manager, ICF Kaiser,
31
-------
p.
p.
re: Meeting on Thursday, February 20, at 9:00 a.m.
to discuss the community's concerns regarding the
Grand Street Mercury Site, February 14, 1997.
10.00034- Letter to Mr. Michael Solter, from Ms. Joanne M.
10.00034 Wireman, Community Relations Manager, ICF Kaiser,
re: Meeting on Monday, March 10, at 7:00 p.m. to
discuss the community's concerns regarding the
Grand Street Mercury Site, February 17, 1997.
10.00035- Letter to Mr. Mark Machonis, Albee Services, from
10.00036 Ms. Joanne M. Wireman, Community Relations
Manager, ICF Kaiser, re: Community interviews
regarding the Grand Street Mercury Site, February
18, 1997.
10.00037- Letter to Ms. Donna Cahill, President, Environment
10.00037 Committee of Hoboken, from Ms. Joanne M. Wireman,
Community Relations Manager, ICF Kaiser, re:
Development of Community Relations Plan, Grand
Street Mercury Site, March 4, 1997.
10.00038- Letter to Ms. Mary Perry, Environment Committee of
10.00038 Hoboken, from Ms. Joanne M. Wireman; Community
Relations Manager, ICF Kaiser, re: Development of
Community Relations Plan, Grand Street Mercury
Site, March 4, 1997.
10.00039- Letter to Ms. Mollie Thompson, Environment
10.00039 Committee of Hoboken, from Ms. Joanne M. Wireman,
Community Relations Manager, ICF Kaiser, re:
Development of Community Relations Plan, Grand
Street Mercury Site, March 4, 1997.
10.00040- Letter to Ms. Deborah Edwards, Esq., Environment
10.00040 Committee of Hoboken, from Ms. Joanne M. Wireman,
Community Relations Manager, ICF Kaiser, re:
Development of Community Relations Plan, Grand
Street Mercury Site, March 4, 1997.
10.00041- Letter to Ms. Cynthia Silber, Vice President,
10.00041 Environment Committee of Hoboken, from Ms. Joanne
M. Wireman, Community Relations Manager, ICF
Kaiser, re: Development of Community Relations
Plan, Grand Street Mercury Site, March 4, 1997.
10.00042- Letter to Ms. Katherine Parker and Mr. Gerald
10.00042 Norton, from Ms. Joanne M. Wireman, Community
Relations Manager, ICF Kaiser, re: Development of
Community Relations Plan, Grand Street Mercury
Site, March 4, 1997.
32
-------
P. 10.00043- Letter to Ms. Janet Filameno and Mr. Louis
10.00043 Nel, from Ms. Joanne M. Wireman, Community
Relations Manager, ICF Kaiser, re: Development of
Community Relations Plan, Grand Street Mercury
Site, March 4, 1997.
P. 10.00044- Letter to Mr. Eugenio Notaro, from Ms. Joanne M.
10.00044 Wireman, Community Relations Manager, ICF Kaiser,
re: Development of Community Relations Plan, Grand
Street Mercury Site, March 4, 1997.)
P. 10.00045- Letter to Mr. Frank J. Spano, Principal, Hoboken
10.00045 High School, from Ms. Joanne M. Wireman, Community
Relations Manager, ICF Kaiser, re: Development of
Community Relations Plan, Grand Street Mercury
Site, March 4, 1997.
P. 10.00046- Letter to Mr. George Crimmins, Public Safety
10.00046 Director, City Hall, from Ms. Joanne M. Wireman,
Community Relations Manager, ICF Kaiser, re:
Development of Community Relations Plan, Grand
Street Mercury Site, March 4, 1997.
P. 10.00047- Letter to Mr. Gary Garetano, Assistant Director,
10.00047 Hudson Regional Health Commission, from Ms. Joanne
M. Wireman, Community Relations Manager, ICF
Kaiser, re: Development of Community Relations
Plan, Grand Street Mercury Site, March 4, 1997.
P. 10.00048- Letter to Mr. Michael Korman, Public Information
10.00048 Officer, City Hall, from Ms. Joanne'M. Wireman,
Community Relations Manager, ICF Kaiser, re:
Development of Community Relations Plan, Grand
Street Mercury Site, March 4, 1997.
P. 10.00049- Letter to Mr. Frank S. Sasso, Health Officer, City
10.00049 of Hoboken Board of Health from Ms. Joanne M.
Wireman, Community Relations Manager, ICF Kaiser,
re: Development of Community Relations Plan, Grand
Street Mercury Site, March 4, 1997.
P. 10.00050- Letter to Ms. Serena Bocchino, from Ms. Joanne M.
10.00050 Wireman, Community Relations Manager, ICF Kaiser,
re: Development of Community Relations Plan, Grand
Street Mercury Site, March 17, 1997.
P. 10.00051- Letter to Ms. Shun Yi-Chen and Mr. Ching Huang
10.00051 Chung, from Ms. Joanne M. Wireman, Community
Relations Manager, ICF Kaiser, re: Development of
Community Relations Plan, Grand Street Mercury
Site, March 17, 1997.
33
-------
p.
p.
p.
p.
p.
10.00052-
10.00052
10.00053-
10.00053
10.00054-
10.00054
10.00055-
10.00055
10.00056-
10.00056
Letter to Mr. Curtis Crystal, from Ms. Joanne M.
Wireman, Community Relations Manager, ICF Kaiser,
re: Development of Community Relations Plan, Grand
Street Mercury Site, March 17, 1997.
Letter to Mr. Matt Schley, from Ms. Joanne M.
Wireman, Community Relations Manager, ICF Kaiser,
re: Development of Community Relations Plan, Grand
Street Mercury Site, March 17, 1997.
Letter to Mark and Myra Graham, from Ms. Joanne M.
Wireman, Community Relations Manager, ICF Kaiser,
re: Development of Community Relations Plan, Grand
Street Mercury Site, March 17, 1997.
Letter to Ms. Meredith Lippman and Mr. John
Steadwell, from Ms. Joanne M. Wireman, Community
Relations Manager, ICF Kaiser, re: Development of
Community Relations Plan, Grand Street Mercury
Site, March 17, 1997. :
Letter to Mr. Robert Schiffmacher, from Ms. Joanne
M. Wireman, Community Relations Manager, ICF
Kaiser, re: Development of Community Relations
Plan, Grand Street Mercury Site, March 17, 1997.
P. 10.00057- Letter to Mr. Michael Solter, from Ms. Joanne M.
10.00057 Wireman, Community Relations Manager, ICF Kaiser,
re: Development of Community Relations Plan, Grand
Street Mercury Site, March 17, 1997.
10.6 Fact Sheets and Press Releases
P. 10.00058- Newspaper article: "Mercury turns a dream into a
10.00059 living nightmare", written by Mr. Tom Johnson,
Star Ledger Newspaper, November 3, 1996.
P. 10.00060- Press Release of Senator Lautenberg and
10.00063 Representative Pallone regarding completion of CIC
off-site removal, and, Statement of Representative
Frank Pallone responding to a just released GOA
report, February 13, 1997.
P. 10.00064- News Release: EPA Orders General Electric and
10.00067 John Pascale, Sr., To Take Over Superfund
Activities At Mercury-Contaminated Condo In
Hoboken, prepared by U.S. EPA, Region II, March 5,
1997. (Attachment: Facsimile cover sheet to Mr.
George Crimmins, Hoboken Office of Business
Administration, from Mr. John Hansen, Remedial
Project Manager, U.S. EPA Region II, re: Grand
34
-------
Street Mercury Site, March 6, 1997.)
P. 10.00068- Newspaper article: "GE Is Told to Pay for
10.00069 Hoboken Evacuees Housing, written by Mr. Ronald
Smothers, The New York Times, March 6, 1997.
P. 10.00070- Newspaper article: "Mercury cleanup ordered",
10.00070 written by Mr. Agustin C. Torres, The Jersey
Journal, March 6, 1997.
P. 10.00071- Newspaper article: " "Mercury condo" owners hail
10.00071 federal pay-up order", written by Mr. Peralto C.
Paul, The Jersey Journal, March 7, 1997.
P. 10.00072- Newspaper Article: "GE files suit over Mercury,
10.00073 Countersuing artists group", written by Mr.
Peralto C. Paul, The Jersey Journal, March 8,
1997.
Note: Attached are indices for the Removal Administrative Record
which is available for review at the U.S. EPA's administrative
record repositories.
35
-------
From: Jack Harmon, On-Scene Coordinator
Removal Action Branch
U.S. EPA Region E
2890 Woodbridge Ave.
Building 209
Edison, NT 08837
To: Lenore Hyland, Librarian
Hoboken Public Library
500 Park Ave.
Hoboken, New Jersey 07030
I acknowledge that I have received the following documents from the U.S. EPA Region JJ
Office, pertaining to the Grand Street Site.
Administrative Record Name - Grand Street Site
Administrative Record Documents Numbers:
Signed:
Dare:
GSS 1.1001
GSS 1.1003
GSS 1.1051
GSS 1.1069
GSS 1.1073
GSS 1.2001
GSS 1.2005
GSS 1.2011
GSS 1.2012
GSS 1.2014
GSS 1.2034
GSS 1.2035
GSS 1.2060
GSS 1.2061
- 1.1002
- 1.1050
- 1.1068
- 1.1072
- 1.1100
- 1.2004
- 1.2010
- 1.2011
- 1.2013
- 1.2033
- 1.2034
- 1.2059
- 1.2060
- 1.2061
GSS 1.2062
GSS 1.2080
GSS 1.2082
GSS 1.2083
GSS 2.1001
GSS 2.1004
GSS 2. 1012
GSS 2. 1021
GSS 2. 1076
GSS 3.1001
GSS 3.1012
GSS 4. 1001
GSS 4.1003
GSS 5.1001
iltiJu V
I
V '
1.2079
1.2081
1.2082
1.2083
2.1003
2.1011
2.1020
2.
2.
3.
3.
4.
4.
1075
1121
1011
1020
1002
1003
- 5.1002
Please return this form to:
Jack Harmon
On-Scene Coordinator
Removal Action Branch
U.S. EPA Region H
2890 Woodbridge Ave.
Building 209
Edison, NJ 08837
-------
GRAND STREET SITE
ADMINISTRATIVE RECORD FILE
INDEX OF DOCUMENTS
The index of documents contains the following information about each document:
Document #: Site Code(three letters of site name)-Section, First Page-Section Last Page
EXAMPLE (ABC 1.1001 - 1.1002)
Title: Abstract of Document Contents
Category: Document Category/Section of Administrative Record File
Author: Writer and Affiliation
Recipient: Addressee or Public and Affiliation, if applicable
Date: When Document was Created or Transmitted
Note: Items in the Administrative Record are for public access, and should be removed from the
file only for copying. The cost of reproduction of the documents in the file is the responsibility
of the person requesting the copy.
-------
GRAND STREET SITE
ADMINISTRATIVE RECORD FILE
LIST OF DOCUMENTS
Document #: GSS 1.1001 1.1002
Title: Concurrence on a Nationally Significant Removal Action at the Grand Street
Mercury Site, Hoboken, NJ
Category: Background
Author: Stephen D. Luftig, Director, Office of Emergency and Remedial Response,
U.S. Environmental Protection Agency
Recipient: Kathleen C. Callahan, Director, Emergency and Remedial Response Division,
U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Region II
Date: January 4, 1996
Document #: GSS 1.1003-1.1050
Title: General Information Submission (GIS) & Site Evaluation Submission (SES)
Category: Background
Author: New Jersey Department of Environmental Protection (NJDEPE)
Recipient: N/A
Date: Apnl 20, 1990
Document*: GSS 1.1051- 1.1068
Title: Declaration of Environmental Restrictions and Grant of Easement for the Site
Category: Background
Author: Michael Edelson, Scarpone &. Edelson, Attorneys at Law
Recipient: Michael Buriani, Case Manager, NJDEPE
Date: January 28, 1993
Document #: GSS 1.1069- 1.1072
Title: Negative Declaration by Operator
Category: Background
Author: Kenneth T. Han, Assistant Director, Industrial Site Evaluation Element.
NJDEPE
Recipient: David Pascale, Quality Tool &. Die Co., Inc.
Date: February 8, 1993
Document #: GSS 1.1073 1.1100
Title: Letter/Sampling and Analysis Report
Category: Background
Author: Gary M. Annibal, CIH. ENPAK Services Company. Inc.
Recipient: Mr. Mike Salter. Grand Street Artist Partners
Date: March 28, 1995
FEBRUARY 12, 1997 - REVISION
ill
-------
Document #: CSS - 1.2001 1.2004
Title:
Category:
Author:
Recipient:
Date:
Document #:
Title:
Category:
Author:
Recipient:
Date:
Initial Questionnaire Memorandum of Agreement Application
Site Identification
Mike Desai, Albee Services
State of New Jersey Department of Environmental Protection
August 29, 1995
GSS 1.2005- 1.2010
Letter Concerning Discovery of Mercury
Site Identification
N/A
Shun-Yi Chen & Ching-Huang Chung
October 26, 1995
Document #: GSS - 1.2011
Title: Letter
Category: Site Identification
Author: David W Williamson, President, D.W.W. Enterprises, Inc.
Recipient: Steve Keough, Grand Street Artist Partners
Date: October 30, 1995
Document #: GSS 1.2012 1.2013
Title: Letter Progress Report
Category: Site Identification
Author: John Szalkowski, Senior Environmental Scientist, Environmental Waste
Management Associates, Inc.
Recipient: Mr. Steven Keough. Grand Street Artist Partnership
Date: November 1, 1995
Document #: GSS 1.2014-1.2033
Title: Mercury Vapor Survey
Category: Site Identification
Author: Detail Associates. Inc.
Recipient: Janice Filemeno, Kathy Parker, Residents. 722 Grand St.
Date: November 8, 1995
Document^ GSS 1.2034 1.2034
Title: Letter Mercury Remediation
Category: Site Identification
Author: David W. Williamson, President, D.W.W. Enterprises, Inc.
Recipient: Mr. John Szalkowski. Environmental Waste Management Associates. Inc.
Date: November 16. 1995
FEBRUARY 12, 1997 - REVISION
IV
-------
Document #: GSS 1.2035 - 1.2059
Title: Mercury Abatement/Encapsulation Specifications
Category: Site Identification
Author: Environmental Waste Management Associates, Inc.
Recipient: Grand Street Artist Partnership
Date: N/A
Document #: GSS 1.2060 1.2060
Title: Mercury Vapor Monitoring
Category: Site Identification
Author: James Pasquallo, New Jersey Department of Health
Recipient: N/A
Date: December 22, 1995
Document #: GSS 1.2061 1.2061
Title: Letter
Category: Site Identification
Author: Richard J. Gtmello. Assistant Commissioner, Site Remediation Program, State
of New Jersey Department of Environmental Protection
Recipient: Richard Salkie, USEPA Region II
Date: January 02, 1996
Document #: GSS 1.2062 1.2079
Title: Mercury Vapor Monitoring Survey
Category: Site Identification
Author: Thomas O'Neill, START PM
Recipient: Jeff Bechtel, OSC, Response and Prevention Branch U. S. EPA, Region II
Date: January 2, 1996
Document #: GSS 1.2080 1.2081
Title: Removal Request
Category: Site Identification
Author: Robert Van Fossen, Assistant Director, Discharge Response Element State of
New Jersey Department of Environmental Protection
Recipient: Kathleen C. Callahan, Director, Emergency and Remedial Response Division,
U. S. Environmental Protection Agency
Date: January 3, 1996
Document #: GSS 1.2082 1.2082
Title: Order of Health Officer
Category: Site Identification
Author: Frank S. Sasso, MS. MSW. Health Officer, City of Hoboken Board of Health
Recipient: N/A
Date: January 4. 1996
FEBRUARY 12, 1997 - REVISION
-------
Document #: GSS - 1.2083 - 1.2083
Title:
Category:
Author:
Recipient:
Date:
Document #:
Title:
Category:
Author:
Recipient:
Date:
Document #:
Title:
Category:
Author:
Recipient:
Date:
Document #:
Title:
Category:
Author:
Recipient:
Date:
Interim Protocol for Mercury Screening of Personal Belongings
Site Identification
N/A
Grand Street Mercury Site Residents
N/A
GSS 1.2084- 1.2089
Mercury Contamination
Site Identification
John Szalkowski, Senior Environmental Scientist, EWMA
Stephen Keough, Grand Street Artist Partnership
November 20, 1995
GSS - 1.2090
Region II Incident Notification Report
Site Identification
Margaret Chong, EPA
File
December 12, 1995
GSS 1.2091 1.2095
Referral of Casework in Bulk
Site Identification
Sue J. Smith. Director Office of Agency Liaison, The White House
EPA 35
Apnl26, 1995
Document #: GSS 1.2096 1.2097
Title:
Category:
Author:
Recipient:
Date:
Document #:
Title:
Category:
Author:
Recipient:
Date:
Document #:
Title:
Category:
Author:
Recipient:
Date:
Response to March 14, 1996 Letter
Site Identification (to be replaced at a later date)
EPA
Stephen Keough, Grand Street Artist Partnership
GSS 1.2098 1.2101
Henry Keough Letter of January 10, 1996
Site Identification
Bill Bradley, United States Senator
Jeanne Fox, Regional Administrator, USEPA
January 30, 1996
GSS 1.2102 1.2103
Response to January 30, 1996 Letter
Site Identification
Jeanne M. Fox, Regional Administrator, USEPA
Honorable Bill Bradley, United States Senate
April 8, 1996
FEBRUARY 12, 1997 - REVISION
VI
-------
Document #: GSS - 2.1001 2.1003
Title: Authorization Form
Category: Removal Response
Author: John Blanchard, HQ Project Officer
Recipient: Jack Harmon, On-Scene Coordinator
Date: January 17, 1996
Document #: GSS 2.1004 2.1011
Title: Results of Mercury Vapor Monitoring Survey Personal Belongings
Category: Removal Response
Author: Thomas O'Neill, START PM
Recipient: Jeff Bechtel, OSC, Response and Prevention Branch U.S. EPA, Region II
Date: January 22, 1996
Document #: GSS - 2.1012 2.1020
Title: Executive Summary Report Grand Street Mercury Site, Hoboken, NJ
Category: Removal Response
Author: Michael Morganti, REAC Task Leader
Recipient: Rodney Turpin, U.S. EPA/ERT Work Assignment Manager
Date: February 13, 1996
Document #: GSS 2.1021 2.1075
Title: Air Quality Modeling for Grand Street Mercury Site, Hoboken, NJ
Category: Removal Response
Author: Rod Turpin, Senior Environmental Scientist
Recipient: Jack Harmon, On-Scene Coordinator
Date: February 16, 1996
Document #: GSS 2.1076 2.1121
Title: Action Memorandum
Category: Removal Response
Author: Jack D. Harmon. On-Scene Coordinator
Recipient: Jeanne M. Fox
Date: March 21, 1996
Document #: GSS 2.2001 2.2011
Title: Sampling QA/QC Workplan, 722 Grand Street
Category: Removal Response
Author: Thomas O'Neill, Region II START
Recipient: Jeff Bechtel, OSC. EPA Region II
Date: January 4, 1996
Document #: GSS - 2.2012 2.2027
Title: Final Report for Phase 1 and 2 of ERT Activities
Category: Removal Response
Author: Rod Turpin, Senior Environmental Scientist. EPA ERT
Recipient: Jack Harmon, OSC, EPA Region II
Date: February 15. 1996
FEBRUARY 12
1997 - REVISION
VII
-------
Document #:
Title:
Category:
Author:
Recipient:
Date:
Document #:
Title:
Category:
Author:
Recipient:
Date:
Document #:
Title:
Category:
Author:
Recipient:
Date:
Document #:
Title:
Category:
Author:
Recipient:
Date:
Document #:
Title:
Category:
Author:
Recipient:
Date:
GSS 2.2028 2.2038
Sampling QA/QC Workplan and Sample Results, 725 Adams Street
Removal Response
Thomas O'Neill, Region II START
Jack Harmon. OSC, EPA Region II
April 1996
GSS 2.2039 2.2054
Sampling QA/QC Workplan Mercury Contamination Study
Removal Response
Thomas O'Neill, Region II START
Jack Harmon, OSC, EPA Region II
August 8, 1996
GSS - 2.2055 2.2080
Final Report, Mercury Contamination Investigation
Removal Response
Thomas O'Neill, Region II START
Jack Harmon, OSC, EPA Region II
October 7, 1996
GSS -2.3001 -2.3006
National Priorities List Nomination of the Grand Street Mercury, NJ Site
Removal Response
Richard L. Caspe, Director, Emergency and Remedial Response Division
David Evans, Director, State, Tribal, and Site Identification Center
November 18, 1996
GSS 3.1001 3.1011
Health Consultation
Health Assessments
U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, Public Health Service, ,
Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease Registry
Hoboken Board of Health
Januarv 3, 1996
Document #: GSS 3.1012 3.1020
Title: Public Health Advisory
Category: Health Assessments
Author: U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, Public Health Service,
Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease Registry
Recipient: N/A
Date: January 22, 1996
FEBRUARY 12, 19y7 - REVISION
vm
-------
Document #: GSS 3.2001
Title: Correspondence
Category: Health Assessments
Author: Elin Gursky, Sc.D., Senior Assistant Commissioner, State of New Jersey,
Department of Health
Recipient: Frank Sasso, Health Officer, Hoboken Health Department
Date: January 4, 1996
Document #: GSS 3.3001 - 3.3024
Title: Hazardous Substance Database (HSDB) Mercury
Category: Health Assessments
Author: N/A
Recipient: N/A
Date: N/A
Document #: GSS 3.3025 3.3028
Title: NIOSH Method 6009 Mercury
Category: Health Assessments
Author: NIOSH Manual of Analytical Methods
Recipient: N/A
Date: 5/15/89
Document #: GSS 3.3029 3.3030
Title: Material Safety Data Sheet for Mercury (Revision C)
Category: Health Assessments
Author: Genium Publishing Corporation
Recipient: N/A
Date: August 1988
Document #: GSS 3.3031 3.3033
Title: CAMEO Chemical Report
Category: Health Assessments
Author: CAMEO Response Information, NOAA
Recipient: N/A
Date: December 12. 1996
Document #: GSS 4.1001 4.1002
Title: Mercury Exposure and Health
Category: Public Participation Fact Sheet
Author: Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease Registry
Recipient: New Jersey Department of Health
Date: January 4, 1996
FEBRUARY 12, 1997 - REVISION
IX
-------
Document #: GSS - 4.1003 - 4.1003
Title: Notice of Public Availability
Category: Public Participation Public Notice
Author: N/A
Recipient: N/A
Date: N/A
Document #: GSS 4.2001 4.2002
Title: Hoboken Mercury Scare
Category: Public Participation Newspaper Article
Author: Beth Ellen Fand, Jersey Journal
Recipient: N/A
Date: December 29, 1995
Document #: GSS - 4.2003
Title: Mercury Driving Artists From Building
Category: Public Participation - Newspaper Article
Author: Jim Efstatiou, The Record
Recipient: N/A
Date: December 30, 1995
Document #: GSS 4.2004
Title: Few Artists Ready to Leave Mercury-Tainted Condo
Category: Public Participation Newspaper Article
Author: Richard Cowen, The Record
Recipient: N/A
Date: December 31. 1995
Document #: GSS 4.2005
Title: High Mercury Level Spurs Hoboken to call for Evacuation of Condos
Category: Public Participation Newspaper Article
Author: Gene Ruffini. The Star Ledger
Recipient: N/A
Date: December 31, 1995
Document #: GSS - 4.2006
Title: Cops Halt Move From Tainted Condos
Category: Public Participation - Newspaper Article
Author: Randy Diamond, The Record
Recipient: N/A
Date: January 1, 1996
Document #: GSS 4.2007 4.2008
Title: Residents Face Cold Reality on Toxic Site
Category: Public Participation Newspaper Article
Author: Elizabeth Moore, Star Ledger
Recipient: N/A
Date: January 1. 1996
FEBRUARY 12, 1997 - REVISION
-------
Document #: CSS 4.2009 4.2012
Title: A Toxic Nightmare in Hoboken
Category: Public Participation - Newspaper Article
Author: Ravi Nessman, The Associated Press
Recipient: N/A
Date: January 27, 1996
Document #: GSS - 4.2013
Title: Dream Home Turns into Big Nightmare
Category: Public Participation - Newspaper Article
Author: The Associated Press
Recipient: N/A
Date: January 27, 1996
Document #: GSS 4.2014
Title: GE to Reimburse Mercury Condominium Residents
Category: Public Participation - Newspaper Article
Author: Beth Ellen Fand, Jersey Journal
Recipient: N/A
Date: January 27, 1996
Document #: GSS 4.2015 4.2017
Title: ATSDR Finds Unsafe Mercury Levels in N.J. Condominium; DEP Blamed
Category: Public Participation - Newsletter
Author: Hazardous Waste News
Recipient: N/A
Date: February 5, 1996
Document #: GSS 4.2018-4.2019
Title: Ad Seeks Mercury Polluters
Category: Public Participation - Newspaper Article
Author: Beth Ellen Fand. Jersey Journal
Recipient: N/A
Date: February 6, 1996
Document #: GSS 4.2020
Title: Feds Gauge Mercury's Spread
Category: Public Participation - Newspaper Article
Author: Beth Ellen Fand. Jersey Journal
Recipient: N/A
Date: April 4, 1996
Document #: GSS - 4.2021 4.2022
Title: Mercury Pollutes 2nd Site
Category: Public Participation - Newspaper Article
Author: Beth Ellen Fand, Jersey Journal
Recipient: N/A
Date: May 9, 1996
FEBRUARY 12, 1997 - REVISION
XI
-------
Document #: GSS 4.2023
Title: Cleanup Bills are Assessed
Category: Public Participation - Newspaper Article
Author: Sarah Kershaw, New York Times
Recipient: N/A
Date: August 17, 1996
Document #: GSS - 4.2024 - 4.2025
Title: Someone to Blame
Category: Public Participation Newspaper Article
Author: Caren Lissner, The Hoboken Reporter
Recipient: N/A
Date: August 18, 1996
Document #: GSS - 4.2026
Title: In Hoboken, a Dream is Poisoned by Mercury
Category: Public Participation - Newspaper Article
Author: Steve Strunsky, New York Times
Recipient: N/A
Date: September 29, 1996
Document #: GSS - 4.2027 .4.2030
Title: Jazz on Canvas
Category: Public Participation Newspaper Article
Author: Barry Schwabsky, New York Times
Recipient: N/A
Date: October 6, 1996
Document #: GSS 4.2031
Title: Evacuated Artists Plan Show
Category: Public Participation Newspaper Article
Author: Terry Pristin, New York Times
Recipient: N/A
Date: October 16, 1996
Document #: GSS 4.2032
Title: ...While in Hoboken, Artists Hold Open House
Category: Public Participation - Newspaper Article
Author: Karen DeMasters, New York Times
Recipient: N/A
Date: October 20. 1996
FEBRUARY 12, 1997 - REVISION
xn
-------
Document tf: GSS 4.2033 4.2034
Title: Mercury Turns a Dream into a Living Nightmare
Category: Public Participation Newspaper Article
Author: Tom Johnson, Star-Ledger
Recipient: N/A
Date: November 3, 1996
Document #: GSS 4.2035
Title: EPA Adds Seven Sites to Superfund Toxic Waste List
Category: Public Participation Newspaper Article
Author: Reuters Financial Service
Recipient: N/A
Date: December 20, 1996
Document #: GSS 4.3001 4.3014
Title: National Priorities List for Uncontrolled Hazardous Waste Sites, Proposed
Federal Register, Vol. 61, No. 246
Category: Public Participation
Author: Environmental Protection Agency
Recipient: N/A
Date: December 23, 1996
Document #: GSS 4.4001 4.4004
Title: Information Update
Category: Public Participation
Author: Irmee Huhn, EPA
Recipient: 722 Grand Street Residents
Date: Apnl 11, 1996
Document #: GSS 4.4005 4.4008
Title: Information Update
Category: Public Participation
Author: Irmee Huhn, EPA
Recipient: 722 Grand Street Residents
Date: September 3, 1996
Document #: GSS 4.4009 4.4024
Title: Documents Given to Residents of 722 Grand Street in Meetings with Residents
on 12/17/96 and 12/18/96
Category: Public Participation
Author: EPA Region II
Recipient: 722 Grand Street Residents
Date: 12/17/96 and 12/18/96
FEBRUARY 12, 1997 - REVISION
xin
-------
Document #:
Title:
Category:
Author:
Recipient:
Date:
GSS 4.5001 - 4.5002
722 Grand Street Mercury Site, Hoboken, NJ
Public Participation
George Crimmins, Business Administrator, Hoboken
Richard L. Caspe, Director Emergency-Remedial Response Division, USEPA
December 19, 1996
Document #: GSS 4.5003 4.5004
Title: 722 Grand Street Mercury Site, Hoboken, NJ
Category: Public Participation
Author: Richard L. Caspe, Director Emergency & Remedial Response Division, USEPA
Recipient: George Crimmins, Business Administrator, Hoboken
Date: January 9, 1997
Document #: GSS - 5.1001 - 5.1002
Title: EPA Regional Guidance Documents
Category: Technical Source and Guidance Documents
Author: N/A
Recipient: File
Date: N/A
Document #: GSS - 6.1001 6.1006
Title: General Notice of Potential Liability
Category: Enforcement
Author: Richard L. Caspe, Director Emergency and Remedial Response Division
Recipient: David Pascale
Date: August 12, 1996
Document #: GSS 6.1007 6.1012
Title:
Category:
Author:
Recipient:
Date:
Document #:
Title:
Category:
Author:
Recipient:
Date:
Document #:
Title:
Category:
Author:
Recipient:
Date:
General Notice of Potential Liability
Enforcement
Richard L. Caspe, Director Emergency and Remedial Response Division
John J. Pascale. Sr.
August 12, 1996
GSS 6.1013 6.1018
General Notice of Potential Liability
Enforcement
Richard L. Caspe, Director Emergency and Remedial Response Division
General Electric Corporation
August 12, 1996
GSS -6.1019
Grand Street Properties Site, Hoboken, NJ
Enforcement
Jane W. Gardner, Esq., General Electric Company
Jack Harmon, On-Scene Coordinator, EPA
August 27, 1996
FEBRUARY 12, 1997 - REVISION
xiv
-------
Document #: GSS 6.1020
Title: Grand Street Mercury Superfund Site
Category: Enforcement
Author: Michael Edelson, Hellring Lindeman Goldstein &. Siegal
Recipient: Catherine Garypie, Esq. EPA
Date: September 3, 1996
Document #: GSS 6.1021 6.1049
Title: Grand Street Mercury Site, Hoboken, NJ
Category: Enforcement
Author: Rachel Jeanne Lehr, Deputy Attorney General, State of New Jersey
Recipient: Catherine Garypie, Esq. EPA
Date: December 24, 1996
Document #: GSS 6.1050 6.1092
Title: Grand Street Mercury Site, Hoboken, NJ
Category: Enforcement
Author: Jane W Gardner. Esq., General Electnc Company
Recipient: Catherine Garypie, Esq., EPA
Date: January 22, 1997
FEBRUARY 12, 1997 - REVISION
-------
prom: Jack Harmon, On-Scene Coordinator
Removal Action Branch
U.S. EPA Region II
2890 Woodbridge Ave.
Building 209
Edison, NJ 08837
To: Lenore Hyland, Librarian
Hoboken Public Library
500 Park Ave.
Hoboken, New Jersey 07030
I acknowledge that I have received the following documents from the U.S. EPA Region II Office,
pertaining to the Grand Street Site.
Administrative Record Name -- Grand Street Site
Administrative Record Documents Numbers:
GSS
GSS
GSS
GSS
GSS
GSS
GSS
GSS
GSS
GSS
GSS
GSS
GSS
GSS
GSS
GSS
GSS
1
1
1
1
1
1
2
2
2
2
2
2
.2084
.2090
.2091
.2096
.2098
.2102
.2001
.2012
.2028
.2039
.2055
.3001
- 1
- 1
1
- 1
1
2
- 2
. 2
2
2
. 2
.2089
.2095
.2097
.2101
.2103
.2011
.2027
.2038
.2054
.2080
.3006
3.2001
3
3
3
-i
j
.3001
.3025
.3029
.3031
-3
-3
3
3
.3024
.3028
.3030
.3033
GSS
GSS
GSS
GSS
GSS
GSS
GSS
GSS
GSS
GSS
GSS
GSS
GSS
GSS
GSS
GSS
GSS
4
4
4
4
A
*T
A
*T
A
T
4
4
4
4
4
4
4
4
A
-T
4
.2001
.2003
.2004
.2006
.2007
.2009
.2013
.2014
.2015
.2018
.2020
.2021
.2023
.2024
.2026
.2027
.2005
-4
-4
- 4
-4
-4
4
4
-4
.2002
.2008
.2012
.2017
.2019
.2022
.2025
.2030
Signed:
Date:
GSS 4.
GSS 4.
GSS 4.
GSS 4.
GSS 4.
GSS 4.
GSS 4.
GSS 4.
GSS 4.
GSS 4.
GSS 6.
GSS 6.
GSS 6.
GSS 6.
GSS 6.
GSS 6.
GSS 6.
2031
2032
2033-
2035
3001 -
4001 -
4005
4009-
5001 -
5003
1001 -
1007-
1013
1019
1020
1021 -
1050-
4.2034
4.3014
4.4004
4.4008
4.4024
4.5002
4.5004
6.1006
6.1012
6.1018
6. 1049
6.1092
Please return this form to:
Jack Harmon
On-Scene Coordinator
Removal Action Branch
U.S. EPA Region II
2890 Woodbridge Ave.
Building 209
Edison, NJ 08837
-------
UNITED STATES ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY
REGION II
EDISON. NEW JERSEY 08837
From: Jack Harmon, On-Scene Coordinator
Removal Action Branch
U.S. EPA Region II
2890 Woodbndge Ave.
Building 209
Edison, NJ 08837
To: Lenore Hyland, Librarian
Hoboken Public Library
500 Park Ave.
Hoboken, New Jersey 07030
I acknowledge that I have received the following documents from the U.S. EPA Region U Office,
pertaining to the Grand Street Site.
Administrative Record Name Grand Street Site
Administrative Record Documents Numbers:
GSS2.1122 -2.1152
GSS2.1153 2.1411
GSS2.1412 2.1514
Signed:
Date:
Please return this form to: Jack Harmon
On-Scene Coordinator
Removal Action Branch
U.S. EPA Region n
2890 Woodbridge Ave.
Bldg. 209
Edison, NJ 08837
-------
ROD FACT SHEET
SITE
Name : Grand Street Mercury Site
Location/State : Hoboken, NJ
EPA Region : II
HRS Score (date): not scored, NCP Sec.300.425(c)(3)
Site ID # : NJ0001327733
ROD
Date Signed: September 30, 1997
Remedy: temporary and permanent relocation of residents, building
demolition, soil remediation and offsite disposal of all
waste above risk-basd levels
Operating Unit Number: OU-1
Capital cost: $13,861,000 (in 1997 dollars)
Construction Completion: December 1999
0 & M per year:
Present worth: $13,861,000 (no O&M)
LEAD
Remedial: Superfund lead
Enforcement: to be determined
Primary contact: John Hansen (212) 637-3915
Secondary contact: Lisa Jackson (212) 637-4380
Main PRP(s): General Electric Company
PRP Contact: Dave Thompson (610) 992-7890
WASTE
Type: mercury
Medium: building components and soil
Origin: attributed to mishandling during mercury vapor lamp
manufacture; possible spill release to exterior soil.
Est. quantity: 1,000 Ibs liquid elemental mercury in building
-------