ENVIRONMENTAL-PROTECTION AGENCY
OFFICE OF ENFORCEMENT
EPA-330/1-77-003
Toxic Substances Information
for a
Selected Geographic Area
A Summary of EPA Information
Union and Middlesex Counties, New Jersey
NATIONAL ENFORCEMENT INVESTIGATIONS CENTER
DENVER, COLORADO
JANUARY 1977
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Environmental Protection Agency
Office of Enforcement
EPA-330/1-77-003
TOXIC SUBSTANCES INFORMATION
FOR A
SELECTED GEOGRAPHIC AREA
A Summary of EPA Information
on
Union and Middlesex Counties
New Jersey
January 1977
National Enforcement Investigations Center
Denver, Colorado
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CONTENTS
I INTRODUCTION 1
HISTORY OF STUDY 1
BACKGROUND 3
II SUMMARY OF EXISTING TOXIC SUBSTANCE DATA . . 10
SOURCES OF INFORMATION 10
INDUSTRIAL SOURCES OF TOXIC SUBSTANCES ... 12
MUNICIPAL SOURCES OF TOXIC SUBSTANCES ... 17
HAZARDOUS WASTE DISPOSAL DATA 20
AMBIENT AIR AND WATER QUALITY DATA 22
WATER QUALITY DATA 23
III POTENTIAL DISCHARGES OF TOXIC SUBSTANCES
TO THE ENVIRONMENT 97
POTENTIAL DISCHARGES FROM INDUSTRIAL
SOURCES . 97
.POTENTIAL'DISCHARGES FROM'*MUNICIPAL
SOURCES 107
HAZARDOUS WASTE DISPOSAL 109
IV SUMMARY AND CONCLUSIONS Ill
APPENDICES
A HAZARDOUS WASTE DISPOSAL IN MIDDLESEX COUNTY
B AIR QUALITY DATA
C SUMMARY OF WATER QUALITY DATA IN THE STORET
DATA SYSTEM
D SELECTED WATER QUALITY DATA
111
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TABLES
1-1 Summary of Cancer Data 8
II-l Summary of Industrial Facilities
in Union County, N.J 24-44
11-2 Summary of Industrial Facilities
in Middlesex County, N.J . 45-62
I1-3 Summary of Additional NPDES Listings
for Union County 63
II-4 Summary of Additional NPDES Listings
for Middlesex County 64
II-5 Summary of NPDES Effluent Limits &
Monitoring Requirement 65
II-6 Summary of Additional CDS Listings
for Union County 66
II-7 Summary of Additional CDS Listings
for Middlesex County 67
11-8 Summary of Existing Industrial Source
Data for Union County 68-74
11-9 - Summary of Existing Industrial Source
jt Data for Middlesex County 75-85
11-10 Summary of Industrial and Municipal
Sources in Union Co 86
11-11 Summary of Industrial and Municipal
Sources in Middlesex Co 87
11-12 Summary of Industrial Facilities
in Union Co. by SIC Code 88
11-13 Summary of Existing Municipal
Source Data, Union Co 89-93
11-14 Summary of Existing Municipal
Source Data, Middlesex Co 94-96
III-l Summary of Potential Discharges of
Toxic Substances from Industries in
Union County 99-101
111-2 Summary of Potential Discharges of
Toxic Substances from Industries in
Middlesex County 102-106
III-3 Major Potential Industrial Sources of
Toxic Substances 108
FIGURE
1-1 Location Map 4
IV
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I. INTRODUCTION
HISTORY OF STUDY
On October 22, 1976, the Deputy Administrator established three
work groups within EPA to develop an Agency strategy for the control of
toxic substances in the environment. Work Group C, the Integrated
Toxics Strategy Work Group, was formed to facilitate the coordination of
all of the Agency's toxics programs which are currently fragmented and
require a clear definition of priorities. The work group was given four
months to complete its task.
The work group selected three approaches to control of toxic
substances for evaluation and formed sub-groups to conduct pilot studies
using these approaches. The chemical by chemical approach was evaluated
using nitrosamines for a pilot study. Electroplating was evaluated for
the industry by industry approach. Northern New Jersey was selected as
the pilot study area for evaluation of the geographical\ area apprg_ach_to
control _of_jtox.ic .subs-t-ances-,-This~taTter approach involves the review
of all available data on toxic substances in a geographical area for all
environmental media. Problems can then be identified and appropriate
courses of action specific to that area can then be recommended.
The Geographical Area Sub-Work Group met on December 1, 1976, in
Region II offices in New York City and developed a work plan for con-
ducting the study. Eight tasks were defined and assignments made to
work group members to conduct the necessary staff work. Specific tasks
were as follows:
1. Characterize the study area in terms of known health and
environmental problems and define the types of sources of
toxic substances.
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2. Compile, review and evaluate existing data in EPA files
on sources of toxic substances released to the study
area environment in air emissions, wastewater discharges
and disposal of hazardous wastes as well as data on ambient
levels in air and water.
3. Summarize current EPA, state and local actions and authorities
for control of toxic substances.
4. Based on a review of existing source data by industrial
process experts, estimate what toxic substances are likely
being released to the environment of the study area.
5. Define what environmental problems are present and evaluate
what data are needed to define specific causes of the problems
and to design appropriate abatement actions.
6. Identify options for coordinated control and management
of toxic substances in the study area.
7. Recommend possible courses of action for EPA.
8. Critique the approach used in this study.
NEIC was given the lead role in completing tasks 2 and 4. Substantial
input was also provided to the other six tasks. Assistance was received
from Region II staff and from Sub-Work Group representatives from OAQPS,
OWPS and ORD in compiling existing data.
This report summarizes the available information on toxic substances
in the study area. It was submitted in draft form to a meeting of the
Sub-Work Group on January 11, 1977, as input to their preparation of a
report to the Integrated Toxics Strategy Work Group. This NEIC report
in final form is a support document to the Sub-Work Group final report.
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BACKGROUND
Selection of Study Area
Northern New Jersey was selected as the study locale by the full
Work Group for a combination of reasons: 1) A past history of in-
cidents related to toxic substances, 2) A high rate of occurrence of
cancer, 3) The expressed interest of the Governor of New Jersey in
developing a cancer control and management plan, and 4) The willingness
on the part of the State to have EPA conduct its study in the area.
The Sub-Work Group selected the contiguous counties of Union and
Middlesex as the specific study area within the general Northern New
Jersey locale. This provided an appropriate scope of work for the
limited time available. The two counties provide a good cross-section
of the general locale. Union County is highly urbanized with high
density resi'dential development in the West and heavy industrial develop-
ment (primarily petrochemical) in the East. Middlesex County represents
a microism of the Northeast New Jersey area with a wide variety of heavy
chemical industry in the north and suburban development in the South.
Proximity of the study area to both the New York City Regional
office and the Surveillance and Analysis Division laboratories at Edison,
N.J., increased both the availability of data arid staff familiarity with
area problems. State offices are also in proximity to the area although
State data was ultimately not used for the study as discussed in the
following section.
Description of Study Area
Demographic Data -- the adjacent counties of Union and Middlesex
are near the center of the New York City metropolitan area (Figure 1-1).
As a result they have high densities of population and industry. With
an area of only 103 square miles, Union County has a population of more
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i^^^
ce Union KeanS- Koaruburg Bay
Figure I - 1. Location Map
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than 550,000. Its population density ranks it as the twelfth highest
county in the United States. Middlesex County has three times the land
area (309 square miles) and a population of more than 610,000. It ranks
29th in the U. S. in population density.
Principal cities in Union County include Elizabeth, Linden, Plain-
field, Rahway, Roselle, Summit, Union and Westfield. Cartaret, Edison,
Metuchen, New Brunswick, Perth Amboy, Sayreville, South River and Wood-
bridge are principal cities in Middlesex County.
In Union County, the largest concentration of industries occurs in
Elizabeth and Linden adjacent to Newark Bay and the Arthur Kill in the
eastern portion of the county. Industry occupies about 10% of the land
area with residential use occupying about 50% of the area, primarily in
the West. There are about 1100 industries in the county with more than
six employees. Chemical, fabricated metal and machinery categories
account for about half of these industries. Large petroleum and petro-
chemical plants are along the Arthur Kill.
Land use in Middlesex County is substantially different. About 35%
of the area is occupied by residential, commercial and industrial uses.
Twenty eight percent is in agricultural land, forests, wetlands, parks
and reserved open space while the remaining 37% is vacant. Development
is primarily centered in the eastern and central portions of the county
while the southern third is relatively undeveloped. Industry tends to be
concentrated near the Arthur Kill, Raritan Bay and Raritan River.
Primary metals, chemicals, and fabricated metals account for a majority
of the county's 1,000 industries.
Hydrology -- From East to West, Union County is drained by the
Elizabeth River, Morses Creek, the Rahway River (all discharging to the
Arthur Kill), the Raritan River (discharging through Middlesex County to
Raritan Bay), and the upper Passaic River. The Arthur Kill and Newark
Bay, both tidal waters, border the county on the East. A majority of
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County is drained by the Raritan River and its tributaries including
South River, the Millstone River and Lawrence Brook. Arthur Kill and
Raritan Bay border the county on the East.
Arthur Kill connects Newark and Raritan Bays and separates Staten
Island from the New Jersey mainland. Large volumes of municipal and
industrial wastewater are discharged to Arthur Kill and the adjacent
bays. Wastewater is also discharged to the major streams, especially
the Elizabeth, Rahway and lower Raritan Rivers and Morses Creek.
Water Supply A majority of the water supply for domestic and
commercial use is obtained from surface sources West of the study area.
Municipal water systems obtain an estimated 80 and 60% of their supply
from surface sources in Union and Middlesex Counties, respectively. The
remainder is obtained from scattered wells tapping various groundwater
supplies. Pumping of groundwater is decreasing due to salt water
intrusion and contamination of groundwater by surface pollution sources.
There are five large community water supplies and 37 small non-
community supplies in Union County. In Middlesex County, there are 41
community and 383 non-community supplies. Many of the small systems
obtain water from wells and are thus vulnerable to localized pollution.
Environmental Conditions In addition to the general environ-
mental problems associated with a heavily urbanized area, both the air
and water quality in the study area are poor. Secondary standards for
particulate matter and standards for photochemical oxidants are exceeded
in the ambient air of Union County. Carbon monoxide standards are
exceeded in Elizabeth. Problems also exist for sulfur oxides. Water
quality is degraded in Newark Bay, the Arthur Kill and portions of the
Elizabeth and Rahway Rivers and Morses Creek.
Air quality is also poor in Middlesex County. Primary standards
for particulate matter are not met in Cartaret and photochemical oxidant
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levels do not meet standards county wide. Sulfur oxides are also a
problem. Water quality is degraded in Raritan Bay, the Arthur Kill,
and the lower Raritan River.
Large volumes of hazardous and toxic industrial wastes have been
disposed of in landfills in Middlesex County. These stored materials
pose a threat to the environment through air emissions and leachates.
Available data is inadequate to asses current levels of toxic
substances in ambient air and water.
Health Problems -- New Jersey is the nation's most densely populated
state and one of the most heavily industrialized. Both population and
industrial densities are substantially higher in the study area than
average for New Jersey. These factors coupled with the environmental
conditions previously described contribute to substantially higher
death rates in the state and in the study area than average for the
nation. New Jersey generally outranks other states in deaths attributed
to cancers of the breast, bladder, lower urinary tract, gastrointestinal
tract and associated organs, and respiratory tract. Death rates for
other types of illness are also high in New Jersey and the study area.
The National Cancer Institute has "compiled statistics on mortality
rates for all types of caner for the period 1950-1969. Data comparing
mortality rates in Union and Middlesex Counties with New Jersey and U. S.
averages for selected cancer sites are presented in Table 1-1. Note
that in most cases presented, the New Jersey average is higher than the
U. S. average and the two counties are even higher. This is especially
true for non-white mortality rates.
Data on mortality rates for all causes of death including cancer
for the period 1968-1972 have been compiled by the Office of Toxic
Substances. A statistical evaluation of this data for the 21 counties
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Table 1-1
SUMMARY OF CANCER MORTALITY DATA
(Deaths per 100,000 population, 1950-1969)
8
Location
Population
White
Non-White
Male Female Male Female
Middlesex Co,
Union Co.
N.J.
U.S.
Middlesex Co,
Union Co.
N.J.
U.S.
Middlesex Co,
Union Co.
N.J.
U.S.
Middlesex Co,
Union Co.
N. J.
U.S.
Middlesex Co,
Union Co.
N.J.
U.S.
Middlesex Co,
Union Co.
N.J.
U.S.
Middlesex Co,
Union Co.
N.J.
U.S.
Middlesex Co,
Union Co.
N.J.
U.S.
A11 Maiignant Neoplasms
221 149 279 208
203 151 252 166
205 148 230 163
174 130 184 139
Malignant Neoplasm of Esophagus
7.9 1.3 23.0 6.5
5.2 1.1 17.1 1.4
5.7 1.2 15.7 2.7
4.1 1.0 9.4 2.2
Malignant Neoplasm of Stomach
22.9 12.1 29.5 7.2
19.1 10.6 27.4 12.8
18.9 9.8 25.2 11.5
15.2 7.7 24.0 10.7
Malignant Neoplasm of Large Intestine
23.4 20.4 22.2 13.1
22.2 20.9 19.3 18.7
22.T 21.1 16.9 17.4
16.5 16.3 12.1 12.7
Malignant Neoplasm of Rectum
11.2 6.4 3.0 7.7
11.8 6.4 10.2 6.4
11.6 6.8 ' 8.1 7.1
7.6 4.8 5.7 4.5
Malignant Neoplasm of Trachea, Bronchus & Lung
54.5 6.6 70.7 10.7
42.0 6.9 48.8 10.1
46.8 7.2 51.4 8.6
38.0 6.3 36.7 6.3
Malignant Neoplasm of Breast
0.2 30.4 1.5 38.6
0.3 34.4 1.5 29.1
0.4 30.6 0.8 27.5
0.3 25.5 0.4 22.1
Malignant Neoplasm of Bladder & Other Urinary Organs
8.4 2.8 11.5 1.2
9.9 2.8 4.7 4.8
9.7 2.9 5.9 4.2
6.8 2.4 5.1 3.1
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in New Jersey show that all counties ranked in the top 500 (out of
3,609) counties in the country for at least two out of 40 causes of
death. For white males, Union County ranked in the top 500 for all
digestive cancer and intestinal cancer deaths. Middlesex County ranked
high for 13 causes of death including various types of cancer, chronic
ischemic heart disease, bronchitis, digestive system diseases, cirrhosis
and skin disease. For white females, a similar pattern was observed
with high rankings posted for 8 and 9 causes of death for Union and
Middlesex Counties, respectively. Non-white data had not been summarized
yet. The cancer data would suggest high rankings for these counties for
non-whites as well.
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II. SUMMARY OF EXISTING TOXIC SUBSTANCE DATA
SOURCES OF INFORMATION
The primary sources of existing data on toxic substances in the
two-county area reviewed for this study were information present in files
in the EPA Region II offices in New York City and Edison, New Jersey.
Additional information is known to be present in the files of the New
Jersey Department of Environmental Protection at Trenton and Spring-
field. The time frame of the study did not allow for review of these
voluminous state files.
Data on discharges of toxic substances to surface waters from
municipal and industrial sources were obtained from the National Pollu-^
tant Discharge Elimination System (NPDES) files. Information in these
files includes effluent data and process and product information from
the original Refuse Act Permit Program applications, some later effluent
data from application revisions and supplemental data submissions, some
inspection reports for plants reviewed prior to permit issue, permit
conditions, and self monitoring data submitted periodically in Discharge
Monitoring Reports (DMR's). Additional information on products, pro-
cesses, pollution controls and effluent characteristics was available
from compliance monitoring investigations performed by both the EPA and
the Interstate Sanitation Commission.
Information on emissions of toxic substances to the atmosphere was
obtained from air program files. A listing of all known significant
sources of air pollution was obtained from the Compliance Data System
(CD$). Additional data (primarily limited to criteria pollutants) was
obtained from the National Emission Data System (NEDS) file. Data on
sources of hazardous substances were obtained from NESHAPS files.
Inspection reports were available for some sources and provided data on
products and processes.
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A 1975 State Industrial Inventory was used to provide a listing of
all industries in Union and Middlesex Counties with more than six
employees in 1975. This inventory provides a geographical breakdown by
city and lists principal products for each industry.
Results of a study conducted by the Radian Corporation under
contract to EPA provided a listing of selected toxic substances manu-
factured by various industries in the study area.
A few interviews were conducted with Regional air and water staff
familiar with specific industries. However, these were limited by staff
field trips and holiday leave.
The primary source of water quality data was the STORET compu-
terized data bank. A large amount of data on the study area has been
stored during the past 14 years. About one-fourth of the sampling
stations reported some data on toxic substances, primarily heavy metals.
In contrast to water quality data, ambient air quality data for
other than criteria pollutants is almost non-existent. The primary
source of data on toxic substances in ambient air was the results of an
ongoing study by Research Triangle Institute under EPA contract.
Information on hazardous and solid waste disposal was obtained from
the Regions solid waste program files. This included management plans
for both counties including some source inventory data.
Water supply program files yielded data on the quality of raw and
finished water from both surface and groundwater sources in both
counties. Both routine monitoring data and the results of specific
studies were available.
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INDUSTRIAL SOURCES OF TOXIC SUBSTANCES
Industrial Inventory
The geographical listings contained in the 1975 State Industrial
Inventory were used as the primary source of an inventory of potential
sources of toxic substances in the study area. Company names, Standard
Industrial Classification (SIC) codes and principal products were
extracted from the Inventory for all communities in Union and Middlesex
Counties. Tables II-I and II-2 list this data. A total of 1,948
industries were listed for the two counties. Additional data contained
in the tables is discussed below.
NPDES Files
A computer listing of all NPDES permits in the study area was
obtained from the Regions Local GPSF permit tracking data system. There
were 77 entries for Union County and 133 for Middlesex County. Thirty
seven entries had been deleted from further permit processing because of
exemptions, discontinuance of the discharge, connection to municipal
systems, etc. Of the 63 active permit files for Union County, 15 were
major industrial facilities, 40 were minor industrial facilities, 6 were
major municipal facilities, and 2 were minor municipal facilities.
The NPDES listing for Union County was combined with the inventory
data in Table II-I. An X in the NPDES column indicates the facility has
applied for and usually has received an NPDES permit and is considered a
minor discharger. An M in the column indicates that the facility is
considered a major discharger. The minor and major designations are
reflective of flow volumes and loads of all water pollutants, not just
toxic substances.
Of the 63 NPDES listings, only 30 were also listed in the industrial
inventory. The additional NPDES listings are shown in Table II-3.
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In Middlesex County, there were 110 active permit files. Nineteen
were major industrial facilities, 79 were minor industries, 5 were major
municipal facilities, and 7 were minor municipal facilities. The MPDES
listing was combined with the industrial inventory in Table II-2 as for
Union County. Forty-nine of the 110 NPDES listings were also in the
industrial inventory. Industries with NPDES permits but not in the
inventory are listed in Table II-4.
Within the time frame allocated for the study, it was not possible
nor was it considered necessary to review all of the NPDES permit files.
Company names and SIC codes were reviewed and those industrial activi-
ties with potential for release of toxic substances to the environment
were selected for review. Twenty-eight files in Union County and 40
files in Middlesex County were reviewed including all major permits.
Each NPDES file was reviewed to obtain any available data on
products, processes, raw materials, wastewater flows and treatment,
efflu-ent loads of toxic pollutants, solid waste disposal and discharges
to municipal sewerage systems. Much of this information, if available,
was contained in the permit application. Unfortunately, these were 1971
applications in most cases. Occasionally, supplemental data had been
submitted to update the applications. In some cases, effluent limit-
ations and monitoring requirements had been imposed for several toxic
substances (Table II-5). In these cases, some self-monitoring data was
available to define present discharges. Note in Table II-5 that most of
the limits are for chrome and zinc which are only limited or monitored
if water treatment or the use of corrosion inhibitors increases the
content of the wastewater stream. There is thus little current effluent
data available.
In a few cases, an inspection of the plant prior to permit issuance
was reported in the file and provided additional information on products
and processes.
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Compliance monitoring inspections conducted by the Region II
Surveillance and Analysis Division at Edison, N.J., or the Interstate
Sanitation Commission provided additional data on products, raw mate-
rials and processes. In most cases, however, monitoring for specific
toxic substances was not performed unless required by permit conditions.
Six and 10 inspection reports were available for industries of concern
in Union and Middlesex Counties, respectively.
Data obtained from the NPDES files was combined with air file data
to define available information on toxic substances released to the
environment. This data compilation is presented in a later section.
Air Pollution Source Files
A listing of all sources of air pollution being tracked for com-
pliance with State Implementation Plan requirements was obtained from
the Compliance Data System (CDS). For Union County, 59 major sources
(potential emissions of criteria pollutants before control of more than
100 tons per year) and 21 minor sources were listed. Ninety-seven major
and 48 minor sources were listed for Middlesex County.
These lists were also combined with the inventories in Tables II-I
and II-2. An M or X in the CDS columns of the tables indicate that the
facility is listed by CDS as a major or minor source, respectively.
For Union County, there were 13 major and 13 minor sources listed
by CDS but not in the inventory. These are shown in Table II-6. The
corresponding figures for Middlesex County were 35 major and 28 minor
(Table II-7).
Inspections of air emissions had been conducted by Region II at 14
sources in Union County and 27 sources in Middlesex County. Inspection
reports provided information on products, raw materials and processes
but included little information on emissions other than criteria pollutants.
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Little information other than the compliance status and data on
emissions of criteria pollutants was available for the sources not yet
inspected. Review of SIC codes and product information indicates that a
number of these sources are potential sources of emissions of toxic
substances. For some facilities, information was available from the
NPDES files. There were 20 industries in Union County and 34 in Middle-
sex County that were listed by both NPDES and CDS. These were primarily
major industries.
Major Contributing Industries
Any municipal wastewater treatment facility receiving significant
industrial waste inflow is required to submit data on major contributing
industries (MCI's) as part of its NPDES application. The definition of
an MCI is usually based on the volume of wastewater discharged and the
waste constituents. All industries contributing more than 50,000 gpd
were reported along with other smaller contributions if they contained
heavy metals or other deleterious waste materials. Information submitted
for each MCI is supposed to include products, raw materials, flow and
some effluent characteristics. Review of the municipal permit files
indicated that data submitted by industries was often incomplete. Very
little toxic substance data was present and then frequently it was one
grab sample for heavy metals.
In Tables II-I and 11-2, an X in the MCI column indicates that the
facility was identified as an MCI by a municipality and that either the
industry type or the effluent characteristics indicate the actual or
potential presence of toxic substances in the wastewater discharged to a
municipal system.
Toxic substances discharged to municipal systems are summarized in
a following section on municipal sources.
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Potential Sources of Toxic Substances
The inventory in Tables II-l and 11-2 was reviewed to determine
which industries were potential sources of toxic substances based on SIC
codes and major products. Potential sources are shown by an X in the TS
column.
Summary of Industrial Sources of Toxic Substances
One or more files were reviewed for each of 29 and 52 industries in
Union and Middlesex Counties, respectively, that were listed by NPDES
and/or CDS. These industries were considered to have a high probability
that they were discharging toxic substances to the environment. Available
data on each industry is summarized in Tables II-8 and II-9. A review
of these tables indicates that there are 20 industries in Union County
and 28 industries in Middlesex County that are known to have discharged
toxic substances to the environment during the past six years which
could have been potentially harmful. In most cases, current data to
determine the status of discharges to date was not available. Many of
these sources are large plants. Potential toxic substance emissions from
all 81 industries reviewed are discussed in Section III.
A review of Tables II-l and II-2 indicates that there are many more
industries with potential for emissions of toxic substances. Table II-
10 is a summary of the Union County inventory. Note that there are 270
industries with toxic substance potential. As shown in Table 11-11,
there are 215 similar industries in Middlesex County.
In Table 11-12, the industrial listings are summarized by SIC code.
There are about 224 industries in the Chemicals and Allied Products
group. A major portion of the facilities are potential sources of toxic
substances. There are nearly 400 industries in Union County that manufacture
fabricated metal products or machinery. For Middlesex County, there are
about 300 industries of this type. Many of these plants would have
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electroplating, painting, anodizing and other operations that use toxic
substances. It is apparent that although the facilities listed in
Tables 11-8 and 11-9 probably represent most of the major sources of
toxic substances in air emissions or water discharges, the cumulative
effect of the many smaller operations could also be large. Information
on these smaller sources is not available through the channels used for
this study.
MUNICIPAL SOURCES OF TOXIC SUBSTANCES
Information contained in the NPDES municipal permit files was
reviewed and any available data on toxic substances extracted. In most
cases there was little data on toxic substances being discharged by
municipal wastewater treatment plants but ample data to show that several
of the plants receive substantial loads of heavy metals and other toxic
substances from numerous industries.
There are nine wastewater treatment plants serving residential,
commercial, and industrial facilities in Union County listed in the
NPDES files (Table II-3). Data on the five plants listed as majors are
summarized in Table 11-13. Together, these facilities serve an estimated
population of 785,000 persons. Wastewater discharges total 125 mgd.
About 20% (26 mgd) of this flow is reportedly industrial wastewater.
There are a reported 278 major contributing industrial plants
serviced by the five plants. File data indicates that at least 69
plants discharge toxic substances in their wastewater. Flows contributed
by individual facilities range from less than 1,000 gpd to 1.1 mgd.
Most of the data is on heavy metals.
Essentially no data is available in the permit files on toxic
substances in the effluents of the five major wastewater treatment
plants.
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Sludge from the three largest plants is barged for ocean disposal.
This sludge is known to contain high levels of toxic substances such as
heavy metals and PCB's.
The largest plant in Union County is the Joint Meeting facility at
Irvington serving parts of Union and Essex Counties (Table 11-13).
Twenty-three industries, primarily plants with some metal finishing
operations, are known to discharge some toxic substances to the Joint
Meeting system.
Although much smaller, the Linden-Roselle Sewerage Authority plant
serves a substantial tributary industrial flow. Industries discharging
toxic substances include 13 smaller plants, primarily metal finishing
operations, and a large pharmaceutical plant.
The Rahway Valley Sewerage Authority serves the largest number of
major contributing industries (138). Twenty-nine discharge toxic substances.
These represent a broader cross-section of industry than at the other
two plants.
Toxic substances discharged by the other minor wastewater treatment
plants in the county are believed to be minimal because of minor industrial
waste flows.
In Middlesex County there are a total of 16 municipal and commercial
wastewater treatment plants with five considered majors (Table II-4).
The five serve a population of 557,000 persons. Wastewater flows total
93 mgd of which 44 mgd (47%) is reportedly industrial waste.
In contrast to Union County, there were only 72 major contributing
industries reported. The average wastewater flow was much larger,
however, with flows up to nearly 3 mgd reported. Twenty-three industrial
plants potentially discharge toxic substances. Many of these are large
chemical plants that produce very toxic substances.
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Effluent data shows high levels of copper (2 mg/1) and zinc (1
mg/1) in the Perth Amboy discharge and lower levels of heavy metals
(<0.25 mg/1 each) in the Cartaret discharge. Cartaret has been required
to start monitoring its effluent for cadmium, cyanide and mercury. The
Middlesex County Sewerage Authority plant is required to begin monitoring
cadmium and cyanide in 1977.
The largest plant in Middlesex County is the Middlesex County
Sewerage Authority's facility at Sayreville. It treats 80 mgd, about
86% of the flow received by the five major plants. Its 46 major contributing
industries account for 64% of those in the county. Sixteen discharge
wastewaters potentially containing a wide variety of toxic substances.
Half of the wastewater treated is from industrial sources. Sludge from
the plant contains high levels of heavy metals and other toxic substances
and is barged for ocean disposal.
A comparison of the volumes of industrial wastewaters treated by
municipal facilities in Union and Middlesex Counties with direct discharges
from industries in the same areas shows that the municipal discharges
are very significant. In Union County, about 350 mgd of cooling water
is discharged by power plants, 174 mgd (including 160 cooling water) is
discharged by Exxon's Bayway facility, 19 mgd (17.6 mgd cooling water)
is discharged by the Dupont Linden plant, and about 15 mgd of industrial
wastewater is discharged by all other sources. Industrial process
wastes treated by municipal systems are about 26 mgd. If we assume half
of the 15 mgd is cooling water, then industrial process wastes in Union
County total about 49 mgd. More than half of the industrial process
wastes are thus currently discharged to municipal systems providing only
primary treatment.
In Middlesex County, a similar pattern is present. Excluding about
980 mgd of cooling water from power plants, about 93 mgd of industrial
wastewaters (again, primarily cooling water) are discharged directly by
-------
20
industry. About 44 mgd are discharged through municipal plants, 32% of
the total. Making the same assumption that half of the direct industrial
discharges are cooling water reveals that at least half of process waste-
waters are discharged to municipal plants providing only primary treatment.
HAZARDOUS WASTE DISPOSAL DATA
The disposal of hazardous waste materials is a major source of
toxic substances entering the environment. Solid waste produced by
domestic, commercial and industrial sources is composed primarily of the
usual trash and garbage. There is a large component of solid and liquid
wastes and sludges from industrial sources, however, that must also be
disposed of. Much of this material may be hazardous to handle and
dispose of, and it may contain toxic substances.
There are five main means of disposing of hazardous wastes used in
the study area. These are: disposal in public or private landfills
accepting wastes from numerous sources; disposal in a landfill on the
industrial site; ocean disposal; chemical conversion and recovery; and
incineration or other destruction. Unfortunately, data is limited on
both the quantities of toxic materials disposed of, and the relative
volume to, each type of ultimate disposal.
Available data on disposal of toxic substances in Union County is
very limited. A solid waste disposal plan has been developed but it
gives limited treatment to disposal of hazardous wastes. In 1973, an
estimated 920,000 tons of solid waste were collected in the county --
about one-third from industrial sources. The volume of this industrial
waste that may contain toxic substances is undefined. In the same year
it was estimated that about 74% of the industrial solid wastes were
disposed of at sanitary landfills, about 19% were incinerated and 6%
recovered.
-------
21
There is currently only one active sanitary landfill (operated by
the City of Linden) in the county and it receives about 15% of total
county solid waste. The remaining 85% is exported to adjacent counties
with about 40% going to Middlesex County. The volume of industrial
wastes that may be landfilled at industrial sites is unknown. Several
large industries barge liquid wastes and sludges containing toxic substances
to ocean disposal. The three large municipal wastewater treatment
plants also barge their sludges to ocean disposal.
There are two firms in Middlesex County that specialize in chemical
recovery or destruction. Chemical Control Corp. in Elizabeth incinerates
various hazardous wastes and does some solvent recovery. Solvent Recovery
Service of N.J. in Linden specializes in solvent recovery. These plants
handle hazardous wastes from a wide area outside of Union County as well
as from local industries. An unknown number of industries have captive
waste destruction and recovery operations. Other firms may also receive
and process wastes from other sources.
Better data is available on industrial and hazardous waste disposal
in Middlesex County (Appendix A). Industrial solid waste production
exceeds 750,000 tons/year. In 1973, 22 of the county's largest industrial
waste producers generated an estimated 77,000 tons of solid waste,
18,000 yd3 of
for disposal.
3
18,000 yd of sludge and 1.8 million gallons of liquid industrial wastes
In 1972 the Middlesex County Sewage Authority wastewater treatment
plant produced 325,000 tons of sludge that was disposed of in the ocean.
Total municipal and industrial sludge production was estimated to be
500,000 tons in 1975.
In addition to these solid and semi-solid wastes, an estimated 2.3
millions gallons of industrial liquids and septic tank wastes were
collected in the county in 1972 with about 0.8 million gallons disposed
of at sanitary landfills and the remainder ocean-dumped.
-------
22
There are potentially larger but unknown quantities of-industrial
wastes disposed of directly by their producers either at on-site landfills
(there are at least five such facilities in the county) or at numerous
on-site storage areas and settling ponds. Large quantities are incinerated,
recovered or ocean-dumped. One firm, Marisol, Inc., at Middlesex,
commercially practices solvent recovery while other firms have captive
incineration and recovery operations. Ocean disposal is large with one
firm alone, NL Industries at Sayreville, barging 7,700 tons/day of acid
wastes.
Prior to late 1975, toxic industrial wastes from as far away as
Ohio, Massachusetts and Virginia were hauled into Middlesex County for
disposal at landfills. The largest facility was the Kin-Buc landfill at
Edison. This site received an estimated 300,000 tons of waste per year
until it was closed in 1976. Toxic wastes stored at this location and
other landfills in the study area pose major potential sources of toxic
substances that can be released to the ambient air and to surface and
ground waters.
With the closing of Kin-Buc there are currently no landfills in the
study area licensed to accept liquid industrial wastes. Although importing
of out-of-state wastes is now prohibited, substantial volumes of such
wastes are still being generated in the study area. Their current
disposal is unknown.
AMBIENT AIR AND HATER QUALITY DATA
Air Quality Data
Most ambient air quality monitoring performed in the study area is
directed toward evaluating levels of criteria pollutants including CO,
HC, S02, N0x, and particulates. A limited amount of data was available
-------
23
on complex organic substances in ambient air and on the heavy metals
content of participate matter collected at ambient air sampling stations.
Ambient air sampling for complex organics was performed during 1975
and 1976 at three stations near industries in the study area and at nine
stations near the Kin-Buc landfill by the Research Triangle Institute
under EPA contract. Results are shown in Appendix B.
At a station near the Tremley Point Industrial Area in Linden, 75
different substances were identified. Near the Tenneco plant in Fords,
71 substances were identified. Eighty substances were identified near
the American Cyanamid plant at Bound Brook. This data was not quantified.
Substances of concern that were identified included benzene, carbon
tetrachloride, chloroform, trichloroethylene, styrene, phenol, aniline,
para-dichlorobenzene and ortho-dichlorobenzene.
Organic vapors were identified and quantified in ambient air samples
taken in March 1976 from nine stations at ranges of 0 to 1.25 miles from
the Kin-Buc landfill. Station placement resulted in sampling of vapors
from the landfill, from upwind of the landfill, and from several industries
in the vicinity. Results of the sampling (Appendix II-B) showed the
presence of toxic substances such as benzene, carbon tetrachloride,
chloroform, phenol, trichloroethylene, and l-chloro-2-bromoethane, some
in high levels.
WATER QUALITY DATA
A large volume of water quality data has been obtained from locations
within the study area and placed in the STORET data system over the past
14 years. Data from 433 stations was retrieved. These stations included
freshwater streams and rivers, estuaries, water supplies, and wastewater
streams before and after treatment. Very little data on toxic substances
was included.
-------
24
A tabular and graphic summary of toxic substance data in STORE! is
presented in Appendix C. Forty-two stations in the area of interest
reported toxic data. Seventeen were on the Arthur Kill, 12 in Raritan
Bay, 10 on the Raritan River and tributaries, and one each on the Rahway,
Elizabeth and Passaic River. Toxic substances for which data was available
included 11 heavy metals, cyanide, phenols, PCB's, and 21 pesticides.
Elevated levels of phenols were present in the Arthur Kill, Raritan
Bay and lower Raritan River. Dissolved chromium was elevated in the
same three areas and in the lower Passaic and Elizabeth Rivers. Dissolved
copper was elevated in the same five areas with the highest levels in
the lower Raritan River and Raritan Bay. Dissolved zinc was also high
in the five areas. PCB's were reported only for stations on the Passaic
and Millstone Rivers.
Variations in the levels of toxic substances at the various sampling
locations in Arthur Kill are presented graphically in Appendix C. No
attempt was made to correlate this data with sources because of varying
sample dates, tidal influences and changing waste load conditions.
As part of a larger study, the University of Illinois recently
collected samples from seven stations in Raritan Bay, Arthur Kill and
the lower Raritan River. Analysis of these samples by X-ray fluorescence
and spark source mass spectrometry yielded data on trace levels of
inorganics (primarily heavy metals) and organic compounds (Appendix D).
Organic compounds of concern that were isolated included benzene,
chloroform, trichloroethane, trichloroethylene and carbon tetrachloride.
Although data was limited on both the loads of toxic substances
currently being discharged in municipal and industrial wastewaters and
the resultant effects on ambient water quality, existing data was adequate
to show that large volumes of toxic substances are being discharged with
adverse impacts on the aquatic environment. Arthur Kill and the Raritan
River and Bay are seriously affected.
-------
25
Table II-1
SUMMARY OF INDUSTRIAL FACILITIES IN UNION COUNTY, N.J.
Name
SIC
Products
NPDES CDS MCI TS
Acromark Co., The
Bllied Kelite Products, Inc.
Automatic Injection Molding Inc.
Berkeley Plastics & Mfg. Co.
Better Sleep Mfg. Co.
Baystar Corp.
Dynamic Molds, Inc.
^ibson Tube Inc.
Braviner, Inc.
Breat Eastern Seating Co.
Hof, Julius & Sons, Inc.
JJoglund Engineering & Mfg.
Bay-Cee Machine Co., Inc.
Buntz, A.W. Co., Inc.
Lambda/Airtron
^ee Controls, Inc.
illmaster Onyx Corp.
Beuweiler, Karl, Inc.
Oakite Products, Inc.
J>urestream Filtration Systems
Bteheis Chemical Co.
Btoselle Screw Machine Products
Scientific Models, Inc.
^ihaw Plastics Corp.
Wilkinson Sword, Inc.
^quadyne
Automatic INdustries Inc.
Branson Cleaning Equip. Co.
Caton Industries, Inc.
(lark Lumber & Supply Co.
ommerce Clearing House Inc.
ontrol Air, Inc.
Cosmair, Inc.
ESB, Inc.
ersey Machine & Tool Co.
Karnak Chemical Corp.
Kelco Co.
Keyline Corp.
JHotomco Inc.
New Departure - Hyatt Bearings
RCI Corp.
IResidex Corp.
U.S. Gypsum Co.
Western Electric Co. Inc.
BERKELEY HEIGHTS
3544 Hot Stamping Equip.
2842 Industrial Chemical Cleaners
Electroplating Compounds
3079 Mold Design & Mfg.
3079 Molding of Plastic Materials
2392 Pillows, Back Rests, Bed Elev.
3291 Grinding & Filtration Compounds
3544 Plastic Molds, Tools, Dies
3317 Stainless Steel Tubing
3999 Fire Protection Equip.
2531 Church & School Furniture
3841 Drop Forgings, Small Instr.
3544 Contour Wheel Dressers
3599 Drilling Machines, Machine Shop
3295 Pulverized Clay for Tennis Courts
3831 Optics
3559 Steel Shafting
2819 Pharmaceuticals, Fine Chemicals X
3451 Screw Machine Products
2842 Industrial Cleaning Material
3569 Filtration System Units
2834 Antacids & Antiperspirants M
3451 Screw Machine Products
3941 Model Kits
3079 Custom Molders of All Plastics
3429 Razor Blades, Garden Tools X
CLARK
3569 Dust Control Systems, Hetting Agents
3451 Screw Machine Produts
3559 Metal Cleaning & Finishing Equip.
3613 Electronic Components
2442 Cabinets, Boxes
2741 Publishers
3564 Air Conditioning Units
2844 Perfumes, Costmetics
3692 Batteries
3545 Machine Tools & Assoc.
2952 Asphalt, Polyurethane Coatings
2818 Industrial Organic Chemicals
3861 Graphic Arts Supplies
2879 Rodenticides, Aerosol Deodorants
3562 Bearings, Journals, Transmission PartsX
3679 TV Antenna Systems
2879 Pesticides
3275 Paperboard & Gypsum
3661 Telephone Cable Amplifier
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
-------
Table II-1 (Continued)
SUM-JAW OF INDUSTRIAL FACILITIES IN UNION COUNTYf N.J.
26
Name
SIC
Products
NPDES CDS MCI TS
Allen Printing Co. 2751
Eeebe Cordage Co., Inc. 2298
Berry Business Procedures Co. 2751
Britten, E. F. & Co., Inc. 3728
Clark Door Co., Inc. 2431
Construction Specialties, Inc. 3446
Continental Copper & Steel Indust's 3069
Coulter Electronics, Inc. 3811
Cranford Citizen & Chronicle 3711
Del Stone Co. 3295
Didactic Systems Inc. 2731
Everlasting Valve Co. 3494
Faust, Rudolph, Inc. 2893
Gibson Associates, Inc. 3079
Gorton Heating Corp. 3494
Graber-Rogg Inc. 3079
Gusmer, A., Inc. 3551
HHH Machine Co. 3599
Harco Chemical Co. 2842
Hill, C. L., Mfg. Co., Inc. 3544
Hygrade Food Products Corp. 2013
Kavon Filter Products 2299
Koppers Co., Inc. 3554
Madan Plastics, Inc. 3079
Montone, A. & Co. 3544
Olsen Press, Inc. 2752
Packing Engineering Corp. 3293
Para Mfg. Co. 2295
Pern All Fire Extinguisher Corp. 3569
Plymouth Printing Co., Inc. 2732
Polaris Plastics Corp. 2821
Robin Printing Co. 2752
Roden Co., The , 3551
Ruson Shield Div. 2392
Sano Corp. 3651
Sperry Univac 3699
Spindler, August & Sons 3369
Union Carbide Corp. 3548
Williams, J.B. Co. 2834
Acme Leather Sportswear, Inc. 2386
Ajax Coat Co., Inc. 2363
Alcan Metal Powders 3399
Allen's Bakery Co., Inc. 2051
Allied Chemical Corp. 2819
Alpha Wine Corp. 3357
American Binder Co., The 2782
American Bronzing Machine Works 3399
American Metal Treatment Co. 3399
American Plant Equipment Co. 3559
American Plywood Corp. 2432
American Type Founders Co. 3555
CRANFORD
Business Printing
Synthetic Ropes & Cords
Business Forms, Printing
Aircraft Instruments
Doors for Industry
Architectural Building Prod.
Rubber & Copper Products
Electronic Equip.
Newspaper Publishing
Natural Stone
Publishers
Sliding Gate Valves
Engraving Ink
Plastic Closures & Packaging
Air Valves
Plastic Products
Brev/ery Supplies
Machinists
Cleaning Solvents & Materials
Rubber & Plastic Molds
Meat Products
Filter Cloth
Paper Industry Machinery
Plastic Forming, Electroplating
Engraving Dies
Color Printing
Mechanical Packings i
Bath & Hospital Curtains
Fire Exting., Smoke Detectors
Commercial Printing
Plastics Products
Offset Printing
Pneumatic & Hydraulic Comp.
Window Products
Amplifiers & PA Systems
Filing Equip.
Non-Ferrous Foundries
Flame Cutting Machines
Pharmaceuticals & Toiletries
ELIZABETH
Outerwear Mfg.
Children's Coats
Metal Powders & Pigments
Baked Goods
Sulfuric Acid, Plastic Compounds
Wine & Cable
Books and Stationery
Metal Powders
Heat Treating
Chemical Filtration EQuip.
Plywood & Masonite
Foundary Type
M
M
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
X X
X
-------
Table II-l (Continued)
SUMMARY OF INDUSTRIAL FACILITIES IN UNION COUNTY, N.J.
27
t
Name
SIC
Products
NPDES CDS MCI TS
JCor-Lox, Inc.
x Chemical Co., Inc.
her-Daniels-Midland Co.
Armin Polyethylene Film Corp.
Automated Systems, Inc.
|B<-Kit Co. of America, Inc.
[fll, William Corp.
Berkowitz Press
Bethlehem Steel Corp.
Ats Plastic Products Corp.
iBler Beverage, Inc.
Borden Metal Products Co.
B^-ne Chemical Co., Inc.
»dy Marine Repair Co., Inc.
>wn & Brov/n Industrial Realtors
Burry Biscuit
Carbon Steel Products Corp.
rmel Frocks, Inc.
ampain Citron Clark, Inc.
Chandler Sportswear, Inc.
»emical Control Corp.
emlime Corp.
evron Oil Co.
Chico Sportswear Co., Inc.
Klby & McGowan, Inc.
mmercial Supply & Wiper
n-Thel Mfg. Co., Inc.
Connelly-GPM, Inc.
Kntainer Ring Co., Inc.
ol Rite Corp.
pper Clad Products, Inc.
Corrugated Services, Inc.
Ktt Bottling Co. of NJ
own Central Petroleum Corp.
C Corp.
Daily Journal, The
KAltrin INdustries
nny Boy Mfg. Co., Inc.
sh Box Co.
Deka Plastics, Inc.
twan Ink Co.
etrich's Bakery
n's Outerwear, Inc.
Elizabeth Bolt & Nut Mfg.
tizabeth Fabrication Co.
port Hook & Eye Tape Co.
kay Chemical Co.
Eport Machine Corp.
(ssick Mfg. Co.
xact Anodizing Co.
& G Tool & Die, Inc.
Federal Plastics Corp.
riood Fair Stores, Inc.
orest Laboratories, Inc.
^ranchetts Kruelkers, Inc.
Franklin Beverages Co., Inc.
3451 Screw Machine Products
2818 Chemicals
2094 Marine & Vegetable Oils
3079 Plastic Packaging Prod.
3569 Industrial Machinery
2099 Food Preparations'
3161 Reuseable Containers
2751 Letterpress & Offset Printing
3312 Steel Fabrication
3079 Packaging, Molding
2086 Bottled Soft Drinks
3499 Metal Products
2911 Petrochemicals, Textile Specialties
3732 Ship Repairs
6500 Real Estate
2052 Cookies, Crackers
3316 Steel Plate, Sheets, Bars
2335 Dresses
2653 Set Up Boxes
2369 Children's Sportswear
2818 Chemical Waste Disposal
3274 Hydrated Lime Slurry
2992 Oils & Greases
2329 Men's Jackets
2751 Commercial Printing
3714 Auto Windshield Wipers
2369 Children's Sportswear
3399 Ground Chemical Iron
3499 Drum Head Rings
3444 Sheet Metal & Tubes
2842 Metal Cleaning & Polishing Prep.
2653 Corrugated Containers
2086 Carbonated Beverages
2992 Gasolines, Oils, Greases
2284 Art Needlework & Access.
2711 Newspaper Publishers
2542 Steel Racks
2369 Children's Wear
2441 Wooden Boxes
3079 Plastic Housewares
2893 Printing Inks
2051 Bakery Products
2337 Women's Sportswear
3452 Special Bolts & Nuts
3559 Process Equipment
3964 Tapes
2841 Specialty Chemical Prod.
3599 Machine Shop
3585 Cooling & Heating Equip.
3471 Anodizing
3544 Tools & Dies
2821 Plastic Materials
2011 Slaughter House
2834 Pharmaceutical Prod.
2051 Bakery Prod.
2086 Bottled Soft Drinks
X
X
X
X
X
M
X
X
X
X
X
-------
28
Table II-l (Continued)
SUMMAPy OF INDUSTRIAL FACILITIES IN UNION COUNTY, N.J.
Name
SIC
Products
NPDES CDS MCI TS
Freedom Mfg. Co., Inc.
Fulton Marking Equipment Co.
Fulton Shirt Co., Inc.
Gams, Inc.
Garylin Togs
Gavan-Graham Electric Prod.
Georgia Kaolin Co.
Grand Garment Co., Inc.
Grand Sportswear, Inc.
Guardian Sprinkler Co., Inc.
Guild Musical Instruments
Hawthorne Machine & Armature
Hayward Mfg. Co., Inc.
Holiner Leather Products
Hudson Engineering Co.
ITT Mackay Marine
Ilene Sportswear Co., Inc.
Imperial Weld ring Corp.
Industrial Truck Body
Iron Oxide Corp.
Jacobson & Co., Inc.
Jefferson Screw Corp.
KD Jalousie of NJ, Inc.
Kadimah Knits, Inc.
Kanner Dress Co., Inc.
Karen Mfg. Co., Inc.
Lafayette Sportswear Corp.
Lanaetex Products, Inc.
Laurel Industries Corp.
Laned Inc.
Laventhal Mfg. Co. Inc.
Linden Dress Co.
Loizeaux Builders Supply
Manheim Mfg., Inc.
Marva Industries, Inc.
Mastic Corp.
Metal Fabricating Co.
Metal Powder & Chemical Works
Metalwash Machinery Corp.
Milton, George A. Can Co., Inc.
Monarch Metal Fabricators
Moore Bros. Machine & Foundry
Murray Tube Works
Na Vet Printing Co.
National Spray Can Filling Corp.
NJ Bindery Service Co.
NY Bronze Powder Co., Inc.
New Yorker - Peters Corp.
Nietzel, 0. & Son, Inc.
Nimrow Carton Co.
Northeast Pollution Control Corp.
Nuco Leather Finishing Co.
Occupational Center of Union Co.
Pabst Engineering EQuip. Co.
Packaging Associates, Inc.
Par-Way Mfg. Co.
3964 Zipper Repair Kits
3953 Stamps, Stencils, Brands
2328 Boys Shirts
2335 Dresses
2369 Children's Outerwear
3622 Switchboards, Steel Enclosures
3295 Kaolins & Bentonites
2335 Dresses
2329 Men's Leather Jackets
3569 Automatic Sprinkler Systems
3931 Guitars
3621 Rewinding Armatures
3499 Pipeline Strainers, Valves
3171 Handbags
3731 Ship Repair
3662 Marine Electronci Equip.
2329 Men's Apparel
3569 Industrial Machinery
3713 Truck Bodies
3295 Iron Oxide
2542 Acoustical Contractor
3452 Metal Fasteners
3442 Jalousies, Doors, Windows
2339 Ladies Sportswear
2335 Dresses
2339 Slacks
2335 Dresses
2094 Lanolin & Derivatives
2844 Cosmetics
3651 Phonographic Equip.
2321 Shirts
2335 Dresses
3272 Concrete Products
2331 Sportswear
2262 Knitted Fabrics
3449 Vinyl, Steel, Aluminum Siding
3369 Welding & Machine Fabric.
3399 Bronze Powders
3559 Industrial Machines
3411 Metal & Plastic Containers
3444 Sheet Metal Fabrication
3599 Machine Shop - Castings
3317 Tubular Metal Prod.
2751 Commercial Printing
2899 Aerosol Products
2761 Business Forms
2851 Aerosol Spray Paint
2299 Burlap, Upholstery Webbing
3544 Tools & Dies
2651 Printed Boxes & Cartons
3564 Air Pollution Control Equip.
3111 Leather Finishers
3699 Packaging, Light Assembly
3679 Electronic Components
3079 Vinyl Cases & Bags
2096 Shortening, Table Oils
X
X
MX X
X
X
-------
29
Table II-l (Continued)
SUMMARY OF INDUSTRIAL FACILITIES IN UNION COUNTY, N.J.
Name
SIC
Products
NPDES CDS MCI TS
Pase Equipment Co., Inc.
Pentapco, Inc.
Perk Chemical Co., Inc.
Petal Enterprises
Pharmacaps, Inc.
Phelps-Dodge Copper Products
Plastic Extruded Products
Plybent, Inc.
Post and Sherman Textile Co.
Progressive Bindery Corp.
Purepac Pharmaceutical Co.
Reichhold Chemicals, Inc.
Reynaud, Ltd.
Rich Mfg. Corp.
Ro/Son, Inc.
Rondex Laboratories, Inc.
Ruta Millwork and Stairs Co.
Saracenos Bakery
Schaefer, Chas. Sons., Inc.
Schnitzer Alloy Products, Inc.
Schweitzer, Peter J. Div.
Seagull Enterprises
Seneca Coal Corp.
Service Machine Co., Inc.
Simmons Co.
Singer Co., The
Smith Lime Flour Co., Inc.
Sobieski Bakery
Specialty Chemicals
Standard Gasket Mfg. Corp.
Star Auto Products Co.
Steel-Brite Polishing Corp.
Stimmel Industries, Inc.
Stulz Sickles Steel Co.
Tabakin, Morris and Sons, Inc.
Tenneco Chemicals, Inc.
Thomas and Betts Co., The
Thor Electronics Corp.
Topco, Inc.
Trans Industrial
Treat Togs, Inc.
Trinity Bag and Paper Co.
Unity Electronics
Universal Shirt Co.
Universal Sportswear Co.
Universal Valve Co.
Varney, Frank Co., Inc.
Vernon, S.E. and M. Co.
Welding Alloyws Mfg. Co.
Wilson Jones Co.
Winters Stamp Mfg. Co.
Yara Engineering Corp.
Safe Carry Paper Prod.
3444 Sheet Metal Work
3964 Sewing Notions
2818 Chlorinated Solvents, Waste Disposal
3079 Plastic Products
2834 Soft Gelatin Capsules
3351 Copper Products
3079 Extrusions
3161 Molded Luggage Shells
2299 Table Cloths and Napkins
2789 Book Bindings
2834 Pharmaceuticals
2821 Synthetic Resins
2818 Aromatic Chemicals
3499 Welding
3642 Lighting Fixtures
2834 Pharmaceuticals
2431 Stairs and Millwork
2051 Bakery Products
2899 Salts and Chemicals
3494 Valves, Pipe Fittings
2621 Paper and Paper Products
2751 Commercial Printing
3312 Coal, Coke, Steel, Iron Ore
3544 Tools and Dies
2515 Mattresses
3636 Sewing Machines
2819 Lime and Limestone
2051 Bakery Products <
2818 Industrial Organic Chem.
3293 Gaskets, Asbestos Insulation
3714 Motor Vehicle Parts
3471 Stainless Steel Polishing
3714 Equipment Parts
3399 Alloy Steel and Welding
2299 Textile Jobber
2819 Paint Driers and Vinyl Stqbilizers
3643 Electrical Conduit Fittings
3679 Electron Tubes, Transistors
3499 Metal Stampings
3612 Electronci Transformers
2369 Children's Sportswear
2643 Paper Bags
3674 Electron Tubes
2321 Shirts .
2329 Sport Clothing
3494 Valves and Fittings
2621 Paper Products
2782 Bindrs and Business Forms
3352 Spooling of Aluminum Wire
2782 Books and Business Forms
3953 Rubber Stamps
3535 Tramway Systems
ELIZABETHPORT
2653 Corrugated Boxes
X
X
X X
X
X
X
X X
X
X
X
M M
X
X
X
-------
30
Table II-l ('Continued)
SUMMARY OF INDUSTRIAL FACILITIES IN UNION COUNTY, N.J.
Name
SIC
Products
NPDES CDS MCI TS
Chlorescope Systems
Livingston-Wilbor Corp.
Nycoil Co.
Ortalis Engineering Co.
Young Paint and Varnish Co.
Accurate Busing Co.
Allison Corp.
Beckley Perforating
Bowman Electronics Corp.
Casale Industries, Inc.
Creative Color Lithographers
Crescent Die Corp.
Creter Vault Corp.
Crown Trophy Co., Inc.
Diamond Expansion Bolt
Dura-Tape Corp.
General Cable Corp.
Gold Bond Building Products
Homac Mfg. Co.
ICD Corp.
Lermer Packaging Corp.
NHN Tool and Die Co.
PKM Panel Systems Corp.
Petro Plastics Co., Inc.
Phoenix Gasket and Packing
Rosco, Inc.
Skill Knit Fabrics, Inc.
Spray Drying Service, Inc.
Standard Nipple Works, Inc.
Ther-a-Pedic Sleep Prod.
Watchung Die Casting
Accurate Products Co.
Aero Gear Machine and Tool
American Can Co.
Amersil, Inc.
Ariston, Inc.
Arrow Engineering Co., Inc.
Atlas Tool Co., Inc.
Awards Trophy Co.
Baer, N.S. Co.
Blue Ribbon Foods
Blum Bindery, Inc.
Bristol Myers Co.
Buie Steel Co.
Ceco Corp., The
Certified Processing Corp.
Cerv-All Heating and A.C.
Clinton Mfg., Inc.
Columbia Processing Corp.
FANUOOD
3811 Analyzing Equip.
3559 Special Machinery
2821 Plastic and Nylon Tubing
3444 Heating and Air Conditioning
2851 Paint, Varnish, Lacquers
GARUOOD
3722 Bushings, Bearings
3714 Auto Accessories
3469 Perforated Metal, Plastic, Paper
3679 Electronics Kits
3499 Metal Fabrications
2752 Commercial Printing
3544 Die Casting Dies
3271 Concrete Vaults
3914 Metal Trophies
3452 Masonry Fasteners
2661 Drywall Building Special.
3643 Hardware
3275 Wallborad, Paper
3643 Electrical Connectors
2542 Dept. Store Fixtures
3079 Plastic Packaging
3544 Tools, Dies
3612 Electrical Panels
3079 Plastic Tubing, Containers
3292 Asbestos Packing
3544 Tools, Dies
2256 Knit Fabrics
2819 Chemical Dehydration
3494 Iron and Brass Pipe Nipples
2515 Mattresses and Box Springs
3361 Die Castings
HILLSIDE
3559 Precision Machining
3566 Mechanical Power Equip.
3411 Metal Containers
3295 Fused Silica and Quartz
3993 Advertising Displays
3599 Machine Work
3944 Model R.R. Tracks
3499 Metal Trophies
3292 Plastic Fabricat.,Fibre Insul.
2034 Dried Foods
2789 Bookbinding
2833 Chemicals
3441 Structural Steel
3442 Steel Doors, Formwork
2833 Fine Chemicals
3444 Sheet Metal Work
3449 Housewares
3541 Custom Grinding and Blending
M H
X
X
-------
31
Table II-l (Continued)
OF INDUSTRIAL FACILITIES IN UNION COUNT?, tt.J.
Name
SIC
Products
NPDES CDS MCI TS
Cooper Alloy Corp.
Custom Fabricators, Inc.
DME Corp.
Day-Baldwin
Dell Products Corp.
Dillon Beck Mfg. Co.
Display Industries Corp.
ECD, Inc.
Edgcomb Steel and Aluminum
Emeloid Operations
Faraday Laboratories, Inc.
Fluets Corp.
Fluores-0-Lite of Hillside
G & H Sheet Metal Works
Gessner Machine Co.
H & H Swiss Screw Machine
Harpak Machine and Tool
Heller Truck Body Corp.
Higgins Fire Protection Inc.
Hillside Tool and Machine
Hope Electrical Products
Hotwork, Inc.
Insulating Specialties, Inc.
International Corp.
Interstate Iron Works
Ironbound Box and Lumber
Jay Syrup Co.
Jiffy Mfg. Co.
Johnston, Robert A. Co.
Kaye Electric Fixtures, Inc.
Ken!en Wire Products
Kraft Foods Div.
Kramer Body and Equip. Co.
Lawrence Plastics, Inc.
Mailing Services, Inc.
Manson Printers, Inc.
Mayers Industrial Lithographers
Metropolitan Steel Industries
Mid-States Container
National-Reliable Box and Lumber
Newark Spinning and Stamping
Nil sen-Smith Sheet Metal
Offset by Craftsman
Plessey Dynamics Div.
Precision Lighting, Inc.
Precision Resistor Co., Inc.
Preis, H.P. Engraving Machine
Preservation Packaging, Inc.
Radio-Matic of America
Randall Mfg. Co., Inc.
Ramsey Machine and Tool Co.
Reinke, Gus Machinery and Tool
Rotary Metal Slitting Co.
Savoy Brass Foundary
Siegmaster Butcher Saw Supply
Stanley, William W. Co., Inc.
3323 Stainless Steel Castings
3444 Sheet Metal Fabrication
3544 Molded Bases
2834 Pharmaceuticals
2087 Juices, Flavors
3079 Plastic Products
3962 Display Materials
3357 Steel Wire and Bars
3316 Cold Rolled Steel
3079 Misc. Plastic Prod.
2834 Pharmaceutical Prep.
3599 Machinery
3642 Light Fixtures
3444 Bar-Kitchen EQuip.
3599 Machine Shop
3451 Screw Machine Prod.
3599 Machine Shop
3713 Truck Bodies
3569 Auto Fire Sprinklers
3599 Machinists
3643 Electrical Equip.
3433 Preheating of Refractories
2821 Plastic Fabrication
3312 Stainless Steel Prod.
3446 Architectural Iron Work
3535 Materials Handling EQuip.
2087 ' Syrups and Flavors
2643 Padded Shipping Bags
2072 Chocolate and Cocoa
3642 Fluorescent Fixtures
3323 Steel Processing
2022 Dairy and Confect. Prod
3713 Truck Bodies
3079 Injection Molding
2751 Commercial Printing
2752 Litho Printing
2752 Accounting Machine Forms
3441 Structural Steel
2651 Boxes
2441 Wooden Boxes
3461 Job Spinning
3444 Sheet Metal Work
2752 Commercial Offset Printing
3729 Avionic and Ind. Prod.
3642 Lighting Fixtures
3622 Resistors
3548 Engraving Machines
2034 Dehydrated Foods
3561 Audio Equipment
3559 Vapor Degreasers
3729 Aircraft Components
3544 Special Machinery
3443 Slitting Various Materials
3361 Non-Ferrous Castings
3425 Saws and Chopping Machines
2211 Filter Cloth
H X
X
X
X
X
-------
Table II-l (Continued)
SUMfMRY OF INDUSTRIAL FACILITIES IN UNION COUNTY, N.J.
32
Name
SIC
Products
NPDES CDS MCI TS
Test-Rite Optical Co.
Triad Tool and Die Co.
Tridix Tool and Machine Co.
Unique Wire Weaving Co.
Vanguard Offset Printers
Vanton Pump and Equip. Corp.
West Side Printing House
Western Electric Co.
York Insulation Co., Inc.
Acme Press, Inc.
Adamas Carbide Corp.
Alertronics, Inc.
Allied Steel Prod. Corp.
Alloy Cast Products, Inc.
B & B Press, Inc.
B & M Finishers, Inc.
Belting Industries Co., Inc.
Brent Materials Co.
Campton Tool and Die Co.
Carboloy Systems Dept.
Christie Enterprises, Inc.
Cincinnati Industries, Inc.
Coffee-Mat Corp.
Columbia Leather and Coating Co.
Consolidated Steel and Alum. Fence
Continental Packaging Corp.
Danline Mfg. Co.
DeWitt Tool Co., Inc.
Development Molding, Inc.
Dura-Clad Mfg.
EWC, Inc.
Edison Mold and Tool Corp.
Errington Tool Mfg. Co.
Ewertsen, E.L. and Sons
F & M Machine Co.
France, Campbell and Darling
Fugle Miller Laboratories
Gauer Metal Products, Inc.
Geissel Mfg. Co., Inc.
Gen-Oppix
General Elevator Co., Inc.
Gilbert Plastics, Inc.
Hanco Tool and Mfg. Co.
Marvin and Co.
Heindrichs Machine Prod.
Heyman Mfg. Co.
Hi-Grade Prod. Mfg. Co.
Hynes Electric Heating Co.
JMC Tool Mfg., Inc.
Jacobson Mfg. Co., Inc.
Jet Wood Working, Inc.
Kirchner, Gaspar and Son
Klemens Tool and Die Co.
Langbein and Co., Inc.
3851 Opthalmic Lenses
3544 Tools and Dies
3544 Tools and Jibs
3481 Industrial Wire Cloth
2752 Printing
3561 Pump and Electroplating Syst.
2751 Commercial Printing
3661 Telephone and Telegraph App.
3292 Asbestos Products
KENILWORTH
2751 Commercial Printing
3544 Tungsten and Titanium Carbide
3662 Automotive Alarms
3441 Fabricated Steel Prod.
3369 Non-Ferrous Castings
2751 Commercial Printing
3471 Anodizing
3121 Industrial Belting
3259 Sewer Pipes
3542 Tool and Die
3545 Carbide Cut Tools
3079 Plastic Molding
2649 Crepe Paper
3581 Coffee Vending Machines
2295 Artif. Leather, Plastic Coating
3481 Alum, and Steel Gal van. Fence
2649 Corrugated Paper Prod.
3991 Brooms and Brushes
3541 Machine Tools
3079 Injection Molding
3079 Laminated Plastic and Wood
3679 Electronic Magnetic Comp.
3544 Molds and Tools
3391 Iron and Steel Frogings
3729 Aircraft Components
3461 Stamped Metal Prod.
2821 Resins
3679 Electronic Components
3441 Metal Fabricating
3461 Hinges and Machines
3545 Precision Tools
3434 Elevators
3079 Injection Molds
3599 Machine Shop
3451 Screw Machine Pro.
3544 Metal STamping
3461 Metal Stamping
3451 Screw Machine Prod.
3567 Heaters
3542 Machine Tools
3452 Self-Locking Nuts
2431 Furniture Arms
3441 Fabricated Structural Steel
3544 Custom Tooling
3441 Sheet Metal Fabric.
X
X X
X
X
-------
33
I
Table 11-2 (Continued)
SUMMARY OF INDUSTRIAL FACILITIES IN UNION COUNTY, N.J.
Name
SIC
Products
NPDES CDS MCI TS
Itendorf Conveying Corp.
ncoln Die and Mfg. Co.
Lors Machinery, INc.
jmapac, Inc.
Tool Co., Inc.
iterna Steel Products
Monsanto Co.
.0. Communications Corp.
Jtional Tool and Mfg. Co.
;ill and Spanjer
N.J. Mfg. Co., Inc.
^j.J. Tool and Die Co.
Hewark Brush Co.
Newark Metal Products, Inc.
North American Equip. Corp.
»usser Sheet Metal and AC, Inc.
rion Instrument and Tool Mfg.
eterson Stamping and Mfg.
Reed and Carnrick
rtembrandt Hardware Mfg.
Rich and McLean, Inc.
^odig Mfg. Co., Inc.
Ronald Tool and Mfg. Co.
Rotary Pen Corp.
Kchering-Plough Corp.
Security Packaging Co.
Silver Line Co.
Kpindler Brothers Co.
Spring Tool Co., Inc.
"Springfield Die Casting Co.
Stollen Machine and Tool Co.
Talit Mfg. Co.
Three Par Assoc., Inc.
Trident Metal Products
Ullrich Copper, Inc.
United Screw and Bolt Corp.
Valcor Engineering Corp.
Volco Brass and Copper Co.
Waage Electric, Inc.
Weldments, Inc.
Uestfield Sheet Metal Works
White Machine Co.
Wild and Schulze, Inc.
Aarving Displays, Inc
Accurate Metal Products
Accurate Plating Co. of Linden
Acme Steel Drum Co.
Advance Machine, Inc.
Aloyco Plant
Aluminum Products Distributors
American Container Corp.
American Cyanamid Co.
American Flange and Mfg. Co.
3551 Food Products Machinery
3544 Dies
3623 Arc Welding Machines
3611 Fluorescent Light Inventor
3599 Machine Shop
3441 Steel Fabrication Materials
2821 Polyethylene Film
3662 Audio Systems
3544 Supplies and Mold Sets
2426 Wood and Plywood
3451 Screw Machine Prod.
3544 Tools and Dies
3991 Industrial Brushes
3444 Sheet Metal Work
3535 Conveyors
3444 Sheet Metal Work
3599 Machine Shop
3469 Metal Stamping
2834 Ethical Pharmaceuticals
3429 Mail Boxes
3555 Linotype Parts
2522 Metal Office Furniture
3544 Produciton Machining
3951 Plastic Pen Parts
2830 Pharmaceuticals
2651 Corrugated Boxes
3442 Aluminum Windows
3544 Ceramic Molds
3079 Plastic Mold Injections
3339 Non-Ferrous Foundary
3599 Machine Shop
3451 Screw Machine Prod.
3079 Plastic Nursery Containers
3461 Metal STamping
3643 Copper Electrical Prod.
3452 Screws and Bolts
3494 Solenoid Valves
3351 Brass and Copper Wire
3443 Electric Heating Equip.
3443 Steel, Al. & Mg. Weldments
3444 Sheet Metal, Paint Spray
3535 Conveyors
3569 Case Packers Equip.
LINDEN
3993 Store Displays
3469 Metal Stamping
3471 Industrial Electroplating
3491 Steel Drums
3599 Machine Shop
3494 Stainless Steel Valves
3442 Storm Windows and Doors
3079 Molded Plastic Prod.
2822 Ind. and Agr. Rubber,Petro & Chem.
3079 Closures for Steel Containers
X X X X
X X
X M
X X
X
X
X
X
X
-------
Table II-l (Continued)
SUMMARY OF INDUSTRIAL FACILITIES IN UNION COUNTY, N.J.
34
Name
SIC
Products
NPDES CDS MCI TS
Ampeg Co., The 7391
Apache Foam Products 3296
Apex Plating and Polishing Co. 3471
Arthur Dress Co. 2335
Artistic Creations Inc. 3999
B & B Electroplating Co. 3471
BP Oil Co. 2911
Baltic Metal Prod., Inc. 3444
Barre Co., Inc., The 3444
Bauman Metal Prod., Inc. 3444
Beinstein Baking Co., Inc. 2051
Bennett Heat Treating Co. 3399
Berk, O.Co. 3231
Berk, 0. Plastic Container Co. 3000
Brazill Bros, and Assoc., Inc. 3679
Brem Metal Fabricators, Inc. 3444
Breneman, Inc. 3591
Brodie Systems, Inc. 3599
CCS/Hatfield 3357
Cadillac Plastic and Chemical Co. 2821
Carack Co., Inc., The 3641
Carbide Reduction, Inc. 2813
Carnival Creations 2342
Cazeneuve Lathes, Inc. 3541
Celotex Corp., The 3292
Colorco Inc. 2815
Comsip Customline Corp. 3811
Consolidated Material Converting 2649
Converters INk Co. 2893
Cook's Industrial Lubricants 2992
Coolenheat, Inc. 3433
D'Angelo Metal Prod. 3432
Delta Knit Finishers 2259
Distillers Co. Ltd. 2085
Dock Resins Corp. 2821
Domar Buckle Mfg. Corp. 2964
DuPont 2819
East Side Lighting 3642
Edgar Road Tank Uorks 3443
Everest Co., Inc. 3079
Evergard Steel Corp. 3481
Exxon Chemical Co. 2911
Fabco Metal Products 3444
Farber Brothers Lumber Co. 2431
Fire Control Products, Inc. 3999
Fischer Bros. Knitting Mills 2256
Foods Plus, Inc. 2834
Form Mfg. Co. 3544
GAF Corporation 2815
Garden State Knitting Mills 2253
General Gummed Products 2641
General Magnaplate Corp. 3471
General Motors Corp. 3711
Glasseal Products, Inc. 3679
Gomar Mfg. Co.,Inc. 2821
Goodlife, J.W. & Son 2813
Research & Development
Polyurethane Foam
Electroplating and Polishing
Dresses
Christmas Displays
Electroplating
Petroleum Products
Sheet Metal
Sheet Metal Work
Sheet Metal Work
Bakery Prod.
Metal Treating
Glass Containers
Distr. of Plastic Cont.
Electrical Prod.
Sheet Metal Fabr.
Window Shades, Blinds
Machine Shop
Electrical Wire and Cable
Plastic Sheet, Rod, Tube, Film
Portable Lamps
Industrial Gasses
Underwear
Metal Cutting Lathes
Asbestor Products
Color Concentrates
Analyzer Systems
Paper Converting
Flexographic Printing Ink
Industrial Lubricants
Heating Equip.
Plumbing Supplies
Knit Finishing
Distilled Liquors
Synthetic Resins
Buckles
Industrial Inorganic Chem.
Electrical Fixtures ,
Truck Tanks
Plastic Molding
Wire and Wire Prod.
Petrochemical Prod.
X-Ray Protective Metal Shields
Mi 11work
Fire Extinguishers
Knit Fabrics
Drugs, Health and Beauty Aids
Molds & Die Castings
Chemicals, Surfactants
Knit Outerwear Mills
Gummed Tape and Sepcialties
Electroplating and Anodizing
Motor Vehicles
Hermetic Seals, Plating, Bronzing
Metalized, Coated & Lamin. Films
Commercial Gases
X
X
X X
X
M
M
M
X
X
X
X
-------
35
Table II~1 (Continued)
SUMMARY OF INDUSTRIAL FACILITIES IN UNION COUNTY, N.J.
Name
SIC
Products
NPDES CDS MCI TS
Greitzer, Inc.
Gross, A. Candle Co.
Guardian Safety Equip.
Guilden Development Co.
Hammer Mfg. Co., Inc.
Hansome Energy Systems
Harris Paint Products, Inc.
Helmuth Tool & Die Co.
Hilton Clothes, Inc.
Howard Precision, Inc.
Ideal Plating & Polishing
Industrial Machine & Engr.
Jamie Boy Corp., Inc.
Jasco Knitting
Joyal Products, Inc.
Kaufman Stairs, Inc.
Kuehne Chemical Co.
Laeger Metal Spinning Co.
Lane Electronics, Inc.
Lehman Mfg. Co.
Library Press, The
Linair, Inc.
Linden Chlorine Prod.
Linden Ice Co.
Liquid Carbonic Corp.
Lloyds-of-Linden
Magnus Organ Corp.
Malo & Weste Corp.
Mapes & Sprowl Co.
Marco Chem. Div. (W.R. Grace)
Margrove Mfg. Co. Inc.
Metal Foil Prod. Mfg. Co.
Meyer, I.B., Plastics, Inc.
Micro Matic Screw Co.
Miller, Paul Sheet Metal Works
Monitor Welding Co.
Morland Associates
Nadel Lumber & Fuel Co.
Nebetco Engineering
Nesco Steel Barrel Co.
New Mercantile & Notion Corp.
Newman, C. L., Inc.
Nova Screw Machine Prod.
Ogden Food Service Corp.
Paper Covnerting Corp.
Park Plastics Co.
Penn-Ray Sprinkler Co.
Perforating Industries, Inc.
Platronics, Inc.
Poppy, Inc.
Precise Tool & Mold Co.
Prince Industries Ltd.
Pro Plastics
Pulaski Meat Products
3535 Food Conveyors
3999 Candles
3714 Industrial Safety Equip.
3699 Christmas Ornaments
3461 Metal Stampings
3621 Electric Motors
2851 Caulking, Putties, Paints
3545 Machine Tool & Accessories
2311 Men's Clothing
3461 Metal stamping
3471 Plating of Metals
3451 Screw Machine Prod.
2363 Children's Coats
2256 Knitting Mill
3623 Welding Machines
2431 Stairs
2899 Sodium Hypochlorite Solution
3461 Metal Spinning
3679 Electronics
3714 Marine Engines
2751 Printing
3729 Aircraft Instr. Repair
2812 Chlorine & Caustic Soda
2097 Ice
2813 Industrial & Medical Gases
2391 Plastic Curtains, Bedspreads
3131 Electric Chord Organs
3079 Plastic Products
3449 Steel, Aluminum
2821 Polyester Resins
3872 Watch Cases
3497 Aluminum Foil Prod.
3079 Plastic Products
3451 Screw Machine Prod.
3444 Sheet Metal Work
3441 Fabricated Structural Steel
3494 Safety Showers
2431 Lumber, Mi 11work
3674 Air Poll. Monitoring EQuip.
3491 Steel Drums
3964 Stays & Supports
3079 Rigid Polyurethane Compounds
3451 Screw Machine Prod.
3481 Food Vending Machines
2641 Shredded Paper
3941 Toy Assembly
3498 Sprinkler Systems
2295 Perforating Materials
3471 Precious Metals Electropl.
2339 Outerwear
3544 Industrial Molds
2844 Cosmetics
3079 Industrial Plastics
2013 Sausage
X X
-------
Table II-1 (Continued)
SUMMARY OF INDUSTRIAL FACILITIES IN UNION COUNTY, N.J.
36
Name
SIC
Products
NPDES CDS MCI TS
finance Equip.
search Assoc., Inc.
Resyn Corp.
Ix Tool & Mfg. Co.
eem Mfg. Co.
tuba Extruders, Inc.
Royal Mills Assoc.
Jhiller, J. Inc.
allcross & Pace Sheet Metal
ort Run Stamping Co.
Silk Screening Co.
!all Lot Stamping Co.
lar Compounds Corp.
Ivent Recovery Service of NJ
§eed Electronics, Inc.
andard Electric Motor Repair
andard T. Chemical Co.
States Electronic Corp.
Stedi-Pac Corp.
Hweet Sign & Advertising
Hasty Maid Food Prod.
Tempie Electronics & Research
Jenco (Coca Cola)
horn-Wilmerding Corp.
Vans National Fabricators
Transco Products Corp.
JJnion Carbide Corp.
Bjnited Laboratories
Bjnviersal-Newark Container
W & W Design Mfg. Co.
JJalbern Devices, Inc.
wallus Screw Machine Prod.
Bwalden Farms, Inc.
Walworth Co.
Wayne Wire Die Co.
Weldon Service & Testing
Wesley, Winter & Moore
West Lake Hydraulics
White Rose Tea, Inc.
Wing Co., The
Woodbridge Plastics, Inc.
All-State Legal Supplies
America! Aluminum Co.
Bestway Prod., Inc.
Bishop Industries, Inc.
Central Scientific Co.
Delmac Machine & Tool Co.
Elb Grinders Corp.
Falcon Safety Prod. Inc.
HPL Mel ray NJ
Hago Products, Inc.
Hillyer Corp.
Jersey Conveyors Co.
Klingelhofer Corp.
Lawlor Enterprises Ltd.
3535 Materials Handling Systems .
2385 Plastic Gloves & Aprons
2821 Synthetic Resins
3544 Tools & Dies
3412 Plastic & Steel Containers
3079 Plastic Products
2392 Bedspreads & Draperies
2791 Composition & Printing
3444 Sheet Metal Works
3461 Metal Stamping
2751 Silk Screen Printing
3469 Metal Stamping
2891 Adhesives, Sealants, Resins
2818 Industrial Cehmicals & Solvents
3679 Printed Circuits
3621 Motors & Generators
2851 Paints, Varnishes, Enamels
3662 Electronics
3569 Packaging Machinery
3993 Outdoor Advertising
2037 Frozen Foods
3679 Solid State Electronics
2099 Instant Coffee & Tea
3272 Ready-Mix Concrete
3451 Steel Nuts
3652 Transcription Blanks
2813 Industrial GAses
2842 Buffing Compounds
3491 . Steel Drums
3469 Metal Stamping
3674 Silicon & Germanion Transistors
3451 Screw Machine Prod.
2035 Salad Dressings, Nuts
3494 Stainless Steel Valves
3544 Dies & Tools
3443 Cryogenic Vessels
2649 Envelopes & Stationery
3449 Metal Fabricators
2099 Food Preparations
3433 Heating & Ventilating Systems
2821 Synthetic Resins
MOUNTAINSIDE
2751 Printed Legal Forms
3441 Deep Drawn Alum. Parts
3652 Phonograph Records
2844 Cosmetics
3811 Chemicals & Lab. Supplies
3599 Machine Shop
3541 Precision Surface Grinders
3662 Alarms, Aerosol Prod.
3461 Metal Stamping
3432 Oil Burner Nozzles
3541 Machine Tools
3535 Conveyors
3541 Machine Tools
2751 Printing
X
M
X
X
X
X
X X
X
X
X
-------
37
Table II-1 (Continued)
SUW1ARY OF INDUSTRIAL FACILITIES IN UNION COUNTY, N.J.
Name
SIC
Products
NPDES CDS MCI TS
Magnus Tool & Die Co.
Middlesex Tool & Machine Co.
Muirhead, Inc.
Name-0-Plate, Inc.
National Tool & Mfg. Co.
Palnut Div. of TRW, Inc.
Plastics Mfg., Inc.
Schmid & Son, Inc.
Stampings, Inc.
Sterling Plastics Co.
Trucktor Corp., The
W'Jsnor Mfg. Corp.
Worthington Pump Corp.
Zausner Food Corp.
Amberg & Vslar, Inc.
Azoplate
Bard, C. R. International
Bell Telephone Laboratories
Bull & Roberts, Inc.
Electrical Industries
Englehard Minerals & Chemicals
Ethylene Corp.
Fablok Mills, Inc.
Flodyne Controls, Inc.
Molecular Energy Corp.
Pix Mfg. Co.
Smit, O.K. & Sons, Inc.
Arrow Paper Co.
Boise Printing Co.
Bruno, M. Dress Co.
Burroughs Corp.
Cozzoli Machine Co.
DA Mi lie Bag Co. Inc.
Fair Mail Service, Inc.
Fleck Knitwear.Co.
Modes Dress Co.
Howell Products, Inc.
Hultberg, Erik, Inc.
Industrial Foam Corp.
Interstate Printing Corp.
Jane! Modes, Inc.
Jersey Neon Corp.
Laggren's Inc.
Lenape Equip. Co.
Loizeaux Lumber Co.
Markay Bags, Inc.
National Starch & Chemical
Novak Co., Inc., The
Paul, Edward P. & Co., Inc.
Plainfield Lumber & Supply
Plainfield Pattern Works, Inc.
3722 Aircraft Engine Parts
3544 Tools & Dies
3861 Electronic Testing Devices
3461 Name Plates
3444 Mold Bases
3452 Nuts & Fasteners
3079 Plastic Injection Molding
3911 Jewelry
3469 Metal Stampings
3079 Injection Molding
3714 Truck Axle Susp.
3551 Food Equip.
3561 Pumps, Compressors
2022 Cheese
MURRAY HILL
3451 Metal Parts
3555 Lithograph Plates & Chem.
3841 Medical Equipment
7391 Research & Development
3823 Water Treating Equip.
3679 Hermetic Seals
2819 Salts, Solutions, Precious Metals
3079 Extrusions, Cable Cores
2241 Fabrics
'3494 Valves & Controls
3692 Primary Batteries
3461 Metal Stamping
3532 Diamond Wheels, Tools
PLAINFIELD
2621 Paper Products
2751 Commercial Printing
2335 Dresses
3679 Electronic Components
3559 Packaging Machinery
3171 Handbags
2751 Printing & Mailing
2396 Knitted Trimmings
2335 Dresses
3621 Electric Motors
3429 Varnishing, Facsimile Oil Paint.
3069 Fabricated Foam Packaging
2752 Commercial Printing
2335 Women's Apparel
3993 Signs
2591 Awnings, Window Shades
3444 Degreasing Machines
2431 Lumber, Millwork
3171 Handbags
2821 Starches, Adhesives, Resins
3535 Aluminum Conveyors
3269 Ceramic Giftware
2431 Lumber, Millwork
2499 Wood & Metal Patterns
X X
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
M
-------
Table II-l (Continued)
SUMMARY OF INDUSTRIAL FACILITIES IN UNION COUNTY, N.J.
38
Name
SIC
Products
NPDES CDS MCI TS
ftlskin, Inc.
Ubinco, Inc.
Robert Dress, Inc.
pyal Apex Mfg. Co., Inc.
2ven-Up Bottling Co.
S Plastic Mfg. Co.
Thul Engine & Equip. Co.
Kul Machine Works, Inc.
ion Instrument Corp.
rkotype Corp.
Advance Tool Corp.
Airtec, Inc.
£to Pallet, Inc.
erican Leather Mfg. Co.
erican Solenoid Co.
Anrus Mfg. Co.
Jirny Steel Constr. Co.
Dissociated Plastics, Inc.
\stro Tool & Machine Co.
Astrolab, Inc.
^\tom Tabloid, The
Avionic Instruments Inc.
Babinek, Joseph Sheet Metal Works
Bauer Publishing & Printing
Bondit Corp.
Carlson, O.F. & Co., Inc.
Dobrin Engineering
EDM Tool & Machine Co.
Elains's Caprice Fashions
Electro-Catheter Corp.
Fertl-Soil Co.
Grief Brothers Corp.
Gwilliam Machine & Mfg. Co.
H & H Heat Treating Corp.
Hi-Brett Chemical Co.
Industrial Hydraulics, Inc.
Jans Fashions, Inc.
Kagan-Dixon Wire Corp.
M & T Chemicals, Inc.
Margon Corp.
Marna Co., Inc.
Melstrom Mfg. Corp.
Merck & Co., Inc.
Micromech Mfg. Corp.
Moore Dispensers, Inc.
Paramount Mfg. Co.
Perry Sportswear Mfg. Co.
Philadelphia Quartz Co.
Precision Gas Prod., Inc.
Purolator, Inc.
Quinn & Boden co., Inc.
Rahway Iron Works, Inc.
Rahway News Record
Regina Co., The
2369 Women's Apparel
3599 Mulching Machinery
2335 Dresses
3444 Rain Gutters
2086 Soft Drinks
3079 Plastic Toys
3599 Unloaders
3729 Aircraft Components
3811 Graphic Arts Equip.
2893 Printing Machines & Ink
RAHWAY
3544 Tools & Dies
3679 Electronic Components
2499 Wood Products
3121 Leather Belting
3622 Switches
3451 Screw Machine Prod.
3441 Fabricated Structural Steel
3357 Insulated Wire Prod.
3599 Machine Shop
3679 Microwave Components
2711 Newspaper Publisher
3621 Power Supplies, Battery Chargers
3444 Sheet Metal
2751 Newspaper & Comm. Printing
3679 Electronic Equip.
3471 Plating & Polishing
3444 Dampers
3544 Tools & Dies
2335 Dresses
3841 Medical Instruments
2871 Turf & Fertilizer
3411 Drums & Pails
3444 Metal Fabrication
3399 Commercial Heat Treating
2841 Soap & Detergents
3542 Hydraulic Machinery
2337 Suits & Coats
3357 Alum. & Brass Wire
2818 Spec. Chem., Org. Coatings & Inks,
Plating Prod., Metals Recycling
3942 Dolls' Eyes
3079 Plastic Products
3679 Electronic Equip.
2869 Pharmaceuticals, Industr. Chem.
3541 Wafering Machines
3569 Soap Dispensers
3449 Fabr. Metal Prod.
2329 Jackets
2819 Na & K Silicates, Metso Deterg.
2813 Pure Gases & Mixtures
3599 Automotive Filters
2731 Book Printing
3599 Machine Shop
2711 Newspaper Publishing, Print.
3589 Floor Machines
X X
X
X X
X
X
X
X
-------
Table II-1 (Continued)
SUtMARY OF INDUSTRIAL FACILITIES IN UNION COUNTY, N.J.
39
Name
SIC
Products
NPDES CDS MCI TS
Rex Packaging Machine Co. 3551
Rudy's Armature Service 3694
S & S Mfg. Co. 3599
Sanford Mfg. Corp. 3699
Technair Packaging Labs. 2842
Tie Easy Inc. 3481
Trebor, Inc. 3469
United Coated Fabrics 2644
Warwick Laboratories Co. 2992
All Disc Records, Inc. 3652
Austin Electronics 3679
Bakers Bakery, Inc. 2051
Banner Mfg. Co. 2399
C & K Plastics, Inc. 3079
Carle Tool Co., Ltd. 3544
Cidex Corp. 2842
Coil hose Pneumatics 3069
Coromatic, Inc. 3479
Corrosion Dynamics, Inc. 3569
Consumano Perma-Rail 3449
Design Line Inc. 2521
Dur-A-Guard Wooden Box Co. 2441
Economy Color Card Co. 2752
Enterprise Steel Fabricators 3443
Federal Mining & Mfg. Co. 2869
Gamco Industries, Inc. 2621
Gem Sportswear, Inc. 2386
Gitzendanner-Muller Co. 3559
Graphic Identificaiton Service 2751
Great Eastern Packing & Paper Stock 2621
Highland Metal Products 3461
Hydrawlik 3079
Ironbound Heat Treating Co. 3399
Jersey Laminating & Finishing 3079
K & R Tool Co., Inc. 3544
Lehigh Tool & Mfg. Co. 3544
M & R Seal Press Co. 3479
Matix Co., The 3544
Metro Hospital Supply Co. 3079
Modern Engraving & Machine 3555
Moldamatic Inc. 3079
Moon Corrugated Container 2649
Moore Candy Co. 2071
Packaging Specialties Co. 2751
Pamarco Creative Engravers 2753
Pamarco, Inc. 3555
Permanent Marking Corp. 3469
Phoenix Mfg. Co. 2329
Quality Plastic Molds, Inc. 3544
Quality Printing 2751
Regal Molding Corp. 3079
Remington Industries 3599
Reproduction Typographers 2791
Roselle Paper Co., Inc. 2649
Runne Tool & Machine Co. 3599
Smokador Products Co. 2514
Stain-Ox Co., Inc. 2842
Tobacco Machine Supply Co. 3559
Food Products Machinery
Electrical Equipment
Precision Machine Parts
Surface Grinders
Aerosol Pkging
Paper & Plastic Wire Ties
Metal Stampings
Vinyl Wallcovering
Hydr. Brake Fluids
ROSELLE
Phonograph Records
Electr. System Development
Bakery Prod.
Fabricated Textile Prod.
Plastic Prod.
Dies & Plastic Molds
Deterg., Mildew Agents, Repellents
Pneumatic Hoses
Coating & Engraving Metal Prod.
Rust Removal EQuip.
Metal Work
Wood Office Furniture
Wooden Boxes
Lithographic Printing
Steel Weldments
Solvents for Graphic Arts
Catalog Equip.
Leather Apparel
Wire Stitching Machines
Printing Labels & Tags
Paper Mill Supplies
Metal Stampings
Plastic Tubing, Medical Instr.
Commercial Heat Treat.
Urethane Coated Fabrics
Model Work
Tools & Dies
Marking Devices
Tools & Dies
Plastic Products
Embossing Machines
Plastic Molding
Converted Paper Prod.
Hard Candy
Printed Bags & Boxes
Photo-Engraved Roto Gravure
Steel Rolls
Metal STamping
Outerwear
Tools & Molds
Commercial Printing
Plastic Products
Machines
Advertising Typography
Paper
Machine Shop
Smokers Accessories
Automobile, Chem. Polishings Supp.
Cigar Processing Equip.
X
X
-------
40
Table II-1 (Continued)
SVMMAR? OF INDUSTRIAL FACILITIES IN UNION COUNTY, N.J.
Name
SIC
Products
NPDES CDS MCI TS
Torco Machine Co., Inc. 3599
Tri-State Precision Works 3599
Untied Steel Rule Die Service 3079
Vito Mill work & Cabinet Co. 2511
Wall fleet Prod, of NJ 2253
Weiner-Emerson Glass Co. 3229
Accurate Machine & Tool Co. 3544
B & B Mold & Tool Co. 3544
Childhood Interests, Inc. 3941
Crossfield Products Corp. 2821
Florence Togs, Inc. 2369
Goeller, Charles, Inc. 3441
Hexacon Electric Co. 3423
Keen-Edge Carbide Cutter 3541
Lion Uniform, Inc. 2329
Hearl Corp., The 2821
Miller-Northern Corp. 2751
Monroe Pattern Works 3565
Orbit Mfg. Co., Inc. 3599
Park Printing Co. 2751
Ramco Mfg. Co., Inc. 3444
Roselle Tool & Die Co. 3544
.Schrieber Photo Service 2751
Tri-Tech Tools, Inc. 3541
Beco Mfg. Co., Inc. 3679
Bridon America Corp. 3481
Cedar Products, Inc. 2499
Custom Molders Corp. 3079
De Luxe Tool & Mold Co. 3544
Gleicher Mfg. Corp. 3599
Industrial Microwave Corp. 3679
L & J Cabinet Co., Inc. 2499
Micro Accurate Corp. . 3599
Mid-Eastern Industries, Inc. 3611
Progressive Die & Mold 3544
Aetna Felt Corp. 2231
Airco Welding Products 3548
American Optical Corp. 3851
American Vector, Inc. 3679
ATI antic Metal Products 3679
Barworth, Inc. 3511
Best, Richard Pencil Co. 3951
Bigelow Components Corp. 3452
Builders Fair, Inc. 2511
Carter Bell Mfg. Co., The 2899
Centaur Machine Tool & Mfg. 3545
Colvin-Friedman Co. 2821
DeVilbiss Co., The 3561
Machine Shop
Tooling & Machine Work
Plastic Products
Millwork
Dresses
Plate Glass
ROSELLE PARK
Tools & Dies
Tools & Dies
Toys
Composition Floor Covering
Clothes
Structural & Galvanized Steel
Electric Soldering Irons
Carbide Tipped Tools
Industrial Uniforms
Fire Fighting Foam, Chem.
Business Card Printers
Wood Patterns
Machine Shop
Printing
Misc. Metal Prod.
Tools & Dies
Commercial Printing
Carbide Cutting Tools
SCOTCH PLAINS
Beryllium, Copper Parts
Wire Rope
Wood Fence Prod.
Plastic Items
Molds
Pressure Sensitive Tape
Electronic Components
Bathroom Vanities
Machine Shop
DC Power Systems
Dies & Molds
SPRINGFIELD
Felt Prod. '
Metal Working
Opthalmic Goods
Electronic Power Supplies
Metal Electronic Parts
Hydraulic Parts
Pencils, Pens, Erasures
Cold Formed Parts
Kitchen Cabinets
Vulcanized Vegetable Oils
Machine Tool Access
Components from Sheet Termoplastlcs
Spray Painting Equip.
X
X
-------
41
Table II-l (Continued)
SUMMARy OF INDUSTRIAL FACILITIES IN UNION COUNTY, N.J.
Name
SIC
Products
NPDES CDS MCI TS
Disco Electronics, Inc. 3679
Dolly Madison Kitchens 2511
Duerr Tool & Die Co. 3544
Elkay Products Co. 3429
EMZ Machine Co. 3599
Felger, F & F, Inc. 3911
FEM Industries, Inc. 3599
Fisher Scientific Co. 3811
Fravessi-Lamont, Inc. 2771
Furniture Craft Co. 2512
General Electric Co. 3679
Grassmann-Blake, Inc. 3912
Haarmann & Riemer Corp. 2844
Hollywood Vanities Co. 2511
Investment Casting Corp. 3369
Liberty Mold & Duplicating 3559
Lu-Max Mfg. Co., Inc. 3961
Marine Colloids, Inc. 2818
Mechanical Felt & Textiles Co. 2231
Meeker, A. R. Co. 3579
Newark Die Co., The 3544
Nylon Molding Corp. 3079
Orbit Tool & Die Corp. 3544
Quindar Electronics, Inc. 3679
Rapid Roller Co. of NJ 3555
Republic Metal Products 3600
Ruesch, H. J. Machine Co. 3542
Sargent-Welch Scientific Co. 3811
Singer Business Machines 3571
Springfield Heating & AC 3585
Springfield Tool & Die Co. 3545
Springfield Welding Co., Inc. 3499
Steack, Paul C., Inc. 3599
Thornton Closing Rings, Inc. 3499
Universal Tools & Mfg. Co. 3542
Vickers, Inc. 3494
Victory Engineering Corp. 3674
Zep Mfg. Co. 2842
A & A Canvas Corp. 2591
Atkins & Co., Inc. 2531
Beekman Grove Originals 3962
Blcornfield Foundary, Inc. 3361
Bradshaw, Harry C., Co. 3914
Celanese Plastics Co. 2821
Celanese Research Co. 7391
Ciba Pharmaceutical Co. 3834
Ciba Products Co. 2821
Edwards, H. G. & Co., Inc. 3442
Harold Machine & Tool Co. 3423
Holman Label Co. 2641
Johnson, W. V., Engineering Co. 3599
Lumitron Corp. 3641
M & D Shop, Inc. 2337
Martindale-Hubbel, Inc. 2731
Mikropul Div., U. S. Fitler 3821
Mi 11 burn Summit Pritners 2711
R & M Tool & Mold Co. 3544
Rowe Electronics, Inc. 3622
Electronic Components
Wood Furniture
Custom INjection Molding
Misc. Prod.
Machine Shop
Jewelers
Machine Shop
Instruments
Greeting Cards
Architectural Woodworking
Metal Parts
Jewelry Findings
Flavors & Fragrances
Laminated Plastic Tops
Ferrous & NOn-Ferrous Castings
Molds
Costume Jewelry
Chemicals, Seaweed Extracts
Felt & Textile Processors
Office Equipment
Molds for Plastic Ind.
Molds, Thermoplastics
Injection Molds
Electronic EQuip.
Rubber Covered Rollers
Electrical Chassis, Cabinets
Metal Working Machinery
Lab. Apparatus & Chemicals
Office Machines
Air Conditioning Equip.
Tool, Die & Molds
Metal Fabrication
Sheet Metal Work
Steel Drum Head Rings
Tools & Dies
Hydraulic Prod.
Resistors, termistors
Janitors Supplies
SUMMIT
Venetian Blinds
School Equipment
Featehrs & Artif. Flowers
Bronze & Alum. Castings
Trophies, Medals
Plastic Materials
Research & Development
Pharmaceuticals
Epoxy Resins & Hardeners
Alum. Windows & Doors
Small Tools
Pressure Sensitive Labels
Instrument Parts
Incandescent Lamps
Coats
Book Publishing
Industrial Pollution Contr.
Newspaper Publishing ,
Tools & Dies
Industrial Electronic Controls
X
X
X
X
X
X
-------
Table II-l (Continued)
SUMMARY OF INDUSTRIAL FACILITIES IN UNION COUNTY, N.J.
42
Name
SIC
Products
NPDES CDS MCI TS
Stessel 8 Neugebauer, Inc.
Summit Fitler Corp.
Summit Truck Body, Inc.
Twill Marking Devices
United States Fitler Corp.
Adams Industries, Inc.
Airco, Inc.
Alcan Metal Powders, Inc.
Alfred & William, Inc.
All Tool Co.
Allied Handling Equip. Co.
Alpha Technical Services
Amerace Corp., ESNA Div.
American Can Co.
American Products Co., Inc.
Anderson Overhead Door Corp.
Arpell Razor Blade & Heat Treating
Atlantic industrial Corp.
Auto Skate Co., Inc.
Automatic Process Cotnrol, Inc.
B & S Engraving Co.
Breeze Corp.
Butler, H. F. Corp., The
Canfield, M. C. Sons
Carpenter Technology Corp.
Ce De Candy, Inc.
Cenco Grinding Corp.
Color Reproductions, Inc.
Creter, Philip, Inc.
Danly Machine Corp.
Disco Fashions
Dresser Industries
Drum Equipment Corp.
Dunphey Smith Corp.
Durex, Inc.
Duro Screw & Mfg. Co.
Eagle Sportogs, Inc.
Ebway Corp.
Ecodyne Corp.
Electroid Co.
Electronics Tool & Die Co.
Elizabeth Engineering Corp.
Elizabeth Iron Works, Inc.
Essex Chair Co.
Essex Optical Co.
Fair Burglar Alarm System
Force Machinery Co.
Foremost Mfg. Co., Inc.
GAF Corp.
G. D. Ideal Co., Inc.
Gelb, R & Sons, Inc.
General Cable Corp.
General Finishing & Spraying Co.
General Tool Corp.
Gottscho, Adolph, Inc.
Griffith Laboratories, Inc.
Hammett, J. L. Co.
Hasemann Flexible Shaft Co.
Hillside Spinning & Stamping Co.
2391 Draperies & Upholstery
2394 Industrial Collector Bags
3713 Truck & Bus Bodies
2751 Commercial Printing
3821 Air Pollution Controls
UNION
3461 Tools & Dies
3548 Cutting & Welding Equip.
2816 Inorganic Pigments
3493 Spring Machinery
3599 Machining
3535 Materials Handling Equip.
1151 Contract Engineering
3452 Self-locking Fasteners
3411 Containers
3729 Machining
2431 Overhead Doors & Operators
3421 Industrial Razor Blades
3999 Steel Measuring Tapes
3429 Metal Fabricators
3586 Metering & Dispensing Machines
3541 Machine Tools
3729 Aircraft & Atito. Parts
3449 Steel Products
3356 Solder Products
3312 Welded Stainless Steel Tubing
2071 Candy
3545 Steel Drill Blanks
2751 Screen Process Printing
3544 Tools & Dies
3544 Machine Tools
2339 Shirts & Dresses
3531 Hoists, Tools
3559 Heavy Equip.
3444 Heating, AC & Sheet Metal
3461 Metal Stamping & Assemb.
3545 Screw Machine Prod., Tools
2389 Screen Printed Sportswear
3544 Tools & Dies
3589 Water Treatment Equip.
3679 Electromagnetic Equip.
3544 Tools & Dies
3444 Sheet Metal Contr.
3441 Structural Steel
2511 Household Furniture
3851 Opthalmic Goods
3662 Burglar Alarm System
3544 Tools .
3642 Precision Reflectors
3861 Business System Products
3544 Dies, Jigs, Machine Parts
3559 Chemical Machinery
3357 Wire & Cable
3479 Metal Finishing
3599 Machine Shop
3555 Coding & Imprinting Equip.
2099 Food Seasonings
2621 School Supplies
3566 Flexible Shaft Assemblies
3461 Metal Stamping & Spinning
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
X X
-------
Table II-l (Continued)
SUMMARY OF INDUSTRIAL FACILITIES IN UNION COUNTY, N.J.
43
Name
SIC
Products
NPDES CDS MCI TS
Hodor, Inc. 2511
Hutchinson, William T. Co. 3541
Ideal Dairy Farms 2026
Industrial Ferguson Foundry 3362
International Paint Co., Inc. 2851
Interstate Mold & Mobbing Co. 3544
Jaeger Lumber & Supply Co. 2431
Jersey Tab Card Corp. 2645
Keene Corp. 3642
King Mfg. Corp. 3911
Krais Tool & Die Co. 3545
Kratt, William Co. 3469
Krupnick Brothers, Inc. 2221
Lehigh Electric Prod. Co. 3499
Lehigh Precision Mfg. Co. 3499
Lincoln Electric Prod. Co. 3613
Lutz, John L. Welding & Fabr. 3444
MacMillan Bloedel Containers 2652
Major Printing Co. 2751
Manning & Lewis Engineering Co. 3443
Meisel , C. Music Co. 3931
Mengers Bake Shop, Inc. 2051
Mercuric Jewelers 3911
Meyer & De Pew Co., Inc. 3444
Miele Iron Works, Inc. 3272
Mulberry Metal Prod., Inc. 3643
National Printing Co. 2752
National Woodworking Co. 2541
N. J. Safety Equip. Co. 3569
Optical Radiation Corp. 3545
Polyplastex United, Inc. 2821
Precision Plates, Inc. 2793
Princeton Case Co., Inc. 3079
Pyro Plastics Corp. 3079
Rectifier Components Corp. 3679
Red Devil, Inc. 2851
Regal Dewey Industries, Inc. 2511
Reisen Lumber & Mi 11 work Co. 2431
Reliable Mfg. Co., Inc. 3400
Reu, Erwin, Inc. 3911
Roselle Plastics Corp. 3079
Rummel Fiber Co. 2823
S. S. ARt & Engraving corp. 2793
SJB Pipe Co. 3292
Schmidt, Oscar International 3931
Schroeder Brothers Co. 2431
Selrite Millwork & Bldg. Supply 2431
Service Hard Chromium Co. 3471
Show Art Kitchens, Inc. 3262
Signal-Stat Corp. 3642
Stair-Pak Prod. Co. 2431
Star Machine & Tool Co. 3599
T & W Setting Co. 3911
Tenney Engineering, Inc. 3443
Tessler & Weiss, Inc. 3911
Tilp Industries, Inc. 3631
Tilp, J. G., Inc. 3079
Tipper Tie Div. - Rheem Mfg. Co. 2649
Titanine, Inc. 2851
Triangel Tool Co. 3544
Tuscan Dairy Farms, Inc. 2026
Wood Household Furniture
Gages, Blanks, Grinding
Milk
Non-Ferrous Castings
Marine Paints & Varnishes
Machine Tools
Building Materials
Computer Output Microfilm
Outdoor Lighting Equip.
Jewelry Components
Machine Tools
Metal STampings & Dies
Fabrics
Steel Boxes
Metal Fabrication
Panel Boards
Plate Forming
Paperboard Boxes
Job Printing & Photo Offset
Chemical Process Equip.
Musical Instruments
Bakery Products
Jewelry
Air Conditioning & Heating
Steel Products
Electric Wiring Devices
Lithography
Wood Partitions, Shelving
Safety Equip.
Electro-Optical Devices
Decorative Plastic Sheeting
Photoengraving
Injection Molding
Injection Molding
Rectifier Assemblies
Paint Sundries & Chemicals
Kitchen Cabinets
Bldg. Material & Millwork
Picture Frames & Mirrors
Precious Jewelry
Plastic Injection Molding
Industrial Plastics
Photo Engraving
Asbestos Products
Musical Instruments
Mi 11work
Millwork
Plating of Metals
Custom Kitchens
Auto. Flashers & Lamps
Stairs
Machine Shop
Jewelry, Precious Metal
Environmental Test Chambers
Jewelry, Precious Metal
Cooking Equip.
Steel Molds for Plastics
Packaging Supplies
Industr. Finishes, Lacquers
Machines, Tools, Dies
Dairy Prod.
X
X
-------
44
Table II-l (Continued)
SUMMARY OF INDUSTRIAL FACILITIES IN UNION COUNTY, N.J.
Name
SIC
Products
NPDES CDS MCI TS
Union Electro-Therm Corp. 3631
Union Steel Corp. 3316
Union Tool & Mold Corp. 3544
Union Window Shade & Awning 2591
United Billiards, Inc. 3949
Verona Div., Boychem Corp. 2819
Vincent Brass & Alum. Co. 3400
Vulcan Tool & Mfg. Co. 3544
Wally-Ann Fashions 2337
Washmobile Corp. of NJ 3589
Western Electric Co., Inc. 3661
White Printing & Publishing 2751
Wilson, Andrew, Inc. 2879
Woodward Plastics, Corp. 2821
American Blueprint Co. 3952
Pall Trincor Corp. 3621
Plastic Laminating Corp. 3079
Tabatchnick's Millburn Inc. 2037
Wagner Precision Tool & Mfg. Co. 3544
Croll-Reynolds Co. 3561
Geigers Cider Mill & Restaurant 2033
Handler Mfg. Co., Inc. 3843
Hud-Cin Bldg. Prod. 3271
Koppers Co., Inc. 2850
Portasoft Co. . 3589
Union County Printing & Mailing 2751
Wei don Concrete Corp. 3271
Wyckoff Publishing Co. 2711
Cooking Equip.
Cold Rolled Steel
Molds
Alum. Doors & Windows
Billiard Tables
Industr. Inorg. Chemicals
Alum., Copper, Brass Mill Prod.
Tools & Dies
Coats
Auto. Car Wash Equip.
Telephone & Comm. Equip.
Commercial Printing
Irrigation Chemicals, Equip.
Compounding Plastic Mat'l.
VAUXHALL
Drawing Instruments
Filters & Dryers
Thermoplastic Laminating
Food Processing
Hydraulic Units
WESTFIELD
Pollution Control Equip.
Canned Fruits & Vegetables
Jewelers Processing Equip.
Concrete Products
Coatings & Bitumatic Paints
Water Softeners
Printers
Concrete
Newspaper Publishing
X X
X
M
-------
45
Table II-2
SUMMARy OF INDUSTRIAL FACILITIES IN MIDDLESEX COUNTY, N.J.
Name
SIC
Products
NPDES CDS MCI TS
Continental Plastics &
Chemicals, Inc.
Damsel Mfg. Co., Inc.
Economics Laboratory Inc.
Electro Dynamic
Food Concentrates, Inc.
Gray Envelope Mfg. Co., Inc.
J « F Contracting Corp.
Ketzenberg & Organization Inc.
Korelle Industries Inc.
Kullman Industries
Ortem Sportswear, Inc.
Premier Die Casting Co.
Process Systems Inc.
Sciortion Baking Co., Inc.
Thelma's Bakery, Inc.
Wall Trends, Inc.
World Carpet, Inc.
A-W Brands
Anchor Abrasive Corp.
Atlantic Industrial Supply
Best Made Co., Inc.
H. F. Butler Corp.
Carteret Abbattoir Inc.
Carteret Novelty Co., INc.
Carteret Products Corp.
Concord Plastics, Inc.
Continental Can Co.
Cramore Products, Inc.
Dow Chemical Co.
Engelhard Industries
Engelhard Industries
Engelhard Industries
Engelhard Minerals and Chemicals
FMC Corporation
G & L Tool Co.
Hoffman Printing Co.
Indol Chemical Co., INc.
Kappa Networks, Inc.
Karl Koch Erecting Co., Inc.
L. W. Sportswear Co.
Mar-Jon Sportswear
Metro Containers
Mobile Chemical Co.
Musi Dining Car Co., Inc.
North American Container Corp.
Pelamay Products, Inc.
Reichhold Chemicals, Inc.
AVENEL
3079 Plastic Sheeting
2369 Children's Sportswear
2841 Detergents
3621 Electric Motors & Generators
2099 Powdered Molasses & Honey
2642 Envelopes
2323 Novelty Meckware
3444 Sheet Metal Work
2295 Fabric Coating
3742 Dining Cars
2311 Men's Suits and Clothes
3361 Aluminum and Zinc Die Castings
2821 Polystyrene
2051 Bread and Other Baked Goods
2051 Break, Cake and Related Prod.
2644 Wallpaper
2279 Carpets and Rugs
CARTERET
2087 Bitters and Other Bar Prod.
3291 Blast Cleaning Abrasive
2394 Canvas & Nylon Web Prod.
2386 Garment Contractor
3443 Metal Prod.
2011 Slaughter House
2369 Sportswear
2321 Men's shirts
3079 Plastic Products
2655 Cans, Fiber Ship. Drum
2034 Dehy. Fruit Juice Prod.
3079 Anti-Freeze, Styrofoam
3339 Precious metals
3842 Dental supplies
3912 Rings, solder
3339 Refining Precious Metals
2819 Chemicals
3079 Custom INjection Molding.
2752 Lithographic Printing
2815 Dyes, Pigments
3679 Electromagnetic Delay Lines
3441 Fabricated Structural Steel
2339 Women's Sportswear
2339 Women's Wear
3221 Containers-Glass
2819 Phosphoric Acid
3999 Diners
2653 Corrugated shipping containers
3079 Polyethylene Bags, Covers, Liners,
Sheeting and Tubing
2821 Phenolic Molding Compounds
M
X
X
X
X
X
X
-------
46
Table II-2 (Continued)
SUMMARY OF INDUSTRIAL FACILITIES IN MIDDLESEX COUNTY, N.J.
Name
SIC
Products
NPDES CDS MCI TS
Republic Wire Corp.
Rex Packaging Corp.
Singer-Climate Control Div.
Soldek Fabrics Corp.
Spur Products
Stoller Carteret Baking
Superior Picture Tubes Inc.
Transmores Corp.
U.S. Metals Refining Co.
White Castle Systems Inc.
Wilgreen Electronics Inc.
A. R. Williams & Co.
United Stairs Corp.
Aeroquip Corp. 3069.
Bankers Box Record Storage Systems 2653
A. S. Barnes & Co., Inc. 2731
Brown and Perkins 2298
Building Components Industries Corp.2433
Carter-Wallace, Inc. 2834
Chamberlin & Barclay Inc. 2872
Cities Service Co. 7391
Cities Service Oil Co. 7391
Clevepak Corp.
Consolidated Models, Inc.
The Cranbury Press
Creative Playthings
Dataram Corp.
Federal Chemical Co.
Johns-Manville
Structural Systems Corp.
National Metallizing
Plant Food Company
Richcrete Concrete Co.
Roche Medical Electronics
Teledyne Turner Tube
Edward Wegner Co.
Western Electric Eng.
Amway Corp.
Andrewes Industries, INc.
Dayton Circuits Co.
Dayton Fertilizer Co.
Hoagland Instrument Co.
IBM Corp.
Mideast Aluminum Industries Corp.
NJE Corporation
South Brunswick Asphalt Inc.
Stauffer Chemical Co.
3315 Wire rods, bars
2643 Paper and polyethylene bags
3585 Air conditioning and heatinq prod.
2259 Knitting Mill
3079 Polyethylene Packaging
2051 Baked goods
3672 Color picture tubes
3541 Metal cutting and forming machines,
straightening presses
3331 Refining copper and nonferrous metals M
2051 Bread, cake
3643 Assembl. electrical connectors
2834 Pharmaceuticals
CLIFFWOOD BEACH
2431 Wooden stairways
CRANBURY
Flexible hose lines
Corrugated and Solid Fiber Boxes
Pub!ishing of books
Wire rope, chain nylon and manila rope
Wood roof trusses
Pharmaceuticals H
Fertilizers
Petrochemicals and Plastics Research
Petroleum Research
2655 Composite Cans, Paper Cores & Tubes
3941 Toys
2751 Newspaper & Job Printing
3941 Toys
3674 Computer Products
2871 Fertilizer
3271 Precast Concrete Slabs
3479 Metallizing film and coating
2879 Liquid Fertilizer
3273 Concrete Products
3841 Medical Electrical Instruments
3499 Collapsible Metal Tubes
3531 Tow Trucks
7391 Communications equipment
DAYTON
2841 Cleaning and household products
3494 Tank truck Equip.
3679 Printed circuits
2879 Fertilizers and Pesticides
3622 Time Delay Relays
3573 Data processing machines
3352 Alum, extrusions fabricating & anodizing
3612 Electronic Power Supplies
2951 Asphalt Products
2879 Formulation of Agricultural Pesticide
Prod., Ind. Sulfur
-------
47
Table JI-2 (Continued)
SUMMARY OF INDUSTRIAL FACILITIES IN MIDDLESEX COUNTY, N.J.
Name
SIC
Products
NPDES CDS MCI TS
Brunswick Rubber Co., Inc.
Slackers Canvas Prod.
Buffalo Tank Division
Consolidated Container Co.
Fischer Casting Co., Inc.
New Jersey Fire Equip. Corp.
Nu-Tex Corp.
Plainfield Machine Co. .
Savary & Glaeser, Inc.
Van Blaricom & Co.
Village Weeklies, Inc.
All is Chalmers Mfg.
American Tara Corp.
Philip H. Buehrle, Inc.
Dreier's Sporting Goods Co.
Robert Frey and Sons
Greater Jersey Press, Inc.
Herbert Sand Co., Inc.
ITT Continental Baking Co.
Interpace Corp.
Interstate Business Forms
KEM Mfg. Co.
Leeming-Pacquin Div.
Lehara Equip. Co.
Mar-Fred Store Fixtures & Cabinet
Co.
Middlesex Sheet Metal Co., Inc.
Middlesex Stainless Fittings
Monaco Knitting Mills, Inc.
New Jersey Carbon Paper
Polymer Services
Rutgers Cloak Mfg. Co., Inc.
Seacoast Labs, Inc.
Sentinental Publishing Co.
Sta-rite Industries Inc.
Academy Die Casting & Plating Co.
Aircompco
Almon Industries Inc.
Alpine Metal Products
Aluminum Building Specialties,
Amerchol
American Boa, Inc.
American Can Co. ;
American Can Co.
American Hospital Supply
American Metal Moulding
Ardmore Textured Metals. Inc.
Inc.
DEANS
3069 Rubber Gaskets
DUNELLEM
2394 Canvas Products
3443 Steel Plate Work
2653 Corrugated Shipping Cartons & Displays
3361 Aluminum Foundry
3569 Fire Dept. apparatus equipment hoses
2399 Textiles for industry
3484 Automatic Pistols
3441 Structural Steel Fabrication
2391 Draperies
2711 Weekly newspapers and job printing
EAST BRUNSWICK
3537 Tractor Parts
3955 Carbon paper for business form
3569 Machine tool products
3949 Sporting Goods
2397 Schiffli Machine Embroideries
2752 Offset Printing
3295 Sand
2051 Baked Goods
3272 Concrete Pipe and Fittings )
2751 Business Forms
2842 Cleaning Compounds
2844 Personal Products
3523 . Boom Flail Mowes
2541 Store fixtures
3444 Sheet Metal Work
3494 Pipe fittings
2258 Knitted fabrics
3955 Carbon Paper
3031 Custom Mixed Rubber
2363 Girls outerwear
2879 Insecticides, Fungicides
2711 Newspaper Publishing
3561 Pumps & Pumping Equip.
EDISON
3369 Die casting
3599 Metal component parts :
3949 Sporting & Athletic Goods
3469 Cabinets, weldments, stampings
& electronic panels
3442 Aluminum storm windows, doors
2899 Lanolin Derivatives Specialty Chem.
3441 Expansion joints, metal hose
3411 Beverage cans
3411 Aerosol containers
3841 Medical Supplies
3315 Armored Cable flexible steel conduit
3399 Textured embossed metals, laminated
metals
X
X
-------
48
Table II-2 (Continued)
SUMMARY OF INDUSTRIAL FACILITIES IN MIDDLESEX COUNTY, N.J.
Name
SIC
Products
NPDES CDS MCI TS
Berry Steel Corp. 3316
Best Block Co., Inc. 3271
Bienfang Paper Co. Inc. 2621
Bond Baking Co. 2051
Brenon, Inc. 3544
CML Maccarr, Inc. . 3679
Cadre, Inc. 2752
Cary Page Chemicals, Inc. 2821
Cascade Industries Inc. 3949
Certain-teed Machinery Corp. 2655
Certain-Teed Products Corp. 3079
Champion-Edison Inc. 2649
Childcraft education Corp. 3941
Clausen Co. 3079
Communications Illustrated ' 2751
Con Lux Coatings Co. 2851
Curran-Pfeiff Corp. 3264
D & B Plastics 3079
L.A. Dreyfus Co. 2073
Edison Asphalt Corp. 2951
Edison Lamp Works 3641
Edison Plastics 3079
Elwin Packaging Corp. 2654
Engelhard Minerals & Chem. Corp. 7391
Fedders Corp. 3585
Pels Refractories, Inc. 3297
Fibrenetics Inc. 3079
Filter Dynamics International 3569
Ford Motor Company 3711
H. B. Fuller Company 2891
Furiness, Samuel Mat Co. 3069
G & G Welding 3443
Galbraith-Pilot Marine Corp. 3622
Garfield & Co. 2834
Garon Products, Inc. 2891
General Pallet Corp. 2444
Gund Mfg. Co. 3944
Halecrest Co. 3531
Heidingsfeld Printing Co. 2751
0. M. Huber, Corp. 2893
Industrial Lumber Corp. 2431
Inplant Systems Co. 3559
International Paper Co. 2511
Interstate Container Corp. 2653
Jennings Kitchen Grygo, Inc. 2751
Johns-Manville Products Corp. 3079
Kaiser Aluminum & Chemical Corp. 3411
The Kendall Co. 2211
G. A. Kleissler Co. 3564
Krauszer's Dairy 2026
Lee Filters 3599
Mackrin Saw & Gutter Corp.
Marco Chemical Co. 2819
Marine Drive Systems 3519
Shearing & slitting flat products
Cinder blocks X
Specialty papers
Bread
Wire drawing diamond dies
Power supplies
Offset Printing & Lithography
PVC Compounds
Swimming pools X
Extruder Machines
Fiberglass insulation
Converted papers, film & foils
Educational Products
Synthetic Resin Compounds
Printing
Paint Products
Porcelain Silicon Carbides
Polyethylene Film Extruding
Thermoplastic Compounds
Paving Products
Electric Lamps
Plastic film extruding
Sanitary Food Containers
Research, Engineering Service
Household Appliances
Refactories
Fiberglass Fabrication
Filters
Assemble automobiles X
Adhesive Mfg.
Matting, Dockbumpers
Metal fabrication
Electrical Marine supplies
Pharmaceuticals
Cements, sealants, adhesives
Pallets
Toys, Dolls
Paving & excavating
Commercial printing
Printing inks, carbon black, Kaolin
clays, rubber chemicals, colors and
pigments
Lumber
Packaging machinery & equip.
Wooden kitchen cabinets
Corrugated containers
Commercial printing
Injection molded plastic prod.
Metal cans
Surgical dressings
Dust separators & controls
Milk & milk products
Automotive filters
Carbide tipped saw blades
Specialty chemicals X
Marine drives
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
-------
49
Table II-2 (Continued)
SUMMARY OF INDUSTRIAL FACILITIES IN MIDDLESEX COUNTY, N.J.
Name
SIC
Products
NPDES CDS MCI TS
Metal Magic, Inc.
Metex Corp.
Method Pattern & Model Co.
Mielach, John Millwork Co.
Mobil Chemical Co.
Mobil Chemical Co.
Model Rectifier Corp.
Motor Machine Co., Inc.
National Bag Corp.
National Can Corp.
New Brunswick Store Fixture Co.
Norge Laundry Div.
O.E.M. Medical Inc.
Olympia tool & Machine Co.
OPCOA
Owens-Illinois, Inc.
Paisley Products, Inc.
Parkway-Kew Corp.
Pigment Dispersions Inc.
Plex Corporation
R & D Circuits
Regal Beloit Corp.
Revlon, Inc.
Rings for Drums, Inc.
Rovegno Lithograph Inc. Co.
Sapolin Paints, Inc.
Frederick Schill & Co., Inc.
Don Schreiber & Co., Inc.
Seaboard Metal Prod. Co., Inc.
Soluble Products Corp.
Stahilized Pigments, Inc.
Stauffer Chemical Co.
Technical Adhesives
Thermometrics Inc.
Tuff-lite Corp.
Unex Conveying Systems Inc.
Unviersal General Sheet Metal
Valvoline Oil Co.
Vanguard Inc.
Vibo Industries Inc.
Wadell Equip. Co., Inc.
Westinghouse Elec. Corp.
Ashland Chemical Co.
,i
Best Brand Beverage Co.
The Clausen Company »
Hatco Chemical Div. '
Molded Fashions Co.
Tenneco Chemicals, Inc.
3444 Sheet metal fabricating
3879 RFI shielded products
knitted wire mesh
3565 Industrial models & vacuum formed
products
2431 Architectural woodworking
7391 R & D of plastics, polymers, organic
chemicals, chemicals, & crop
chemicals M X
2851 Paints, varnishes X M X
3612 Electric Transformers X
3542 Industrial machinery
2643 Paper Grocery Sacks
3411 Cans - metal M X
2431 Store fixtures, millwork
358.2 Commercial cleaners
3841 Medical instruments
3559 Plastic extruding machines
3674 Light Emitting Diodes
3079 Plastic products X
2891 Adhesives X
3548 Wire mill blocks, capstrn.sheaves
2821 Color plastic dispersions X
2821 Extruded plastic
3679 Printed Circuit Boards X
3451 Metal Cutting tools
2844 Perfumes, cosmetics, toilet preparations X
3499 Metal Products
2752 Lithographic Printing X
2851 Paints & Coatings . X
2431 Lumber, millwork
2782 Binders & Indexes
3444 Sheet metal
7391 Research & testing of Pharmaceuticals X
3264 Hard Ferrites M
2833 Medical Chemicals M X
2891 Grout and mastic
3679 Electronic components
3079 Plastic Garden Hose
3535 Conveyors
3444 Sheet metal work
2992 Automotive lubricants
2653 Corrugated Boxes
3441 Fabricated Structural Steel
3545 Computer (Mini)
3585 Room air conditioning units X
FORDS
2821 Phenolic & acrylic resins,
antioxidants M C X
2086 Beverages
2851 Polyester Resin Base Patch Compounds X
2819 Industrial Chemicals X C X
2335 Women's Dresses
2818 Fine Chemicals M M C X
-------
50
Table II-S (Continued)
SUMMARY OF INDUSTRIAL FACILITIES IN MIDDLESEX COUNTY, N.J.
Name
SIC
Products
NPDES CDS MCI TS
Zeston, Inc.
Helme Products, Inc.
Birnn Candy
Compos-0-Lists Systems Inc.
Ha idee Sportswear Co.
Lithoid, Inc.
Midland-Ross Corp.
New Brunswick Childrens
Coat Co.,Inc.
New Brunswick General
Sheet Metal Works
Raysolv, Inc.
Universal Auto Radiator Mfg. Co.
Water Master Co.
Princeton Shirt Corp.
Air Products & chemicals Inc.
B & C Insulation Products Inc.
Ciccone Welding Works Inc.
Heil Company, The
Northern Tool Co.
Peterson Brothers Mfg. Co.
Siemens Corp.
Simon Sez Wire & Fence Co.
Buxton's County Shops
Container Corp. of America
Essex Systems Co. Inc.
Glen Rock Concrete Products, Inc.
Gray-Rock Block Co.
Grefco, Inc.
Ideal Frocks
M & N Contractors, Inc.
Mantelle Ind. Inc.
Quality Bakery
Raffino Knits Corp.
Wheeling Corrugating Co.
The Carborundum Co. ;
Colonial Sand & Stone Co.
New Jersey, Inc.
Indiana General
Twin Bridges, Inc. j
Wagenhoffer Mfg. Co. Inc.
Warben Packaging Co.
of
3079 Plastic Products
HELMETTA
2131 Snuff
HIGHLAND PARK
2065 Candy
2791 Typesetting, publishing and printing
2335 Women's and Misses dresses
2751 Publishing, Printing
3444 Sheet Metal Prod.
2363 Childrens1 coats
3444
3532 Air & Dust pollution control equip.
3714 Radiator Replacement Cores
3069 Rubber balls & cups
HOPELAWN
2321 Men's and boy's shirts
2813 Industrial Gases
2655 Electrical Insulation tubing
3446 Wrought Iron Railings
3713 Material handling equipment
3599 Machine Shop
3469 Metal stampings
3811 Electronic medical communications
equip.
3481 Wire fences
JAMESBURG
2024 Dairy Products
2655 Cans, fiber
2761 Manifold business forms
3272 Sand and gravel
3271 Cement blocks
2661 Roof insulation board
2335 Womens' & Misses dresses
3544 Jigs, tools, machine works
2295 Coating and laminating fabrics
2051 Bread and other baked goods
2256 Knit fabrics
3499 Fabricated Steel Products
KEASBEY
3297 Specialized Refractories
3273 Building materials
3264 Electrical ferrite materials
2951 Paving products
3271 Pre-cast concrete
3079 Plastic artichs
X
M
M
-------
51
Table II-2 (Continued)
SUMMARY OF INDUSTRIAL FACILITIES IN MIDDLESEX COUNTY, N,J.
Name
SIC
Products
NPDES CDS MCI TS
Porter-Mathew Scientific Co.
Trap Rock Industries Inc.
Connectron, Inc.
Madison Township Industrial Comm.
Aluminum Billets, Inc.
Middlesex Bakers
Plasun Mfg. Co.
Rabinowitz Iron Works Inc.
Aluminum Billets Inc.
Food Additives, Inc.
North American Metal & Chemical
Suburban Weekly Publishing Co.
Superior Signal Co. Inc.
Woltube Corp.
AMK Electronic co., Inc.
Ace Coil & Electronics Corp.
Allied Conditioning Corp.
Alpine Aromatics, Inc.
Anaroco Industries Inc.
B.F.I.
Berger Industries Inc.
Browning Ferris Ind.
Charter Machine Co.
Criterion Publishing Co.
Davis Nitrate Co., Inc.
East Jersey Lumber Co.
Economy Forms Corp.
Flokice Corp.
Flexico Products, Inc.
Franco Mfg. Co.
G & G Bearing Co., Inc.
General Industrial Equipment Co.
Graphic Equipment Co.
Gulton Industries Inc.
Laser, Dinde Laboratories, Inc.
Lawler Company
Mayo & Lutle Inc.
McDowell Electronics, Inc.
Muller Machinery Co.
Oakite Products, Inc.
Paeon Manufacturers Corp.
Panel Control, Inc. ';
Panorama Printing Co., Inc.
Per Corp. *
Plastic Engineering Co., Inc.
KINGSTON
3444 Sheet metal
3272 Crushed stone, rock, concrete
LAURENCE HARBOR
3643 Electrical Terminals
Industrial real estate
3341 Aluminum billets
2051 Bread
3079 Plastic Molded Products
3441 Fabricated Structural Steel
MADISON TWP.
3341 Aluminum billets
2099 Food preparations
Co. 3339 Refining silver & gold
2711 Newspaper publishing and printing
2899 Signal flares
MENLO PARK
3699 Electrical insulation
METUCHEN
3679 Electrical devices
3662 Coils, transformers
3585 Heating, ventilating & AC
2911 Aromatic Chemicals
3449 Shower tub enclosures
2842 Cleaning preparations
3317 Steel pipe & tubes
2819 Chemical cleaning and descaling
3599 Machine shop
2741 Publishing
2818 Chemicals, Plastics, Fertilizer
2421 Lumber
3444 Pouring Forms
3569 Ice & Refrigeration Equipment
3599 Metal, Rubber & Hydraulic Hose
2259 Decorative Cotton Towels
3562 Ball & roller bearings
3443 Corrosion resistant coatings
3555 Printing machinery
3679 Electronic instrumentation
3662 Electronic semi-conductor lasers
3592 Processing Machinery for Ceramic
3569 Chemical Mining
3444 Sheet Metal Work
3567 Induction Heat Equipment
3531 Concrete
2842 Cleaning Compounds
3079 Packaging Materials
3613 Instrument Panels
2751 Printing
3559 Filtration, Distillation &
Adsorption Equip.
2851 Vinyl Plastic Parts
X
X
X
X
-------
52
Table II-2 (Continued)
SUMMARY OF INDUSTRIAL FACILITIES IN MIDDLESEX COUNTY, N.J.
Name
SIC
Products
NPDES CDS MCI TS
Princess Marcella Borghese 2844
Publication Insert Corp. 2751
Premium Plastics 3079
Rheem Manufacturing Co. 3443
Richmond Foundry Inc. 3362
Scarecrow Press Inc. 2731
Scarpa Laboratories Inc. 3811
Schundler Company, The 3271
Small Quantities, Inc. 3469
spotless Shade & Blind Co. 2591
West Machine Uorks, INc. 3599
Acme Engineering Co., Inc. 3544
Advanced Machine Planning Inc. . 3559
Airco Chemicals & Plastics 2818
Airco Industrial Gases & Welding
Products 2813
Betham Corp., The 2641
Bomar Crystal Co. 3679
Borden Chemical Co. 2821
Brant Mfg. & Sales 3079
Burger Tubing Inc. 3315
Burns, R. H. Compound Co. 2842
Carteret Die Casting Corp. 3369
Chemray Coatings Corp. 2851
Chillers, Inc. 3585
Coated Products, Inc. 2649
Cottage Creations Inc. 2511
Decorative Metalizing Systems, Inc. 3471
Do-All-Craft, Inc. 3079
El kern Inc. 3471
Enduro Industries 3471
Gidding, L. Co., Inc. 2361
Hillard Industries Inc. 3599
Holsclaw Industries, Inc. 2842
Industrial Fabricators Inc. 3444
International Loose Leaf Co., Inc. 2782
Jafco Industries 2531
Jeffco Industries, Inc. 3079
Jema-American, Inc. 3559
Johnson-Delbauve Company, Inc. 3599
Keenan Binders Inc. 2789
Knickerbocker Toy Co., Inc. 3941
Knox Decal Corporation ' 2752
Koba Corporation 3079
M.G.P. Manufacturing Inc. 3599
Mari.sol Inc. 2851
Mason Candlelight Co. 3999
P & D Printing Corp. 2751
P & R Fasteners Inc. 3452
Permaseal Mfg. Corp. 3442
Cosmetics
Commercial Printing, Envelope Prod.
Plastics Products
Water Heaters, Boilers, AC
Bronze Foundry
Book Publishing
Lab Instruments
Vermiculite, Perlite
Stampings
Venetian blinds
Machine Shop
MIDDLESEX
Tools & Dies, Special Machinery
Chemical Processing Equip.
Industrial chemicals
Industrial Gases
Coating of adhesive products
Electronic Components
Industrial Chemicals, Adhesives
Plastics
Wire Parts for Electronics '
Polishing Compounds
Die Castings
Paint Products
Industrial refrigeration equip.
Pressure sensitive label stock
Home accessories
Vacuum metalizing of plastic,
metal, glass
Plastic laminate fabricator
Electro-Chemical wire strip plating
Pre-Plated Shafting
Sportswear
Machinery
Buffing & Polishing Compounds
Steel fabrication
Loose-leaf binders, indexes
School Furniture
Plastic filing supplies
Metalizing Equipment & Coatings
Machine Parts
Book binders
Stuffed Toys
Decals, Dry Transfers
Molds & Plastic Products
Machinery
Paint Thinners
Candles, Candle Lamps
Letterpress Printing
Metal Fasteners
Aluminum Windows
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
-------
53
Table II-2 (Continued)
SUMMARY OF INDUSTRIAL FACILITIES IN MIDDLESEX COUNTY, N.J.
Name
SIC
Products
NPDES CDS MCI TS
I illips Lens Co., Inc.
ritan Packaging Inc.
Rainville Company
Eeagent Chemical & Research Co.Inc.
>seville Mfg. & Machine Work, Inc.
Rientific Machine & Supply Co.
Shaffer Products
fwer Tool & Plastics Corp.
iple K Metal Products
uckform, Inc.
Union Abrasive and Chemical Co.
§ion Foundry Co., Inc.
od Industries, Inc.
Ray Solutions, Inc.
tgro Knitting Mills, Inc.
nnister Company, The
Cel Fibe
^hicopee Mfg. Company
ontinental Can Co., Inc.
Bucane Die Cutting Co.
Leedall Products Mfg. Co.,
^efkowitz, Louis & Bro.
Middlesex Container Co.
Personal Products Co.
Raritan Container Corp.
, Inc.
Inc.
Inc.
Advanced Computer Supplies Co.
Aerochem Research Laboratories,
Cities Service Co.
ftolumbian Carbon Co.
^Dompac Corp.
Dennison Duramatic Corp.
Dolph, John C. Co.
Eterna Precision Co., Inc.
General Devices, Inc.
Imperial Kitchens, Inc.
International Hydronics Corp.
Mohawk Laboratories of New
Jersey, Inc.
Pinter Door Sales, Inc.
Princeton Infra-REd Equipment
Princeton Rubber Inc.
Ridge Nassau Corp.
T P C 0 Inc.
Elva Sportswear, Inc.
Lockwood Boat Works
3442 Aluminum Windows
3079 Plastic Products
3559 Machinery
2818 Chemicals
3544 Tool & Die Makers
3231 Glassware & Teflon Prod.
2399 Filter BAgs, Cloths, Fabrics
3079 Plastic Injection Molding
3369 White Metal Casting
3449 Fabricated Metal Prod.
3291 Abrasive Compounds
3361 Aluminum & Bronze Castings
3555 Graphic arts equipment
3861 Photographic Equip. & Supplies
MILLTOWN
2256 Knitting Mills
3362 ' Bronze Tablets & Signs
2621 Disposable Paper Prod.
2299 Non-Woven Fabrics
3079 Plastic products
2645 Die Cut Paper, Paperboard
3955 Typewriter Ribbons, Carbon Papers
3111 Leather and simulated leather prod.
2653 Corrugated Cartons
2647 Sanitary napkins, cellulose wadding
2653 Corrugated Cardboard Boxes
MONMOUTH JUNCTION
3573 Data Processing Cards
Inc.7391 Research in combustion
2816 Iron oxide
2816 Iron Oxides
2653 Pressure-sensitive sheet material
3999 Miscellaneous Manufacturing
2851 Insulating Varnishes, Compounds and
Epoxy Resins
3679 Electronic Components
3679 Switches, Multicoders, Multiplexers
2599 Industrial Furniture
3699 Electrical Equipment
2899 Industrial Maintenance Chemicals
3442 Overhead Doors
3662 Communications EQuipment
3069 Custom Molding & Extruding
3442 Garage Doors
3293 Pre-Insulated Pipe Products
MORGAN
2339 Women's Sportswear
3732 Boat Rebuilding and Repair
-------
54
Table II-2 (Continued)
SUMMARY OF INDUSTRIAL FACILITIES IN MIDDLESEX COUNTY, N.J.
Name
SIC
Products
NPDES CDS MCI TS
Alfabex Corporation
§1 Industrial Metal Spray Corp.
erican Girl Coat Co., Inc.
t Furniture & Decorating Co., Inc
Atlas Auto Cover Mfg. Co., Inc.
Itomotive Electronics Corp. of Am.
ue, I. N. Printing Co., Inc.
nd Stores, Inc.
Burke, J. E. & Co.
I Hi Die Cuttings Co.
eerette Inc.
icopee Mfg. Co.
Cincinnati Milacron Chemicals, Inc.
tty Bakery
ncrete Systems Inc.
nsolidated Fruit Jar Co.
Container Corp. of America
Ksimano Sportswear Inc.
eam-0-Land Dairy
Custom Construction Co.
§yco Corporation
an Blouse Co.
Ico-Remy
Engineering Chemical Services Inc.
Equitable Handbags, Inc.
xcel Dental Laboratories Inc.
Bxcel Products Co.
Extrudonics, Inc.
Jormatics Inc.
Barry Manufacturing Co.
Reneral Cable Corporation
Genito Machine & Tool Co.
Jjinsberg, L. Inc.
Blobe Die Cutting Products, Inc.
Bold SEal Foods, Inc.
Heide, Henry Inc.
Jome News Publishing Co.
fydron Laboratories
Hygrade Handbag Corp.
Johnson & Johnson
R-C Auto Parts
Cingley Products, Inc.
Leisure Workshop Corp.
Jlepsco, Inc.
Metallo Gasket Co.
Midland-Ross Corp.
Monte Carlo Wine Industries, Ltd.
^lorrison Steel Co.
National Musical String Go.
wew Brunswick Lamp Shade,Co., Inc.
New Brunswick Nickel & Chromium
_ Plating Inc.
Mew Brunswick Scientific Co., Inc.
NEW.BRUNSWICK
3471 Aluminum Extrusion
3479 Powder Spray Coating
2337 Women's Coats
.2512 Household Furniture
2399 Automobile Seat Covers
3679 Automotive Antennas
2752 Lithographic Printing
2311 Coats
3949 Playground Equipment
2645 Die-Cut Paper
2339 Girls' Athletic Wear
2399 Elastic Fabrics, Synthetic Fiber
2818 Organic Chemicals
2051 Bread, Rolls, Cake
3272 ' Precast Concrete
3469 Metal Stampings
2653 Corrugated Boxes
2337 Women's Wear
2026 Milk and Dairy Products
2511 Wooden Furniture
3069 Pulleys, Hydraulic Hoses
2331 Dresses
3691 Storage Batteries
2899 Water treatment, photo etch chem.
3171 Women's Handbags
3843 Dental Prosthetics
3599 Printed Circuit Boards
3352 Fabricated Aluminum Parts
2751 Printing
3451 Screw Machine Products
3357 Electrical Wires
3599 Custom Job Shop
2621 Paper Specialties
2645 Die Cut Paper
2033 Fruit Drinks
2071 Candy
2711 Newspaper Publishing
2851 Printing products, reducing agents
& polymers for coating
3171 Ladies' handbags
2834 Medical & Surgical Supplies
3465 Auto Parts
3079 Novelties of Plastic and Leather
3429 Aluminum Ladders
3544 Die Casting n
3293 Metal Asbestos Gaskets
3554 Slitting and Roll Winding Machinery
2084 Wines and Brandies
3312 Stainless Steel, Aluminum
3931 Strings for musical instruments
3999 Lamp shades
3471 Plating and polishing
3811 Research Instruments
X
X
X
X
-------
Table II-2 (Continued)
SUMMARY OF INDUSTRIAL FACILITIES IN MIDDLESEX COUNTY, N.J.
55
Name
SIC
Products
NPDES CDS MCI TS
New Brunswick Spokesman, The
New Jersey Aluminum Co.
New Jersey Dairy Laboratories
New Paper Photo Offset Printing Co.
Norland Products, Inc.
Oxford Chemicals, Inc.
Paris Fashion Inc.
Park Roofing Co., Inc.
Patterson-Sargent
Penny Pak Co., Inc.
Permacel
Phillips, F. F
Phylab Mfg. Co
Inc.
Inc.
Princeton Aqua Science
Princeton Electronic Products
Procedyne Corporation
Quaker Oats Company, The
Raritan Valley Workshop
Realco Chemical Co.
Rhodia, Inc.
Richardson Company, The
Ro-Art Company
Rutgers Coat Co., Inc.
S.T. & L. Associates, Inc.
Schaffner Mfg. & Sales Corp.
Scharf Corporation
Simpson Timber Company Inc.
Squibb, E. R. & Sons, Inc.
Standard Press
Starkey Beverages Co.
Suffolk Mfg. Co., Inc.
Swift & Co., Inc.
Triangle Conduit & Cable Co., Inc.
Ungar, Alexander, Inc.
Uniman Printers
United Engine Rebuilders, Inc.
United Steel Container Corp.
Wallace Business Forms of N.J.
Ward Products
Willette Corp. of New Jersey
Winarick, A.R..Inc.
Xaloy, Inc.
Yolanda Dresses
2711 Weekly Newspaper Publishing
3354 Aluminum Extrusions
7391 Quality Control Laboratory
2752 Commercial Printing
2891 Fish glue, optical adhesives,
water based-acid resistant
photoresists
2821 Industrial Chemicals, Plastic Film
2337 Women's Coats
3444 Roofing and Sheet Metal Work
2851 Paints & varnishes
3079 Plastics
3842 Pressure Sensitive Tapes
3272 Concrete Products
2337 Women's Coats
3829 Waste Water Analysis Equipment
3573 Electronic Computing Equipment
3629 Fluid Bed Furnaces
2099 Frozen Waffles. & Corn Sticks
3999 Offset Printing
7391 Research & Development
2834 Aromatic Chemicals
3069 Auto Battery Containers
3269 Table Lamps
2363 Children's Coats
3993 Advertising Displays
3431 Enameled Iron & Metal Vlare
2335 Dresses
2421 Lumber Products x,
2834 Drugs and Pharmaceuticals
2751 Commercial Printing
2088 Beverages
2441 Cigar Boxes
2011 Meats
3357 Electrical Wires, Cables, Copper
tube and brass products
.2782 Record Covers, Boxes
2751 Printing
3714 Automotive Engine Rebuilders
3411 Steel Shipping Pails
2761 Business Forms
3662 Communications Equipment
3261 Ceramic & Metal Bathroom Access.
2844 Perfumes, Cosmetics, Toilet Prep.
3599 Bimetallic Cylinders
2361 Children's Dresses
NEW MARKET
X
X
X
X
X
M
M
X
X
X
X
X X
Harris Structural Steel Co., Inc. 3441 Fabrication of Structural Steel
Nixon Baldwin Chemical
Tenneco Chemicals, Inc.
Alto Products Corp.
American Can Co.
Avery Label Systems Inc.
Brown Boveri Corp.
Cel Fibe
2821
2821
3469
3411
2641
3567
2621
Coca-Cola Bottling Co. of N.Y., Inc.2086
Covino's Industrial Disposal
Service, Inc. 3639
nipt7non Cornor.itinn 3861
NIXON
Rigid Vinyl
Rigid Vinyl Film and Sheeting
NORTH BRUNSWICK
Metal Stampings
Cans and Storage Containers
Pressure Sensitive Labels
Electrical and Mechanical Equipment
Paper Mills
Soft Drinks
Trash Compactors
Diazo Paper
X
X
-------
56
Table JI-2 (Continued)
SUMMARY OF INDUSTRIAL FACILITIES IN MIDDLESEX COUNTY, N.J.
Name
SIC
Products
NPDES CDS MCI TS
I
ito-Lay, Inc.
Gale Corporation
tant Tool & Mfg. Co., Inc.
hns-Manville Products Corp.
Itese, John Iron Works, Inc.
Maltese, N. & Sons, Inc.
tssau Woodworking Inc.
tional Musical String
rth Brunswick Refrigeration &
Air Conditioning, Inc.
Ionite Company, The
psi Cola Metropolitan Bottling
Co., Inc.
Permacel
!dic Chemical & Rubber Co.
mmit Motor Products
Wahler & Sons Bindery
tbcraft Packaging Inc.
nolite
1-1 Block Company
nheuser-Busch, Inc.
Astro Molding, Inc.
Blonder-Tongue Laboratories, Inc.
PS Chemical Co.
Cherefko Inc.
Continental Wood Products Inc.
pectrocomp, Inc.
Busmer Corporation
Midhattan Woodworking Corp.
Rational Folding Wall Corp.
Bid Bridge Chemical Inc.
^)uality Fence Co.
Quigley Company, Inc.
Schon, J. Tool & Machine Co.
South River Sand Co., Inc.
"Vonkers Plywood Mfg. Corp.
2052
3444
3599
3293
3441
3441
2511
3931
3585.
3357
2086
3842
3069
3429
2789
2642
3644
3271
2099
3069
3662
2899
3713
2499
3662
3561
2431
2431
2819
3297
3544
3471
2433
Du Pont De Nemours, E.I. & Co. Inc. 2851
Du Pont De Nemours, E.I. & Co.,Inc. 3861
Hercules, Inc. 2892
Sieron & Sons, Inc.. 3271
Winters Printers 2752
Abarry Steel Co. 3316
Ace Sign Shop 3993
ACMI Knitwear, Inc. 2339
Al-Peters Shirt Co., Inc. 2331
Alderney-Puritan Dairy Co. 2026
Allstar Dairies Inc. 2026
Amboy Box Co., Inc. 2652
Amboy Handkerchief Work 2389
Amboy Knits Inc. 2339
Amboy Mfg. 2363
American Smelting & Refining Co. 3341
Potato Chips
Sheet Metal Products
Machine Shop
Metallic Gaskets X
Structural Steelwork
Steel Buildings
Kitchen Cabinets
Music Strings
A.C., Heating, Refrigeration
Insulated Wire X X
Soft Drinks
Pressure-Sensitive Tapes
Extruded Rubber Goods, Synthetic
Rubbers X
Auto Hardware
Bookbinding
Envelopes
Insulation
OLD BRIDGE
Cinder and cement
Baking Powder, Yeast X X
Fabricated rubber products
Television signal distribution prod.
Esters, alkylates, solvent recovery-;
custom refining X XXX
Truck & Bus Bodies
Wood Products
Television signal distrib. systems
Pumps and Pumping Equip.
Mill work
Folding Walls
Chemicals X
Refractory specialties
Rubber goods, teflon & nylon
Industrial Sand X
Prefabricated wood structures
PARLIN
Industrial Finishes X H
Photographic Film and Supplies M M
Nitrocellulose, Nitric acid,
Parlon, Clorafin M M
Concrete Burial Vaults
Lithographic Printing
PERTH AMBOY
Steel bars, plates, wire mesh
Displays
Sportswear
Shirts
Dairy Products
Fluid Milk
Boxes-Paper
Handkerchiefs
Women's Wear
Coats
Refining of Non-Ferrous Metals MM XX
X X
X X
X X
-------
Table II-2 (Contwuea.)
OF INDUSTRIAL FACILITIES IN MIDDLESEX COUNTY, N.J.
57
Name
SIC
Products
NPDES CDS MCI TS
Amity Lamp Corp.
Anaconda Company,. The
Anlin Co. of New Jersey
Arias Machine Tool & Die Corp.
Barby's Frosted Foods, Inc.
Baroness Leather Producs Inc.
Bird & Son Inc.
Blade Sportswear, Inc.
Braunstein Associates
Carr Awning & Blind Co.
Celotex Corporation, The
Chesebrough-Pond's Inc.
Chevron Oil Co.
Conqueror Shirt Mfg. Co., Inc.
Cooperative Bedding Co. .
Cornell Lamp & Shade Co.
Crescent Chemical Corp.
Curtmac Corp.
Daman Fashions Inc.
Daval Handbags
Di-Cam Mfg. Co.
Duralco Mfg. Products Co.
Elizabeth Industrial Supply Co.Inc.
Englert Metals Corp.
Fabett Company, The
Fanon/Courier Corp.
Fords Porcelain Works
General Cable Corp.
General Steel & Supply Co. Inc.
Gluck Barrel & Fibre Drum Corp.
H & F Baking Co., Inc.
Harklo Handbag Corp.
Hurley, J. E. Lumber Co.
Individualized Shirts
Kenyon, Uilliam & Sons, Inc.
La_Roe Press Inc.
Maidenform, Inc.
Marine Fabricators Co.
Mels Children's Dress Co., Inc.
Mid-State Pickle Works
Mode Neckwear Corp.
Monogram Center
Mortell , J. W. Co.
Moser Jewel Company
N L Industries, Inc.
New York Girl Coat Co., Inc.
Pabco Eagle Beverage Co., Inc.
Paeco, Inc.
Perth Amboy Dry Dock Co.
Perth Amboy Ornamental Iron Works
Peters, A. Shirt Co.
Pulva Corp.
Raritan Sportswear Co.
Ray Lo Co.
Red Rose Food Products Co. Inc.
Refill Filter Co.
Regina Sportswear, Inc.
Royal Mfg. Co.
Schott Bros., Inc.
Sewitch, Leon & Sons, Inc.
So-Mar Neckwear Corp.
3641 Lamps
3331 Refined Copper Shapes
2819 Molten Sulphur
3599 Machinists
2011 Meats
3171 Handbags
2952 Asphalt coatings
2337 Women's Coats
2335 Women's Dresses
2394 Canvas bags, tarpaulins
2952 Asphalt roofing, cements
2844 Cosmetics, Proprietaries
2911 Petroleum Prod.
2328 Uniform Shirts
2515 Mattresses
3642 Portable Lamps
2842 Cleaning Compounds & Chemicals
2751 Printing
2335 Women's Wear
3171 Ladies' Handbags
2591 Fence Lattice, Venetian Blinds
3442 Storm Windows and Doors
3612 Transformers
3444 Sheet metal work
3941 Games .
3651 Communication Devices
3261 Vitreous and Semivitreous
Plumbing Fixtures
3357 Insulated Electrical Wires
and Cables
3399 Ferrous and Non-Ferrous Materials'
3491 Barrels
2051 Bakery Products
3171 Ladies' Handbags
2421 Sawmills, Planing Mills
2321 Shirts
2298 Nylon-Cotton Ropes
2751 Commercial Printing
2342 .Lingerie & Swimwear
3443 Steel Fabrication ,
2361 Dresses
2035 Food Products
2323 Men's Neckwear
2397 Schiffli Embroideries
2851 Technical Coatings
3829 Tungsten Carbide Products
3332 Fabricated lead products,
paints, pigments
2363 Girls' coats
2086 Soft Drinks
2822 Rigid Urethane Foam
3731 Ship Repairs :
3441 Steel Fabricators
2321 Shirts
3569 Special Machinery
2329 Apparel
2339 Women's Sportswear
2099 Pickled Food Products
3714 Automotive Filter Cartridges
2335 Dresses
2294 Wiping Cloths, Cheese Cloths
2386 Leather & Cloth Outerwear
2531 Carpentry
2323 Men's and Boys' Neckwear
H M
X
M M
X
X
X
M
X
X
X
X
-------
58 .
Table II-2 (Continued)
OF INDUSTRIAL FACILITIES IN MIDDLESEX COUNT!t N.J.
Name
SIC
Products
NPDES CDS MCI TS
Sobel Brothers, Inc.
Sportsworld Classics, Inc.
Standee Mfg. Corp.
State Iron Works
Sussman & Company
Syncro Machine Co., Inc.
TEK Industrial Corp.
Universal Wood Products, Inc.
WITCO Chemical Co., Inc.
A & S Automated Equipment Corp.
Aguiar, Joseph & Co., Inc.
Air Products & Chemicals Inc.
Alberto-Culver Company
Allen & Bubenick, Inc.
American Standard, Inc.
Beecham Inc.
Bergen, Preston I. Inc.
Burroughs Corp.
Capitol Foam Products
Captive Plastic Inc.
Chanel Inc.
Colgate Palmolive Co.
Consolidated Cork Corp.
Continental Can Co., Inc.
Crystalography Corp.
Design & Moldings Services Inc.
Eastern Steel Barrel Corp.
GIA Mfg. Corp.
General Cellulose Co., Inc.
Hamac-Hansella Machinery
Holland-Rantos Co., Inc.
Jersey Steel Drum Mfg. Co.
Mechanical Associates Inc.
Mobile Industries Inc.
Nova Press
Otis Material Handling
Paramount Industries, Inc.
Parfums Rochas, Inc.
Parkway Plastics, Inc.
Pharmacia Laboratories Inc.
Phillips Van Heusen Corp.
Phoenix Steel Container
Rapistan Incorporated ;
Shield Aerosol Inc. .
Singer Co., The
Smith, Jay R. Mfg. Co.
Spallucci & Son Inc. >
Technical Fabricators, Inc.
Tenncco Chemicals Inc. |
Texize Chemicals Co. 1
Thielex Plastics Corp,
Union Carbide Corp.
Weldotron Corporation
White, S.S. Industrial Products
3961 Costume Jewelry
2499 Trophies, plaques, awards
2369 Children's Clothing
3446 Structural Steel
2514 Steel Parts of Bedding Industry
3548 Wire Cable Machinery
3229 Glassware
2541 Kitchen Cabinets
2952 Asphalt Products, Industrial Chemicals X M X X
PISCATAVIAY
3559 Machinery
3999 Men's Hari Pieces
2818 Acetylenic Chemicals, R S D Lab X
2844 Toilet Preparations; Shampoos
3271 Cinder & Concrete Blocks
3261' Fiberglass Tubs, Showers, Ceilings H
2834 Synthetic Penicillin M X
2761 Carbonized forms & gummed labels
3573 Electronic Computing Equipment
3079 Polyurethane Foam X
3079 Plastic Products X X
2844 Perfumes X
7391 Soaps, detergents, oral products
3466 Bottle caps & metal decorating X
3079 Plastic Containers
3944 Hockey Games
3079 Custom INjection Molding * X X
3491 Light Gauge Steel Drums
2822 Synthetic Rubber X
2649 Paper Converters
3551 Candy Processing Equip.
3842 Pharmaceutical, Surgical and Medical
Supplies
3491 Steel Drums
3599 Machine Shop
3714 Motor Vehicle Parts
2791 Typesetting, Newspaper & Book Publ.
3537 Material Handling Equip.
3069 Fabr. & Coat. Foam & Sponge Prod. X
2844 Perfumes X
3079 Plastic jars
2834 Pharmaceuticals & Diagnostics , X
2311 Men's Clothing
3491 Steel Containers
3537 Conveyors
3499 Aerosols . . X
3636 Industrial Sewing Machines X
3432 Drains, Fittings & Valves
2793 Offset Printing; photoengraving X
3569 Pollution Control Equip.
2818 Industrial Organic Chemicals X M X
2841 Household Cleaners
3070 Thermo Plastic Prophile Extrusions
3569 Metallurgical Equipment M M
3551 Packaging Machinery & Systems
3843 Resistor & Capacitor Trimmers
-------
59
Table II-2 (Continued)
OF INDUSTRIAL FACILITIES IN MIDDLESEX COUNTY, N.J.
Name
SIC
Products
NPDES CDS MCI TS
Whitestone Products Corp. 2647
Woerner Machine & Tool Co., Inc. 3544
Young's Drug Products Corp. 3069
Ziegler Chem. & Mineral Corp. 2952
Firmenich Inc. 2899
Haark Corporation, The 3949
McCormack, Uilliam J. Company 3272
Allied Old English, Inc. 2035
Capital Display, Inc. 3993
Diversey Corp., The 2841
G.R.J. Industries, Inc. 2661
G & W Laboratories, Inc. 2834
Oliver Mfg. Supply Co. 3271
Sage Laboratories Inc. 2899
Schering Diagnostics 2869
Construction Products Division 2891
Grossman company 3295
Fine Organics Inc. (Hexcel) 2841
Ford's Engraving Co. 3479
Guard Polymer & Chemical Corp. 3479
Insul-Coustic/Birma Corp. 3296
Micheline Garment Inc. 2335
N L Industries, Inc. 3356
New Jersey Steel & Structural Corp. 3312
Sayreville Iron Works Inc. 3441
Sunshine Biscuits, Inc. 2052
Superior Air Products Co. 2813
Zagata Fabricators, Inc. 3441
C. P. Chemical, Inc. 2819
Project II Inc. 3544
Tombs, W. H., Studio 3999
Barbara Dee Limited 2335
Khemtrol Manufacturing, Inc. 3732
Komar, Charles & Sons, Inc. 2341
Metal ine Products Co., Inc. 3481
Miller Industries Inc. 3369
Monteath, J. H. Co. 2421
Moore, John B. Corporation 2842
Parkway Fabricators 3949
Raritan Iron Works, Inc. 3441
Raritan Printing Co. 2751
South Amboy Publishing Co., Inc. 2751
BASF Wyandotte Corp. 3079
Dallenbach Sand Company, Inc. 3281
Dow Jones & Company, Inc. 2711
Sanitary Paper Products
Machine Work
Prophylactics
Asphalt Compounds
PLAIMSBORO
Chemical Preparations
Tennis RAckets
Sand & Gravel
PORT READING
Chinese Condiments, Table Sauces
Commercial Displays
Soap & Detergents
Hardboard Fabrication
Pharmaceutical Preparations
Building Blocks
Chemicals
Blood Bank Reagents
SAYREVILLE
Adhesives, Sealants, Hot Melts,
Plastisols
Sand and Clay
Soaps, Deodorants
Engraving & Machining
Coating & Engraving *
Insulation, Adhesives & Coatings
Women's Wear
Titanium Dioxide Pigment M
Steel Reinforcing Bars
Fabricated Structural Steel
Cookies, crackers, biscuits
Oxygen producing equip.
Fabricated Metal Products
SEWAREN
Copper, cyanide and nickel sulphate H
Dies & Molds
Lamp Shades
SOUTH AMBOY
Dresses
Chemical Corrosion-Resistant Equip.
Underwear and Nightwear
Wire, Metal, Wood & Plastic Displays
Non-Ferrous Foundry
Lumber
Solvents
Skindiving Suits
Steel Fabrication
Commercial Printing
Commercial Printing
SOUTH BRUNSWICK
Expandable Polystyrene
Sand & Gravel
Newspaper Publishing
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
-------
60
Table II-2 (Continued)
SUMMARY OF INDUSTRIAL FACILITIES IN MIDDLESEX COUNTY, N.J.
Name
SIC
Products
NPDES CDS MCI TS
Hercules Trailer, Inc.
Quality Egg Co., Inc.
Rutgers Chemicals & Metals, Inc.
Stop-Fire, Inc.
A & A Company, Inc.
Acrometal Products, Inc.
Actron
Aero Filter Development Corp.
Alen-Stevens Drum Accessories Corp.
Alloy Fab, Inc.
American Smelting & Refining Co.
AMPCO, Inc.
Arm-R-Lite Door Mfg. Co., Inc.
Armstrong Hydraulics Inc.
Astor Mfg. Co.
Atlantic Tool & Die Co.
Atlas Concrete Products Co., Inc.
B.C.S. Machine Corp.
B & H Metal Products Inc.
Beacon Illumination, Inc.
Book Metals Corporation
Bruno, C. Mfg. Co., Inc.
Chevron Chemical Co.
Combined Processes Inc.
Commonwealth Refining Co.,Ltd.
Continental Precision Corp.
Davis, Frank D. Company
Dilly Mfg. Co.
Diversified Concrete PRoducts, Inc.
Dranetz Engineering Labs, Inc.
Dynaco Automation
Eastech Inc.
Eastern Railroad Equipment Corp.
Eastern Target Co., Inc.
ECO Pump Corporation
Edison Stamping & Manufacturing Co.
Engineer Company, The
Engo Co.
Exactal Tool & Die Ltd.
Far Packaging Co.
Ferro Corp.
Friendly Ice Cream Shop
Garden State Mfg. Co.
Glasser Printing Co.
Gordon, Tony, Inc.
Graphic Printing Co.
Guaranteed Block Co.
Harrison Barnes Steel Co., Inc.
Hummel Chemical Co., Inc.
Kearny Industries Inc.
Kentile Floors, Inc.
Keystone Plastics, Inc.
Kleiner Metal Specialties, Inc.
L-R Metal Treating
3792 Trailers
2015 Egg Processor
2899 Inks & Coatings for Wire Industries
3569 Fire Extinguishers
SOUTH PLAIMFIELD
3471 Plasma Flame Spraying and Metalizing
3361 Aluminum & Plastic Reels
3361 Precision Aluminum Castings
3564 Air Filters for Heating
3469 Metal Stampings
3444 Stainless Steel Pressure Vessels
7391 R & D
3481 Multi-Slide Stampings
3442 Overhead Doors
3714 Hydraulic Equipment
3481 Wire Products
3545 Tools & Dies
3272 Concrete Products
3079 Machine Work
3599 Job Shop
3642 Lighting Fixtures
3469 Metal Stampings & Wire Forming
2335 Women's Dresses
2819 Insecticides & Fungicides
3469 Metal Stampings
3339 Refining of precious metals
3079 Molds for plastics
2815 Dry Colors and Pigments
3999 Giftware
3271 Concrete and Masonry Blocks
3611 Electronic Test Equipment
3559 Automated Machinery
3811 Instruments
3429 Railroad Construction Equip.
3949 Clay Targets
3561 Pumps & Valves
3469 Metal Stampings
3433 Fuel Handling and Burning Equip.
2541 Wood Partitions
3599 Machine Shop
2441 Wooden Boxes
2815 Colorants
2024 Ice Cream
3469 Metal Stampings
2751 Commercial Printing
2431 Woodwork and furniture
2752 Lithographic Printing
3271 Block
3441 Fabricated Structural Steel
2819 Oxiding Chemicals
3443 Graphite Heat Exchangers
3996 Floor Coverings
2821 Plastics
3498 Miniature Tubular Parts
3399 Plating, Metal Finishing
X
X
X
X
-------
61
Table JI-2 (.Continued)
OF INDUSTRIAL FACILITIES IN MIDDLESEX COUNT?, N.J.
Name
SIC
Products
NPDES CDS MCI TS
Lake Shore, Inc. 3732
Lehigh Utility Associates 3441
Lenox-Fugle Electronics, Inc. 3679
Looseleaf Industries, Inc. 2782
H & M Packaging Corp. 2443
Magno-Ceram, Inc. - 3499
Magnus Div. 2842
Mechanitron Corporation 3545
Metropolitan Talc Co., Inc. 3295
Metz Metallurgical Corp. 3339
Middlesex Dress Co. 2335
Modular Materials Inc. 3079
Modulume Industries, Inc. 3442
Mundt Perforations, Inc. 3469
National Tank Fabricators, Inc. 3443
Niagara Rubber Corp. 3069
Northeastern Products Co. 2032
Novy, E. & Sons 3499
Panel Oven Engineering, Inc. 3613
Pitney Bov/es 3579
Propel, Inc. 3679
Rika Corp. 3569
Roller Corp. of America 3069
Ronnie Packaging Corp. 2651
Roof Trusses, Inc. 2433
S Q R, Inc. 3499
Sage Swiss Products Co. 3451
Scientific Gas Products Inc. 2813
Speco Machine Co. 3599
Standard Plastic Products, Inc. 3079
Steuffer Chemical Company 2851
Sterling Extruder Corp. 3559
Supronics Corp. 2844
Thiele-Engdahl, Inc. 2893
Tingley Rubber Corp. 3069
Triangle Pacific-So. Plainfield
Corp. 2421
Uniflex Manufacturing Co. 3544
Union Carbide Corp. 2813
United States Gypsum Co. 3296
Verley, Albert & Co. 2844
Victaulic Company of America 3498
Weldon Concrete Corp. 3271
Whittaker, Clark & Daniels, Inc. 2816
German Mfg. Co., Inc. 2369
Brodsky, Louis & Son, Inc. 2331
Cathy-Elva Fashions, Inc. 2389
Colonial Dress & Blouse Company 2331
Dora Dress Co., Inc. 2335
Duttkin, Paul . 2397
Marine Deck Machinery
Fabricated Structural Metal
Shielded inductors
Looseleaf binders
Military Packaging
Permanent Magnets
Industrial ceaning machines
Instrument Parts
Ground Talc
Precious Metal Refining
Women 's Dresses
Pre-Finished Exterior Bid. Panels
Aluminum Building Products
Perforated Metals, Plastics
Storage Tanks
Rubber Molded Products, Natural
and Synthetic Silicones
Food Products
Giftware
Electric & Pneumatic Control Panels
Collators & Office Copiers
Battery Test Equipment
Custom Designed Equipment
Molded Rubber Products ,
Paper Bags & Envelopes *
Wood Roof Trusses
Custom Metal Fabricators
Small Electronic parts
Compressed Gases, Chemicals
Machine Shop
Toys S Plastic Products
Vinyl Wall Coverings
Plastics Extrusion.Equipment
Cosmetics & Plastic Record Carrying Cases
Gravure inks
Molded Rubber Items
Lumber & Mi 11 work
Tools, Dies, Machining
Specialty Chemical Gases
Mineral Wool Insulation
Perfumes, Compounds, Essential
Oils, Flavors
Pipe Fittings and tools
Concrete Blocks
Non-Metallic Minerals, Colors & Chem.
SOUTH RIVER
Children's Sportswear
Women's Blouse & Dress
Apparel
Women's Blouse
Dresses
Novelty Embroideries
X
X
-------
62
Table II-2 (Continued)
SUWlAftY OF INDUSTRIAL FACILITIES IN MIDDLESEX COUNTY, N.J.
Name
SIC
Products
NPDES CDS MCI TS
Henry, W. W. Co., The
Kast, Henry J., Jr.
L & M Surco Mfg. Inc.
Lithographic Plate & Negative Svc.
M & M Sportswear
Mako Sportswear Co., Inc.
Marian Dress
Mary Jane Coat Co., Inc.
R & P Mfg., Inc.
Reliable Sportswear, Inc.
South River Coat Co.
South River Dress Co., Inc.
Tonette Creations
Utility Sebolt Company
Wilshire Fashions, Inc.
Woronowicz, J. & A. Bros., Inc.
Inland Container Corp. .
Komar, Chas. & Sons, Inc.
Schv/eitzer, Peter J.
Acme Partition Co.
Alcan Aluminum Corp.
Alpha Associates, Inc.
Amerada Hess Corp.
American Ceramic Laboratories, Inc.
American Cyanamid Co.
Brenn Tool & Machine Co.
Centric Clutch Company
Costa Ice Cream Company
Emerson Quiet Kool Company
Kruger Machines, Inc.
Lumured Corp.
Middlesex Concrete Products &
Excavating Corp.
Middlesex County Publishing Co.
Middlesex Pajama Co., Inc.
Natvar Corporation
New Jersey Appellate Printing Co.
News Tribune, The
North Jersey Publishing Co.
Reynolds Metals Co.
Ronson Corporation
Russell Quality Plastics, Inc.
Russell-Stanley Corporation
Swift & Company
Tilco Abrasive Mfg. Co.
Trautwein's Inc.
Valentine Division, Div. of: A.P.
Green Refractories Co.
Witting Tool & Machine Co., Inc.
Uoodbridge Machine & Tool Co., Inc.
Woodbridge Monument Co.
Woodbridge Sanitary Pottery Corp.
2891 Adhesives
3431 Plumbing Supplies
3272 Concrete Products
2752 Lithographic Printing
2361 Dresses
2331 Blouses & Skirts
2335 Women's Dresses
2363 Girl's Coats
2339 Women's Sportswear
2335 Dresses
2311 . Coats, Suits
2335 Dresses
2335 Dress Manufacturing
3273 Ready-Mix Concrete
2385 Coats & Raincoats
2389 Handkerchiefs, leather belts
SPOTSWOOD
2655 Corrugated Cartons
2341 Underwear & Nightwear
2621 Cigarette Paper
WOODBRIDGE
2645 Cardboard Partitions
3352 Rolling a Extruding Aluminum
2295 Coated & Lamianted Fabrics
2911 Petroleum
2815 Ceramic Color Preparations
2869 Organic Chemicals
3544 Machine Tool Accessories
3566 Centrifugal & Overload Clutches
2024 Ice Cream Products
3585 Air Conditioners
3599 Wire Bar & Billet Molds
3171 Ladies' Beaded Handbags
2951 Asphalt-bituminous concrete
2711 Newspaper Publishing
2341 Women's Underwear
3644 Flexible Electrical Insulation
2752 Lithographic Printing
2751 Printing
2751 Commercial Printing
3411 Aluminum Cans
3999 Lighters, Lighter Accessories
3079 Molders of Thermoplastic
3491 Steel Drums
2024 Ice Cream
3291 Grinding Wheels
3662 Fire Apparatus
3255 Clay Refractories, Fire Brick
3544 Dies, Jigs, Fixtures
3499 Metal Products
3281 Monuments
3261 Vitreous Plumbing Fixtures .
X
X
M
M
X
M
X
X
X
X
M
M
-------
TABLE II-3
63
Name
Summary of Additional NPDES Listings for Union County
SIC Products City
Type* TS_
Borough of New Providence 4952
Cities Service Oil Co. 4463
Cities Service Oil Co. 5171
City of Elizabeth 4952
City of Rahway DPW 4941
Coastal Oil Co. 5171
Diamond Hill Estates Sewage Co. 4952
Elizabethtown Gas. Co. 4930
Engelhard Mining & Chemical 4930
Fanwood Crushed Stone Co. 1429
Gulf Oil Co. 5092
Hermes Products Inc. ?
Houdaille Construction Materials 1000
Huffman & Rods Co., Inc. 4930
International Business Machines 3674
Merck & Co., Inc. 4930
Middlesex Water Co. 4941
Mill Spring Realty Co. 3398
Monarch Toker 5983
Perk Chemical Co., Inc. 2865
Public Service Electric & Gas 7542
.Public Service Electric & Gas 4931
Rahway Valley Sewerage Auth. 4952
Schering Corp. 2830
Scientific Packaging Corp. 2869
Supermarket Services, Inc. 5411
Texaco Inc. 5092
The City of Linden 4952
The Joint Meeting 4952
The Linden-Roselle Sewerage Auth. 4952
Township of Berkeley Heights 4952
Transcontinental Gas Pipeline 4619
U. S. Naval 4952
Sewage Treatment
Marine Cargo Handling
Petroleum Bulk Terminal
Sewage Treatment
Water Supply
Petroleum Bulk Terminal
Sewage Treatment
Electr. & Gas. Util
Electr. & Gas. Util
Crushed Stone
Petroleum Bulk Terminal
?
Mining
Electric & Gas Utilities
Semiconductors
Electric & Gas Utilities
Water Supply
Heat Treating
Fuel Oil Dealer
Cyclic Crudes & Itermed.
Car Wash
Electricity
Sewage Treatment
Drugs
Industrial Inorg. Chemical
Supermarket '
Linden Relay Terminal
Sewage Treatment
Sewage Treatment
Sewage Treatment
Sewage Treatment
Pipe Line
Sewage Treatment
TOTAL
New Providence
Linden
Linden
Elizabeth
Rahway
Clark Twp.
Mansfield Twp.
Elizabeth
Union
Westfield
Linden
Linden
Springfield
Rahway
Cranford Twp.
Linden
Clark
Union
Elizabeth
?
Summi t
Linden
Woodbridge
Union
Elizabeth
Linden
Linden
Linden
Elizabeth
Linden
Berkeley Heights
Linden
Elizabeth
MM
I
I
MM
U
I
M
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
W
I
I
I
I
MI
MM
MI
I
I
I
M
MM
MM
MM
I
M
33
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
9
I
i
1
*I = Minor Industry, MI = Major Industry, V = Water Treatment Facility, M
Facility, M14 = Major Municipal Uastewater Treatment Facility
l-funioipal Waetewater Treatment
-------
TABLE 11-4
64
Summary of Additional NPDES listing; for Middlesex County
Name
SIC
Products
CUy
Type
TS
Air Products & Chem.
Alcan Building Prod.
Amerada Hcss
American OH Co.
Amsco Olv., Union Oil
AP Green Refractories
Atlantic Sulfur Terminal
Best Block Co. , Inc.
Borough of Jamesburg
BorouQh of Sayreville
Borough of Sayreville
City of New Brunswick
City of Perth Amboy
City of South Amboy-WTP
City of South Aroboy-OPW
Coastal Oil Co.
Consolidated Polymers
Department of Defense
Department of Public Works
EROA
Essex Chemical Corp.
FMC Corp.
Foley Machinery Inc.
Holiday Inn
IBM Card Mfg. Plant
Jersey Central P&L
Jersey Central P&L
L«A. Dreyfus Co.
Lincoln Property Co.
Mideast Aluminum Ind.
Middlesex County
Middlesex County Sewerage
Auth.
Middlesex Water Co.
New Jersey Turnpike Auth.
N.J. Steel & Structures
Madison Township Sew. Auth.
Outerbridge Terminal , Inc.
Phillips Petroleum Co.
Public Service E4G
Public Service E&G
Qulgley Co., Inc.
Rebel One Corp.
Reserve Terminal Corp.
Royal Petroleum Corp.
Rutgers University
Second Reserve Terminal
Shell Oil Co.
South Brunswick Twp.
South Brunswick Twp. Bd
Tcnncco Plastics
The Lummus Co.
Township of Uoodbridge
Township of Woodbridge
Training School for Boys
Union Carbide Corp.
Union Carbide Corp.
U. S. Army Nike 60
H. A. deary Corp.
Keldon Concrete
Warbern Packaging Ind.
U. R. Grace, Hatco Chem.
4920
3190
5092
5092
5161
3255
4930
5039
4952.
4952
4952
4941
4952
4941
4952
5171
2821
-
4952
8220
4930
4941
7538
7010
2645
4910
4910
2073
6513
3471
4952
4952
4941
-
3312
4952
5171
5171
4930
4931
17Q7
jcyf
2851
5092
5092
8221
5092
4930
4952
4952
3079
4930
4952
4952
4952
2813
2813
-
-
3273
3079
2818
Acetylene
Misc. Fabr. Metal
Bulk Terminal
Bulk Terminal
Chemicals
Clay Refractories
Utility Services
Constr. Materials
Sewage Treatment
'Sewage Treatment
Sewage Treatment
Water Treatment
Sewage Treatment
Water Treatment
Sewage Treatment
Bulk Terminal
Ure thane Resins
-
Sewage Treatment
Educational Services
Utility Services
Water Supply
Automotive Repair
Hotel
Computer Cards
Electric Services
Electric Services
Chewing Gum
Apartment Bldg,
Anodizing
Sewage Treatment
Sewage Treatment
Water Treatment
Rest Stop
Rolling Mill
Sewage Treatment
Bulk Terminal
Bulk Terminal
Electric Power
Electric Power
Asphalt
Bulk Terminal
Bulk Terminal
College Terminal
Bulk Terminal
Petroleum Prod.
Sewage Treatment
Sewage Treatment
Plastic Products
Utilities
Sewage Treatment
Sewage Treatment
School
Industrial Gases
Industrial Gases
-
.
Ready-Mix Cone.
Plastic Prod.
Inorganic Chemicals
Woodbridge Twp.
Woodbridge Twp.
Perth Anboy
Cartaret
Cataret Boro
Woodbridae Twp.
Cartaret Boro
Edison Twp.
Jamesburg
Morgan
Mel rose
New Brunswick
Perth An£oy
South Anfcoy
South Airtjoy
S. Plalnfield
Sayreville
S. Plalnfield
Cartaret
Plainsboro
Sayreville
. Plainsboro
Piscataway
Plainsboro
S. Brunswick
Sayreville
S. toboy
S. Plainfield
Plainsboro
S. Brunswick
New Brunswick
Sayreville
Edison
Cranbury
Sayrevllle
Madison
Perth Amboy
Cartaret
Edison
Sewaren
Old Bridge
Perth Arrboy
Sewaren
Plscataway
Woodbridge
bowaren
-
-
Edison
New Brunswick
Sewaren
Keasby
Monroe Twp
Koodbrldge
Perth Amboy
Old Bridge
Hew Brunswick
Perth Amboy
Woodbridge
Woodbridge
TOTAL
I
I
I
I
: I
I
I
I
K
M
H
W
MM
V
H
I
I
H
KM
M
I
I
I
H
I
MI
HI
I
H
I
M
m
I
H
I
MM
I
I
HI
HI
j
I
I
I
H
I.
l
KM
H
I
I
M
H
H
I
I
H
I
I
I
I_
61
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
J_
14
*H - Kinor Induttnj, MI - Hi.
Faaililti, K-1 - Huniaiial K,i
jor IrJustry, U » Vntar Treatment Facility, H - H.al Vattauter Treatment
>tn»itur Treatmant facility
-------
TABLE 11-5
65
SUMMARY OF NPDES EFFLUENT LIMITS & MONITORING REQUIREMENT FOR TOXIC
Permit No
0000116
0000159
0000167
0000337
0000426
0000540
0000663
0000736
0000922
0000931
0001465
0001473
0001554
0001759
0001791
0001805
0001899
0002216
0002267
0002305
0002348
0002381
0002518
0002251
0002666
0002691
0002950
0003093
0003166
0003239
0003328
0003778
0003867
0003883
0020141
0020672
0021300
IN UNION AND MIDDLESEX
Industry
Tenneco Chemical , Intermed. Div.,
DuPont, Fabric Finish Div.
DuPont, Photo Products Div.
American Smelting & Refining Co.
IBM Card Mfg. Plant
Ciba-Geigy Corp.
Public Service E&G
Rheem Mfg. Co.
W. R. Grace Co., Hatco Chem.
NL Industries, Titanium Pig. Div.
Singer Co.
The Distillers Co., Ltd.
Monsanto Co.
Helme Products, Inc.
Tenneco Plastics
Oakite Products, Inc.
U.S. Metals Refining Co.
H. El. Fuller Co.
Western Electric Co.
Schering Corp.
Merl: & Co. , Inc.
Cheoseborough-Ponds
Anaconda Co.
Armour Pharmaceuticals
Carter Wallace, Inc.
Ford Motor Co.
Carborundum Co.
Essi'X Chemical
Allied Chemical Corp.
Eli;:abethtown Gas Company
Swift Dairy & Poultry
Linden Chlorine Products
CP Chemicals, Inc.
Huffman & Koos Co.
Middlesex Co. Sewerage Auth.
Tin'jley Rubber Corp.
Air Products & Chemicals
TOTAL 37 Permits
COUNTIES, N.J.
City
Woodbridge
Sayreville
Sayreville
, Perth Amboy
So. Brunswich
Summi t
Summit
Linden
Woodbridge
Sayreville
Elizabeth
Linden
Kenilworth
Helmetta
Nixon
Metuchen
Cartaret
Edison
Union
Kenilworth
Linden
Perth Amboy
Perth Amboy
Berkeley Heights
Cranbury
Edison
Woodbridge
Sayreville
Elizabeth
Elizabeth
Woodbridge
Linden
Woodbridge
Rahway
Sayreville
So. Plainfield
Woodbridge
f
SUBSTANCES
Toxic Substance
Cr, Zn, chlor HC
Zn*
Ag, Trichloroethylene*
As, Cu, Ni, Pb, Zn
Zn
Algicides
Cu, Ni, Zn
Cu, Zn*
Cr**, Zn
Cr, Titanium*
Zn
Zn, Cr***
Cr, Zn*
Cr, ZN***
Cr, Zn*
Cr, Zn***
Ag, Cd, Cu, Pb, Zn
Cr, Zn***
Cr***
Cr, Zn***
Cr, Zn***
Cr, Zn***
As, Cu, Pb, Se, Zn
Pb
Cr, Zn***
Cr, Zn***
Cr, Zn**
Cr, Zn***
Cr, Cu, Pb
Cr, Zn
Zn
Hg
Co, Cu, Ni, Zn
Cr, Zn***
CN, Cd
Bromine
Cr, Zn***
*Monitor Only
**Limits apply only if -used in corrosion inhibitors
***Liwits apply only if increased by water treatment
-------
66
TABLE II-6
Summary of Additional CDS Listings for Union County
Name
Allied Chemical Corp.
American Can Co., M & T Chem.
Buckeye Pipeline
Chelsea Industries, Inc.
Cities Service Oil Co.
Continental Steel & Alloy
Continental Steel & Alloy
Dri -Print Foils
Elizabeth City Housing Auth.
Elizabeth City Board of Educ.
Gentech Industries
Gordons Gin
Inmont Corp.
Jersey Central R.R.
Malmstrom Chem-Emery
Metal Litho Corp.
.Mobil Oil Corp.
Naval Reserve Center .
Northville Linden Terminal
Plainfield Board of Educ:.
Sealol Inc. - Chempro
U. S. Post Office
U. S. Post Office
U. S. Post Office
Waverly Properties
Weldon Asphalt
Weldon Materials, Inc.
Wood Industries
SIC
3272
2818
4613
2999
9711
4311
4311
4311
2951
3321
Products
Concrete Prod.
Industrial Organic Chem.
Refined Petr. Pipe Line
Petroleum Prod.
National Security
Post Office
Post Office
Post Office
Asphalt Paving
Gray Iron Foundry
City
TOTAL
Springfield
Rahway
Linden
Roselle
Linden
Hillside
Linden
Rahway
Elizabeth
Elizabeth
Linden
Linden
Elizabeth
Elizabeth
W. Linden
Elizabeth
Linden
Elizabeth
Linden
Plainfield
Cranford
Summi t
Plainfield
Westfield
Elizabeth
Linden
Garwood
Plainfield
26
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
13
X
-------
TABU 11-7
67
Sumary of Additional COS Listings for Middlesex County
Name
American Oil Co.
BASF - Wyandotc
Blessings, Inc.
Camp Kilmer Military Res.
Colonial Pipeline Co.
Edlsim Plastics
£. Li Beth Ltd.
ERDA
Galln Asphalt Co.
General American Transport
CMC
£SA I:ar1tan Depot
Kardlioard Fabrication Corp.
Hawk Industries
tnmont Chemicals
International Smelting
Irawiiois Brands Ltd.
Jersey Central PiL
Jersey Central PSL
J1ti li'alter Corp.
Ka1si;r Agr. Chen. Co.
Kimbcrly Clark
Klrabirly Clark
KrafUo-Ketro. Cont.
Lemepeter Disposal' Serv.
LJ!H Laplace Co.
Haldun Hills
Manz« Contracting
Horton-Horvdch Prod.
National Can Corp.
Now Jersey Turnpike Auth.
Nike 60 - Housing
N.J. Steel » Structure
Outerbrldgc Terminal
Penwilt Corp.
Pfizcr Inc.
PMlldelphia Quartz
PhillIps Petroleum Co.
Phillips 66
Prospect Industries
Public Service CSG
Public Service EIG
Rartlan Oepot
Rcadi ng Co.
Royal Oil Co.
Russf'l-Stanley
Rutan Brothers
Shel I Oil Co.
South River Sand
Sp1r.il Metals
Stas<:al
Tenaico Chemicals
US AiC Camp Miner
US AtC He1 .
.
-
-
-
-
Rolling Kill
Bulk Terminal
-
-
-
Bulk Terminal
-
-
Electric Power
Electric Power
Executive Offices
Railroad Equip.
-
Fabr. Hetal .
.
Utilities
.
.
.
School
Gov't
Nat'l Security
Agr. Research
Nat'l Security
Nat'l Security
.
.
Industrial Chemicals
City
Cartarct
Cranbury
5. PlalnHeld
Camp Kilmer
Voodbrldge
S. Plalnfleld
Perth Amboy
New Brunswick
Voodbridge
Cartaret
New Brunswick
Edison
Port Reading
Woodbridge
Middlesex
Perth Amboy
Cartaret
Sayrevllle
South Antoy
Perth Airboy
Cranbury
Perth Airtioy
Spotswood
Cartarct
Perth Anboy
Woodbridge
Middlesex
Hadtson
Perth Amboy
Plscataway
Woodbridge
Old Bridge
Sayrevllle
Perth Amboy
Plscataway
Sayrevllle
Voodbrldge
Cartaret
Cartaret
Plscataway
Edison
Sewaren
Edison
Pt. Reading
Sewaren
Voodbridge .
Plscataway
Sewaren
E. Brunswick
Kadlson Twp.
South River
Edison
Edison
Nixon
N. Brunswick
Middlesex
Perth Anboy
Plalnsboro
S. Brunswick
Voodbridge
CO
Tyje
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
.X
X
X
X
X
X
X
x_
36
TS
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
10
-------
Table 11-8 68
SUMMARY OF EXISTING INDUSTRIAL SOURCE DATA
Union County, NJ
1. ALCAN METAL POWDERS, Union SIC - 2816
Products Inorganic Pigments - Bronze, Copper, Aluminum and
Soft metal powders
Processes Air & water atomization
NPDES -- No inspection file
MCI -- Discharges Cu, Ni, Pb, Sn, and Zn to Joint Meeting STP
Air File -- No toxic emissions data
Solid Waste Disposal -- No data
2. ALLIED CHEMICAL CORP., Elizabeth SIC - 2818, 2819
Products -- Sulfuric acid (234 T/day), chlorofluor.ocarbons (1/17 T/day)
and monomer and polymer plastics, PTFE^and Halon^(4 T/day)
Raw Materials Spent acids from refineries and detergent plants,
chloroform, hydrofluoric acid, carbon tetrachloride,
chlorotrifluoro ethylene
NPDES - Major -- 1.1 mgd cooling and process water
Compliance inspection complete
Effluent loads (Ib/day) - Beryllium 0.04, Cd 0.14, Cr 16, Cu 1.7,
Pb 1.0, Ni 1.3, Zn 3.1, Hg 0.025
Chlorinated Hydrocarbons (mostly CHC1-) 2.2
Air File -- No inspection file
Solid Waste Disposal -- Not defined
3. AMERICAN CAN CO., Hillside SIC - 3411
Products Metal Cans (3 1/2 million/day)
Processes -- Manufacture of metal cans including varnishing and
printing
NPDES -- Minor - 0.15 mgd cooling water and boiler blowdown
Air File No information on varnish or ink solvents except most
to be converted to water base.
Solid Waste Disposal -- Not defined
4. AMERICAN CYANAMID, Warners Plant, Linden SIC - 2818, 2819
Products -- Pesticides (Malathion, phorate, dimethate, other non-persistent
organo-phosphorus pesticides), sulfuric acid, Aerofloat,
Cygon, DETA, DEM surfactants, Xanthates, acrylamide,
diphenyl guanidine, diethyl maleate, cyanogas, aeromine cyrons,
polyacrylamide, dicyanamide dry mix, sodium ferrocyanide,
surfactants, cyanurics, cyanogen chloride, hydrogen cyanide
discoids, paramel, glycol nitrile
NPDES -- Major - 19 mgd from 9 outfalls
cooling water and treated weaker process wastes
Effluent Loads (Ib/day) Cd 0.2, CN 3.6, Hg 0.2, As 1.2, Phenols 3,
Pesticides absent-ocean disposal
Air File -- Potential emissions of at least 63 substances of concern
identified for multiple sources before controls. Toxic
substances include benzene, chlorine, chlorobenzene,
formaldehyde, hydrogen sulfide, hydrogen cyanide, malathion,
S0 and HS0.
-------
69
Table II-8 (Continued)
SUMMARY OF EXISTING INDUSTRIAL SOURCE DATA
Hazardous Waste Disposal -- Concentrated process wastes barged for
ocean disposal. Solid waste disposal
not defined.
5. ARMOUR PHARMACEUTICALS (Reheis Chemicals), Berkeley Heights SIC 2834
Products - Aluminum Antacids (90 T/day), Antiperspirants
NPDES - Major - 0.5 mgd of cooling water, treated process wastewaters
and boiler blowdown.
Effluent Loads - Cr - 0.1 Ib/day
Air File - No inspection file
Solid Waste Disposal - Not defined
6. B. P. OIL CORP., NO TERMINAL, Linden SIC - 2911, 5092
Products - Petroleum Products
Processes - Bulk Terminal - No refining
NPDES - Minor - 0.008 mgd
No toxics problems
7. CHEMICAL CONTROL CORP., Elizabeth SIC - 2869
Products - Waste Disposal & Resource Recovery
Process - Destruction of inorganics, organic carcinogens, organic
compounds, organic halogen containing compounds by
pyrolosis & incineration with recovery of metals.
NPDES - Major - No file information on effluents
Air File - Air emissions controlled by scrubber. Pollutants can be
many depending on waste materials being incinerated.
Solid Waste Disposal - Unknown
8. CIBA - GIIIGY CORP., Summit SIC - 2821, 2833, 2834
Products - Medicinal chemicals (3,350 Ib/day), pharmaceutical
preparations (13,000 Ib/day) (40-50 drugs, primarily anti-
hypertensive), epoxy resins produced at a separate
facility.
NPDES - Major - 0.5 mgd (0.4 mgd cooling) direct discharge -
MCI - Facility discharges main process wastewater (0.9 mgd)
to the Joint Meeting STP
Effluent Loads (Ib/day) - Algicides 18, Cl hydrocarbons 0.4
Air File - No data on toxic substances
Solid Waste Disposal - 55,000 gal/year to disposal firm
9. COOPER-ALLOY CORP., Hillside SIC - 3323 '
Products - Stainless Steel Castings
Process - Standard Foundry
NPDES - MCI on the Joint Meeting STP - No data
- No direct discharge
Air File - No data on toxics
10. DU PONT, Linden SIC - 2818, 2819
Products - Organic and inorganic industrial chemicals and pharmaceutical
intermediates including sulfuric acid, Marlate, alum, sodium
bisulfite, ammonium thiosulfate, sulfamic acid, chlorosulfonic
acid, sulfur trioxide, formaldehyde, acetaldoxime, acetaldehyde
-------
70.
Table 11-8 (Continued)
SUMMARY OF EXISTING INDUSTRIAL SOURCE DATA
Raw Materials - Methanol, methoxychlor, urea, oleum, anisole, chloral,
A1C1-, soda ash, methylamine, H?S, strontrium nitrate
NPDES - Major - 19 mgd including 1.4 process wastewater to Arthur Kill
Effluent Loads (avg. conc.-mg/l) - Cd 0.06, Co 0.1, Cr 0.2, Cu 0.06,
Hg 0.0012, Ni 0.1, Pb 0.1, Zn 0.15, C1HC <0.01,
Pesticides <0.025
Air File - No data on emissions of toxic substances except for some
confidential data.
Solid Waste Disposal - Ocean disposal of major process wastes 0.7 mgd
of liquid wastes to waste acceptance firm
11. EXXON - Bayway Refinery, Linden SIC - 2818, 2911
Products - A full range of petroleum products (260,000 B/day)
petrochemicals (5,300 B/day) and misc. organic
chemicals (2,700 B/day)
Processes - A complete line of petroleum refining operations.
Manufacture of alcohols, olefins, ketones, lube oil
additives and other industrial organic chemicals.
NPDES - Major - 160 mgd cooling and 14 mgd process waters
Effluent Loads (Ib/day) - Following loads were reported prior to
secondary treatment now in operation. No current DMR
data because of adjudicatory proceedings. As 13, Cd 59,
Cr 29, Cu 120, CN 15, Hg 2, Ni 390, Pb 540, Zn 90, Phenols 60
Air File - No data on other than criteria pollutants
Solid Waste Disposal - Formerly to Kin Buc landfill, current disposal
unknown.
12. GAF CORF., Linden SIC - 2812, 2815, 2819, 2843
Products - Over 1,000 including dyes (14 T/day), surfactants
(115 T/day), chlorine & caustic (850 T/day), organo-metallics,
photosensitive chemicals, polymeric chemicals, uninuls, vinyl
ethers, methylamines, industrial organic chemicals, &
herbicides.
Raw Materials - Over 330 with rock salt main volume.
Processes - Electrolysis of saltwater, chlorination of aromatics,
many others.
NPDES - Major - 5 mgd (formerly 20 mgd)
Effluent Loads (Ib/day) - Cr 8, Cu 86, Hg 0.2, Zn 7, As 83, Phenols 83,
(based on Chlorinated hydrocarbons 300 (mainly
old flow of 20 mgd) trichlorobenzene)
Air File - No data other than on criteria pollutants
Compliance Inspection has been completed. A complete list of
products and raw materials was obtained.
Solid Waste Disposal - Unknown
13. IRON OXIDE CORP., Elizabeth SIC - 2816, 3295
Products - Iron oxide and chemical ground iron
NPDES - Minor - 0.2 mgd - effluent from degreaser furnace scrubber
Effluent Loads (mg/1) - Cr 1.8, Ca 0.1, Cu 1.5, Pb 2.4, Ni 1.1
Air File - No inspection file
Solid Waste Disposal - Unknown
-------
71
Table II-8 (Continued)
SUMMARY OF EXISTING INDUSTRIAL SOURCE DATA
14. KUEHNE CHEMICAL CO., INC., Linden SIC - 2812, 2899
Products - Sodium hypochlorite solution
NPDES - Minor - 0.001 mgd cooling water
Air File - No inspection file
Solid Waste Disposal - Unknown
15. LINDEN CHLORINE PRODUCTS INC., Linden SIC - 2812
Products - Chlorine & caustic soda (850 T/day)
Processes - Electrolysis of salt; ion exchange and sulfide treatment
for Hg removal
NPDES - Major - 1.25 mgd
Effluent Loads (lb/day) - Hg 0.01, Zn 2
Air File - NESHAPS file - low Hg emission
Solid Waste Disposal - Unknown
16. MERCK & CO., INC., Linden SIC - 2834, 2869
Products - Vitamin C and thiabendazole
NPDES - Minor - 0.4 mgd cooling water
MCI - discharges 1.2 mgd of process wastewater to
Linden-Rosselle Sew. Auth.
Effluent Loads (lb/day) - Cr 2, Zn 5, Algicides 4, spills of
phenols & cobalt catylists
Air File - No inspection file
Solid Waste Disposal - Unknown
17. MILLMASTER ONYX CORP., Berkeley Heights SIC - 2819, 2830
Products - Pharmaceuticals, intermediates, fine chemicals,
meprobromate (5,000 lb/day), carisprodal and polyester
(1,350 T/year)
Processes - Condensation, esterification, hydrogenation, alkylation
NPDES - Minor - 1.1 mgd cooling water
Process wastewater trucked to Elizabeth STP
Air File - No data on toxic substances
Solid Waste Disposal - Unknown
18. MONSANTO CO., Kenilworth SIC - 2821, 5983
Products - Polyethylene film (125 T/day), PVC hose (23 T/day)
Processes - Extrusion from PE & PVC pellets. No PE or PVC polymerized
at this location
NPDES - Minor - 0.17 mgd cooling water
Effluent - Cr & Zn present
Air File - No inspection file
Solid Waste Disposal - Unknown
-------
72
Table II-8 (Continued)
SUMMARY OF EXISTING INDUSTRIAL SOURCE DATA
19. PHELPS-DODGE COPPER, Elizabeth SIC 3351, 4930
Products - Copper Products
NPDES - Minor - Other data missing
MCI - process wastewaters to the Joint Meeting STP
Air File - No inspection file
Solid Wa:;te Disposal - Unknown
20. POLYPLASTEX UNITED, Union SIC - 2821
Products - PVC coating of cloth and paper
Process - Water base laminator and extruder, hydrocarbon incinerator,
plastic coating process
NPDES - No inspection file
Air File - Limited data
Solid Wa:ste Disposal - Incineration
21. PUBLIC SERVICE ELECTRIC & GAS, Linden SIC - 4911
Product - Electric power generation
NPDES - Major - 346 mgd cooling water
Effluent Loads (Ib/day) - Cr 24, Cu 719, Ni 321, Zn 172
Gross loads from Arthur Kill water
Air File - No toxic substance data
22. RHEEM MANUFACTURING CO., Linden SIC - 3411, 3412
Products - Plastic pails, steel containers, drums & pails
Processes - Painting, curing ovens, dip cleaning, shot blast
NPDES - Minor - File not reviewed
Air File - No data on toxic emissions
Solid Wa:5te Disposal - Unknown
23. SCHERING-PLOUGH CORP., Union SIC - 2834
Products - Antibiotics, decongestants, antiacids, antifungal
preparations
Processes - Fermentation and organic synthesis, formulation
and packaging
Raw Materials - Include chloroform, methylene dichloride,
and carbon tetrachloride
NPDES - Major - 0.8 mgd of cooling and storm water
MCI - 1.22 mgd process waste to Joint Meeting STP
Effluent Loads - Less than 1 mg/1 of chloroform, methylene dichloride
and ethylene chloride
Air File - No inspection file
Solid Waste Disposal - Hauled by disposal service
24. SCHERING-PLOUGH CORP., Kenilworth SIC - 2834
Products - Pharmaceutical products
Processes - Manufacturing (formulating?) and packaging
NPDES - Major - 0.8 mgd cooling water and boiler blowdown
-------
73
Table II-8 (Continued)
SUMMARY OF EXISTING INDUSTRIAL SOURCE DATA
MCI - Discharges process wastewater to the Rahway
Valley Sewage Authority
Effluent Loads - Under 1 mg/1 of chloroform, methylene dichloride
and ethylene chloride
Air File - No inspection file
Solid Waste Disposal - Unknown
25. SINGER COMPANY, Elizabeth SIC - 3636
Products - Sewing Machines (1,200/day)
Processes - Clean and finish metal parts, assemble machines
NPDES - Major - Discharge to be recycled
MCI - Industrial metallic wastes go to the Joint Meeting
but to be discontinued by recycle.
Air File - No inspection file
Solid Waste Disposal - Unknown
26. SOLVENTS RECOVERY SERVICE OF N.J., Linden SIC - 2811, 2818
Products - Refining of contaminated industrial solvents for recycling
Processes - Distillation, salt treatment and filtration
Raw Materials - A wide range of contaminated solvents are processed
including acetone, methanol, ethanol, toluene,
ethyl acetate, tetrahydrofuran, heptane, hexane,
cyclohexane, mineral spirits, napthas, methyl ethyl
ketone, isobutyl ketone, cellosolv, methyl cellosolv,
Freon THF grade, normal butyl alcohol, isobutyl
alcohol, beta picoline, dimethylacetamide, xylenes,
1,1,1 trichloroethane, trichloroethylene, methylene
chloride and fuel oil.
NPDES - Major - 0.025 mgd of process, cooling and runoff water.
Highly variable waste load including chlorinated
hydrocarbons.
Air File - Data on solvents processed - No emissions data
Solid Waste Disposal - Unknown
27. THE DISTILLER'S CO., LTD., Linden SiC - 2085
Products - Gin & Vodka
Process - Rectifying & bottling
NPDES - Minor - 0.17 mgd cooling water
MCI - Process wastes to Linden-Rosselle Sewerage Authority
Air File - No inspection file
Solid Waste Disposal - Unknown
28. VOLCO BRASS & COPPER, Kenilworth SIC - 3351
Products - Brass wire & strip
Processes - Pickling, redrawing, rolling
-------
74
Table II-8 (Continued)
SUMMARY OF EXISTING INDUSTRIAL SOURCE DATA
NPDES - Minor - 0.15 mgd cooling & minor process water
Effluent Loads (Ib/day) - Cu <2, Zn <1
Air File - No data on toxic emissions
Solid Was.te Disposal - Unknown
29. WILKINSON SWORD, INC., Berkeley Heights SIC - 3421
Products - Razor blades, garden tools
NPDES - Minor - file not reviewed
Air File - No inspection file
Solid Waste Disposal - Unknown
-------
75
TABLE II-9
SUMMARY OF EXISTING INDUSTRIAL SOURCE DATA
Middlesex County, N.J.
AIR PRODUCTS AND CHEMICALS, Woodbridge SIC - 4920
Products - Acetylene (10-50,000 cu. ft./day)
NPDES - Minor - ).01-0.05 mgd
Effluent Loads (mg/1) - Cr 0.3, Zn 0.5
Air File - No inspection file
Solid Waste Disposal - Unknown
AMERADA HESS, Woodbridge SIC - 2911, 5171
Products - Refined petroleum products - bulk terminal
NPDES - Minor - 0.05 mgd cooling and storm runoff water
Air File - No inspection file
Solid Waste Disposal - Unknown
AMERICAN CYANAMID CO., Woodbridge SIC - 2818, 2821, 2843, 2869
Products - Organic chemicals, metallic stearates, paper chemicals,
acrylic polymers, textile chemicals, sulfonated castor oil,
sodium polyacrylates, wax sizes, sulfuric acid catalyst.
NPDES - Minor - 0.08 mgd - entire plant wastewater
Effluent Loads (lb/day) - CN present, Pb <1, Zn 1.6, chlorinated
hydrocarbons 40 ppb
Air File - No inspection file
Solid Waste Disposal - Unknown
AMERICAN SMELTING & REFINING CO., Perth Amboy SIC - 3341
Products - Copper, Brass, Zinc Oxide, Aluminum, Nickle Sulphate
Process - Smelting, refining and casting of non-ferrous metals
Raw Materials (ton/day) - Copper scrap 50, brass 45, copper slag 50,
aluminum scrap 45, zinc 25, crude nickle
sulphate 7, copper blister 600.
NPDES - Major - 9.3 mgd of contact & non-contact cooling water
MCI - 0.06 mgd to Perth Amboy STP
Effluent Loads (Ib/day) - Cr 76, Cu 2.2, Pb 24, Ni 26, Zn 14
phenols 1.5 - these are reported as gross loads
with most from Arthur Kill supply.
Air File - 18 T/yr metal oxides released to atmosphere
Solid Waste Disposal - Unknown
ASHLAND CHEMICAL CO., Fords SIC - 2818, 2821
Products - Phenolic and acrylic resins, antioxidents
NPDES - No direct discharge reported
MCI - 0.4 mgd to Middlesex County Sewerage Authority
Air File - No inspection file
Solid Waste Disposal - Unknown
-------
76
TABLE 11-9
SUMMARY OF EXISTING INDUSTRIAL SOURCE DATA
Middlesex County, N.J.
6. BIRD AND SON, Perth Amboy SIC - 2952
Products - Asphalt Roofing (500 T/day)
Process - Felt is impregnated with asphalt. Some asbestos felt is used,
NPDES - Major - 0.33 cooling water only
Effluent Loads - Cd 0.02, Pb 0.02, Ni 0.12
Air File - Hydrocarbon incinerator on emissions
Solid Waste Disposal - Unknown
7. CAPTIVE PLASTICS, INC., Piscataway SIC - 3079
Products - Plastic products, plastic bottles (50,000/yr)
Process - Injection blow molding
NPDES - Minor - <0.01 mgd cooling water
No effluent data
Air Fill - No inspection file
Solid Waste Disposal - Unknown
8. CARTER-WALLACE, INC., Cranbury SIC - 2830, 2834
Products - Pharmaceuticals, deodorants and shaving soaps
Processes - Formulating and packaging
NPDES - Major - 0.34 mgd process wastewater
Effluent Loads - No toxic data
Air File - No inspection file
Solid Waste Disposal - Unknown
9. CHEESEBOROUGH - PONDS, Perth Amboy SIC - 2844, 2900
Products - Cosmetics proprietaries, petroleum jelly, white mineral oil
Processes - Refining of semi-refined petroleum oils, percolation,
steaming, acid treatment, neutralization
NPDES - Minor - minor cooling water - no toxic data
Air File - No inspection file
Solid Waste Disposal - Unknown
10. CHEVRON OIL CO., Perth Amboy SIC - 2821
Products - Urethane resins & polymers (500 to 1,000 gpd)
Processes - Polymerizing
NPDES - Minor - <0.05 mgd sanitary and cooling water
Air File - Inspected January 1976. CO & S02 emissions
Solid Waste Disposal - Scavenger
11. CITIES S.ERVICE - MAPICO, S. Brunswick SIC - 2816
Product - Iron oxide (17,000 Ib/day)
Process - thermal decomposition of iron sulfate
NPDES - Major - 0.12 mgd process wastewater
Air File: - No inspection file
Solid Wc.ste Disposal - Unknown
-------
77
TABLE II-9
SUMMARY OF EXISTING INDUSTRIAL SOURCE DATA
Middlesex County, N.J.
12. CON/CHEM INC. (Consolidated Polymers), Sayreville SIC - 2821
Products - Urethane resins & polymers (500 to 1,000 gpd)
Processes - Polymerizing
NPDES - Minor - <0.05 mgd sanitary and cooling water
Air File - No inspection file
Solid Waste Disposal - Scavenger
13. CP CHEMICALS, INC., Sewaren SIC - 2819, 4930
Products - Copper, nickle and cobalt metallic salts (29 T/day)
Processes - Copper sulfate reacted with soda ash & filtered - filtrate
discharged. Nickle sulfate or nickle chloride reacted
with bicarbonate of soda, filtered and filtrate discharged.
Some zinc and cadmium processes
NPDES - Major - 0.08 mgd of process wastewater
Compliance inspection found violations of heavy metals limits
on wastewater discharges.
Effluent Loads (Ib/day) - Cu 24, Ni 43, Zn ?
Air File - Inspected April 1976. Cu SO. & NiSO, emissions are <1 Ib/hr.
Chlorine emissions are 1.5 lo/hr.
Solid Waste Disposal - Unknown
14. CPS CHEMICAL CO., Old Bridge SIC - 2869, 2899
Products - Custom refining, organic esters, alkylates, solvent
recovery (10,000 to 40,000 Ib/day)
Processes - transesterifications
Solvents. Processed - Partial list includes methylene chloride, methyl
ethyl ketone, methyl isobutyl ketone, dimethylacetamide, tetrahydrofuran,
toluene, ethyl acetate, trichloroethylene, monochlorobenzene,
methylene chloride, acetone, perchloroethylene, methanol, isopropanol,
xylene, chlorothene, 1,1,1-trichloroethane, isopropanol
NPDES - Minor - Small flow
MCI - 0,12 mgd to Madison Township Sewer Authority
Air File - Inspected March 1976. Scrubbers on process columns. No
insecticides processed.
Solid Wc.ste Disposal - Scavenger hauls off sludge that is not recovered.
15. DELCO RtiMY, New Brunswick SIC - 3691
Product:; - Lead acid storage batteries (100-199 T/day)
NPDES - Minor - <0.05 mgd direct discharge
MCI - 0..27 mgd to New Brunswick STP
Effluent Loads - Pb in direct discharge, 7 mg/1 Pb in discharge to STP
Air File - No inspection file
Solid Waste Disposal - Unknown
16. DESIGN 'A MOLDING SERVICES, Piscataway SIC - 3079
Products - Custom injection molding of plastics
NPDES - Minor - <0.05 mgd cooling water - No toxic effluent data
Air Fill.1 - Inspected
Solid Waste Disposal - Unknown
-------
78
TABLE II-9
SUMMARY OF EXISTING INDUSTRIAL SOURCE DATA
Middlesex County, N.J.
17. DOM CHEMICAL, Cartaret
Products - Styrofoam, polyethylene bottles, bottled antifreeze
Processes - Foaming of styrene, blow molding of PE bottles, bottling
of antifreeze
Raw Materials - Styrene polymer, Freon 12, methyl chloride, polyethylene,
antifreeze
NPDES - No file
Air File - Inspection report. Freon & methyl chloride vented to atmosphere.
Solid Waste Disposal - Unknown
18. DUPONT - Fabrics & Finishes Plant, Parlin SIC - 2851
Products - Industrial finishes (paints and lacquers, 5 mil. gal/yr)
and polyester and acrylic polymers (3 mil. gal/yr)
Processes; - Batch polymerization of polyester and acrylic resins,
condensation reactions for production of alkyd resins.
Finishes produced by dispersion of pigments in resins,
plasticizers and solvents.
Raw Material s - polybasic acids, glycerine, glycol, natural oils,
acrylic monomer, hydrocarbons, inorganic and organic
pigments, resins, plasticizers, solvents (ketones,
alcohols, etc.)
NPDES - Minor - 0.4 mgd of cooling water, boiler blowdown and
water softener wastes
MCI - O.D2 mgd of process wastewaters to Middlesex County
Sewerage Authority
Effluent Loads - Minor concentrations of Ni, Hg, Zn
Air File - No inspection file
Solid Waste Disposal - Unknown
19. DUPONT - PHOTO PRODUCTS DIVISION, Parlin SIC - 2818, 2851, 3861
Products - Photographic film and photo polymer printing plates
Processes - Polyester film base produced by conversion of organic
monomers into polyester polymers in sheet form. Film
produced by coating film base with silver halide type light-
sensitive emulsions and cutting and packaging. Plates
produced by conversion of organic monomers to photosensitive
polymer sheets.
Raw Materials - Include Ag, trichloroethylene, chloroform and
trichloroethane
NPDES - Major - 1.5 mgd direct discharge
MCI - 0,27 mgd of weaker process wastes to Middlesex County
Sewerage Authority
Effluent Loads - Ag 0.8 Ib/day, trichloroethane 24 yg/1 (0.3 Ib/day),
chloroform and trichloroethylene <0.1 yg/1
Air File - No inspection file
Solid Waste Disposal - <10,000 gpd of concentrated liquid wastes
taken by contract disposal scavenger
-------
79
TABLE II-9
SUMMARY OF EXISTING INDUSTRIAL SOURCE DATA,
Middlesex County, N.J.
20. FMC CORP,, - Inorganic Chemicals Div., Cartaret SIC - 2819
Products - Phosphoric acid, barium nitrate, sodium and potassium
phosphates
Processes - Elemental phosphorus burned .in furnace. Off gases
scrubbed with water, mixed with soda ash, caustic soda
or caustic potash
NPDES - Major - 4.7 mgd process and cooling water
Effluent Loads (Ib/day) - Cr 4.5, phenols 0.2
Air File - Inspected May 1976. Some FLS used in process. As is
removed for disposal as the sulfide.
Solid Waste Disposal - Unknown
21. FMC CORP., Plainsboro SIC 2818, 3000, 4941
Products - Chemcial Research & Development
NPDES - Minor - 0.15 mgd
Effluent Loads - Cd, Cr, Cu, Pb, Hg, Zn and Phenols present
Air File - No inspection file
Solid Waste Disposal - 600 gpd to waste acceptance firm
22. FEDDERS CORP., Edison
Products - Air Conditioners
NPDES - No file
Air File - Operations include trichloroethylene degreasing
(280 Ib/day) and painting
Solid Waste Disposal - Unknown
23. FORD MOTOR COMPANY, Metuchen SIC - 3711
Products - Automobile Assembly
Processes - Include metal plating, painting, metal cleaning
NPDES - Minor - 0.33 mgd
Effluent Loads - Small amounts of Cr, Zn and phenols
Air File - Solvent use of 300 Ib/hr. Part of paint operation is
acrylic powder. Also have electro coat operation.
Solid Waste Disposal - Unknown
24. GULTON INDUSTRIES, INC., Metuchen SIC - 3679
Products - Electronic instruments
NPDES - Minor - 0.12 mgd cooling and minor process water
Air File - No file
Solid Waste Disposal - Unknown
25. HERCULES, INC., Parlin SIC - 2823, 2892
Products - Nitrocellulose, chlorinated rubber (Parlon), nitric acid,
Chlorafin, nitroglycerin, diazodinitrophenol
Raw Materials - Cellulose, nitric and sulfuric acid, rubber, chlorine,
carbon tetrachloride, ammonia
NPDES - Major - 2.9 mgd, primarily cooling water
MCI - 2.88 mgd of process wastewater discharged to Middlesex
County Sewerage Authority - Cu 4 mg/1, Ni
Air File: - No toxic data
Solid Wc.ste Disposal - Unknown
-------
80
TABLE II-9
SUMMARY OF EXISTING INDUSTRIAL SOURCE DATA
Middlesex County, N.J.
26. INMONT CHEMICALS, Middlesex SIC - 2851
Products - Concentrated pigment dispersions
Processes. - Pigments are dispersed in various solvents
NPDES - Mo file
Air File - Hydrocarbon emissions of unknown type. Lead and cadmium
pigments used.
Solid Was.te Disposal - Unknown
27. JERSEY CENTRAL POOWER AND LIGHT, Sayreville SIC - 4910
Products - Electric Power
Process Oil-fired steam boiler
NPDES - Major - 297 mgd cooling water
Effluent Loads (Ib/day) - Cr 70, Zn 55, Algicide (Chlorine) 1,280
Air File - Inspected December 1975. No toxics data.
Solid Waste Disposal - Unknown
28. JERSEY CENTRAL POWER AND LIGHT, S. Amboy SIC - 4910
Products - Electric Power
Process - Oil-fired steam boiler
NPDES - Major - 198 mgd cooling water
Effluent Loads - Cr 18, Zn 68, Algicide (Chlorine) 307
Air File - Inspected April 1975. No toxics data.
Solid Waste Disposal - Unknown
29. KAISER ALUMINUM, Edison SIC - 3411
Products - Aluminum Cans (1,250,000/day)
Process - Form, coat and print cans
NPDES - No inspection file
Air File - 392 T/yr of hydrocarbon solvents used. Afterburner on stack.
Solid Waste Disposal - Unknown
30. MOBIL CHEMICAL CO., Cartaret SIC - 2819, 2874
Products - Phosphoric acid (250 T/day)
Process - Burn phosphorus in air and hydrate
NPDES - Major - 0.2 mgd cooling and process water
No affluent data - Shut down Oct. 1975
Air File - Inspected October 1975.
Solid Waste Disposal - Unknown
31. MOBIL CHEMICAL CO., Edison SIC - 2851, 7391
Products - Paint and chemicals, research
NPDES - Minor - No effluent data
Process wastes to municipal system - not listed as an MCI
Air File - Inspected December 1975. No toxics data.
Solid WAste Disposal - Disposal contractor
-------
81
TABLE 11-9
SUMMARY OF EXISTING INDUSTRIAL SOURCE DATA
Middlesex County, N.J.
32. NATIONAL CAN CORP., Edison SIC - 3411
Products - Steel cans (550/minute)
Process - Three-piece cans punched form pre-1ithographed steel sheets,
formed, cleaned, soldered, coated with vinyl base resin,
baked and packed.
NPDES - No file
Air File - Solvent volume and type not defined. Low lead solder used.
Inspected Dec. 1975.
Solid Waste Disposal - Unknown
33. NATIONAL CAN CORP./CONSOLIDATED CORK, Piscataway SIC - 3466
Products - Two-piece steel cans (1.4 million/day) and pop bottle caps
Process - Cans are punched from steel sheet, washed in a basic
detergent and nitric acid (vented to atmosphere), coated,
oven-dried, lithographed with paste ink, oven-dried, enamel
coated (MEK solvent), oven-dried and packed. Caps are punched
from a printed sheet, varnished on top, lacquered on the
bottom, oven-dried, and provided with a liquid plastic drop
that forms a seal.
NPDES - No file
Air File - Solvent volumes and types other than MEK not defined.
Incinerators on oven vents. Inspected Dec. 1975.
Solid Wc.ste Disposal - Unknown
34. NL INDUSTRIES - Titanium Pigments Div., Sayreville SIC - 2816, 2819
Product:; - Titanium dioxide pigment
Processes - Titanium is extracted from ore by solution in sulfuric acid.
Sulfuric acid is manufactured. By-product is iron sulfate.
NPDES - Major - 38 mgd, primarily contaminated cooling water
MCI - 0,5 mgd weaker acids and process wastes discharged to
City of Perth Amboy
Effluent Loads (Ib/day) - Cr 22, CN 3, Cd <1, Pb <11, Zn 46, Hg <0.2,
phenols 233
Air File - Inspected January 1976. Acid mists and SO^ emitted.
Solid Waste Disposal - Sludge is landfilled, sulfates and gangue
solids barged to sea
35. PREMIUM PLASTICS, INC., Metuchen SIC - 3079
Products - Plastic compounds (1-99 T/day)
Process - Custom plastic compounding
NPDES - Minor - 0.05 mgd - no effluent data
Air File - No inspection file
Solid Waste Disposal - Unknown
-------
82
TABLE I1-9
SUMMARY OF EXISTING INDUSTRIAL SOURCE DATA
Middlesex County, N.J.
36. PROCESS SYSTEMS, INC., Woodbridge SIC - 3079
Products - Plastic sheet (8 T/day) and misc. plastic products
Process - Produce plastic sheet from plastic pellets
NPDES - Minor - <0.005 mgd cooling water - nominal contamination
Air File - No inspection file
Solid Wa:5te Disposal - Unknown
37. PUBLIC SERVICE ELECTRIC AND GAS, Edison SIC - 4930
Products - Natural gas distribution and peak shaving production
Process - Thermally crack kerosene to synthetic natural gas
NPDES - Major - 13 mgd cooling water - no effluent data
Air File - Inspected April 1976. No toxics data
Solid Waste Disposal - Unknown
38. PUBLIC SERVICE ELECTRIC AND GAS, Sewaren SIC - 4911, 4931
Products - Electric Power
Process - Natural gas and oil-fired steam boilers
NPDES - Major - 470 mgd cooling water
Effluent Loads (Ib/batch cleaning) - Cu 10, Ni 50, Zn 5
Air File - Inspected July 1975. No toxics data
Solid Waste Disposal - Unknown
39. REBEL ONE CORP., Old Bridge
Products - Asphalt
NPDES - Minor - No discharge planned - No data
Air File - No inspection file
Solid Wa:;te Disposal - Unknown
40. REICHOLD CHEMICALS, INC., Cartaret - SIC - 2841, 4930
Products - Dioctyl phthalate (20 T/day), plasticizers, phenolic
molding compound (75 T/day)
NPDES - Minor - 0.008 mgd - No effluent data
Air File - No inspection file
Solid Wa:;te Disposal - Unknown
41. RHODIA, INC., New Brunswick SIC - 2818, 2834
Products - Aromatic chemicals, fine organic chemicals, pharmaceutical
intermediates, perfumes, aldehydes, organic alcohols,
coumarin
NPDES - Minor - 0.02 mgd, boiler blowdown - no effluent data
MCI - 0.;! mgd process wastes to Middlesex County Sewerage Authority
Air File - Inspected January 1976 - No data on toxic emission but
lists controls on potential emission points.
Solid Waste Disposal - Unknown
-------
TABLE II-9
SUMMARY OF EXISTING INDUSTRIAL SOURCE DATA
Middlesex County, N.J.
83
42. TENNECO CHEMICALS, Ford SIC - 2818
Products - Fine chemicals, industrial organic chemicals, chlorinated
aromatics, terpenes, phosphate esters, air oxidation products,
formaldehyde, maleic anhydride, HC1, hexamethylene,
tetramine, Strobane T, sodium trichloro benzoate, dimethyl
trichloro phenyl acetate, herbicides and insecticides
(chlorinated derivatives of toluene)
Raw Materials - benzene, toluene, camphene, xylene, methyl alcohol,
methyl methacrylate, ethyl acrylate, chlorine,
ammonia, POCU, PC'U' phenol, caustic soda, sulfuric acid.
NPDES - Major - 0.32 mgd coonng water (pond system blowdown)
MCI - I.!! mgd process wastewater to Middlesex County
Sewerage Authority
Effluent Loads - Low levels of Cd, Cr, Cu, CN, Hg, Pb, Zn and
chlorinated hydrocarbons reported in direct discharge.
Air File - Inspected Nov. 1975. Data on processes, raw materials and
pollution controls but no data on toxic emissions
Solid Wasite Disposal - Unknown
43. TENNECO PLASTICS, Edison SIC - 3079
Products - PVC film and rigid sheeting (65 T/day)
Process - PVC resin calendered into rigid sheets and film
NPDES - Minor - 0.07 mgd
Effluent Loads - Minor levels of Cr, Zn and phenols
Air File - No inspection file
Solid Was.te Disposal - Unknown
44. THE OKON1TE COMPANY, New Brunswick SIC - 3315
Products - Insulated wire and cable (25 T/day)
Processes - Drawing, stranding, insulating, cabling, jacketing,
testing, compounding
NPDES - Minor - 0.05 mgd --No effluent data
Air File - No inspection file
Solid Waste Disposal - Unknown
45. UNION CARBIDE CORP. - Chemicals and Plastics Div., Piscataway
SIC - 2818, 3569
Products - plastic intermediates (plastic resins and pelletized compounds),
phenol, formaldehyde, hexamethylene tetramine, para-tert-butyl
phenol, phenolic resin, polyethylene mixes, styrene polymer
and acrylocopolymer, phenoxy
Raw Materials - Cumene (isopropyl benzene), methanol, nitric acid,
isobutylene, polyethylene pellets, styrene monomer,
bisphenol A, epichlorohydrin, urea, ammonia
NPDES - Major - Only direct discharge reported is storm runoff
MCI - Discharges 1.8 mgd directly to Middlesex County Sewerage Authority
plant through special outfall and 0.32 mgd through municipal
sewer system. Both are high in phenols
Air File - Inspected May 1976. Detailed information on products, processes
and raw materials but no quantification of toxic emissions
Solid Waste Disposal - Some incineration of liquid wastes
-------
84
TABLE I1-9
SUMMARY OF EXISTING INDUSTRIAL SOURCE DATA
Middlesex County, N.J.
46. UNION CARBIDE CORP., Woodbridge SIC - 2813
Products - Compressed industrial gases (50 T/day), oxygen (200 T/day)
and nitrogen (500 T/day)
NPDES - ^inor - 0.14 mgd
Effluent Loads - Minor amounts of Cd, Cr, Cu, Hg, Pb, Zn and Phenols
Air File - No inspection file
Solid Waste Disposal - Unknown
47. UNION CARBIDE CORP., Perth Amboy SIC - 5085
Processes - Repackaging and distribution of plastic pellets (900 T/day)
NPDES - Minor - Storm water runoff only
Air File - No inspection file
Solid Waste Disposal - Unknown
48. U.S. GYPSUM CO., South Plainfield SIC - 3296
Products - Mineral wool, bonded mineral wool, insulating rolls and sheets
Process - Blast furnace slag and coke charged to cupola furnaces,
melt is formed into fibers in blow chambers. Lignin resin
binder added to part of product to form bonded fibre for
making rolls and sheets
NPDES - Effluent now goes to municipal system
Air File - Inspected July 1976. HgS emissions from cupola.
Solid Waste Disposal - Landfill on site
49. U.S. METALS REFINING CO., Cartaret SIC - 3331, 3341
Products - Copper (600 T/day) and refined non-ferrous metals
Processes - Primary refining of copper blister, secondary smelting
and refining of non-ferrous metals
NPDES - Major - 32 mgd process and cooling water
MCI - 0.2 mgd to Cartaret STP, high in Cu and Zn
Effluent Loads (Ib/day) - Cu 2,200, Pb 450,' Zinc 650
Air File - Inspected July 1976. No toxics data.
Solid Waste Disposal - Unknown
50. WARBERN PACKAGING INDUSTRIES, Woodbridge SIC - 3079
Products - Plastic garment hangers (50,000/day)
Process - Injection molding
NPDES - Minor - <0.001 mgd cooling water - low Cr
Air File - No inspection file
Solid Waste Disposal - Unknown
51. WITCO CHEMICALS CO., Perth Amboy SIC - 2869, 2952
Products - Organic chemicals (139 T/day), asphalt and pitch (56 T/day)
stearates (30 T/day), surfactants (38 T/day) and polyesters
Processes - Petroleum residuals heated and air sprayed to produce
asphalt and pitch
NPDES - Minor - 0.14 mgd - no effluent data
MCI - 0.16 mgd to Perth Amboy STP
Air File - No inspection file
Solid Waste Disposal - Waste treatment sludges to municipal sewer
-------
85
TABLE I1-9
SUMMARY OF EXISTING INDUSTRIAL SOURCE DATA
Middlesex County, N.J.
52. W. R. GRACE & Co., Hatco Chemicals Div., Woodbridge SIC - 2818
Products - Plasticizers (300 T/day), phthalate
Raw Materials - 2-ethyl hexanol (octanol), pthalic anhydride
NPDES - Minor - 0.01 mgd of cooling tower blowdown and miscellaneous
condensates with low levels of Cu Pb, Zn and phenols
Air File - Inspected May 1976. Vinyl chloride plant is shut down
but could be restarted.
Solid Waste Disposal - Unknown
-------
TABLE 11-10
SUMMARY OF INDUSTRIAL AND MUNICIPAL SOURCES IN
UNION COUNTY BY GEOGRAPHICAL AREA
86
NPDES
City
Berkeley Heights
Clark
Cranford
El izabeth
Elizabethport
Fanwood
Garwood
Hillside
Ken il worth
Linden
Mountainside
Murray Hill
PI a infield
Rah way
Roselle Park
Resell e
Scotch Plains
Springfield
Summit
Union
Vauxhall
Westfield
INVENTORY TOTAL
ADDITIONAL LISTINGS
TOTAL
Total
25
19
39
176
1
5
26
83
88
161
28
13
34
53
18
55
11
51
25
129
5
9
1 ,054
59
1,113
Minor
2
1
3
2
5
1
3
17
25
42
Major
1
3
1
1
6
1
13
8
21
CDS
Minor Major
1
1
2 9
2 2
1 1
8
1
3
2
2
3
1
7 32
13 13
20 45
MCI
4
12
5
15
2
8
2
12
60
-
60
TS
8
8
18
44
1
6
17
17
50
8
1
7
13
4
9
2
3
7
27
1
258
12
270
-------
87
TABLE 11-11
SUMMARY OF INDUSTRIAL AND MUNICIPAL SOURCES IN
MIDDLESEX COUNTY BY GEOGRAPHICAL AREA
City
Avenel
Cartaret
Cliffwood Beach
Cranbury
Dayton
Deans
Dunellen
East Brunswick
Edison
Fords
Helmetta
Highland Park
Hope! awn
Iselin
Jamesburg
Keasbey
Kingston
Laurence HarbDr
Madison Township
Menlo Park
Metuchen
Middlesex
Mi 1 1 town
Monmouth Junction
Morgan
New Brunswick
New Market
Nixon
North Brunswick
Old Bridge
Par! in
Perth Amboy
Piscataway
Plainsboro
Port Reading
Sayreville
Sewaren
South Amboy
South Brunswick
South Plain-field
South River
Spotswood
Woodbridge
INVENTORY TOTAL
ADDITIONAL LISTINGS
TOTAL
Total
17
42
1
23
10
1
10
23
108
7
1
10
1
8
12
6
2
6
5
1
42
52
11
17
2
95
1
2
25
17
5
81
49
3
8
13
3
11
7
93
22
3
31_
894
121
1,015
NPDES
Minor Major
2 3
1
1 1
6
1
1
1
3
1
2
2 1
1
2
1 2
2 4
3 1
1
1
2
_3 _
33 16
52 9
85 25
CDS
Minor
1
2
1
1
1
1
1
1
2
2
2
2
_£
19
24
43
Major
2
4
1
1
9
2
1
2
1
6
1
3
6
4
1
2
1
1
1
_4
53
36
89
MCI TS
4
2 12
4
4
1
3
32
3 5
1
1
1
1
1
10
16
2
2
1
3 23
2
4
1 2
3 3
3 14
13
1
2
5
1
1
2
9
2
_ _6
15 191
24
15 215
-------
88
TABLE 11-12
SUMMARY OF INDUSTRIAL FACILITIES IN
UNION COUNTY BY SIC CODE
SIC Group Type Industry Union Co.
1-17
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
30
31
32
33
34
35
36
37
38
39
Others
Agriculture, Mining, Constr.
Food & kindred prod.
Tobacco Mfg.
Textile mill prod.
Apparel
Lumber & wood prod.
Furniture
Paper & allied prod.
Printing & Publishing
Chemicals & Allied prod.
Petroleum Refining &
related ind.
Rubber & Misc. Plastic prod.
Leather prod.
Stone, clay, glass & concrete
Primary metal industries
Fabricated metal products
Machinery
Electrical and electronics
Transportation Equip.
Instruments, Photogr., Medical
Misc, Mfg. Ind.
TOTAL 1
3
40
0
21
54
24
23
30
61
106
10
54
8
29
42
181
196
89
24
23
44
51
,113
Number
Middlesex Co. Total
0
44
1
14
82
22
15
44
52
118
12
57
7
55
45
116
94
48
14
19
34
118
1,015
3
84
1
35
136
46
38
74
113
224
22
111
15
84
87
297
290
137
38
42
78
169
2,128
-------
TABLE 11-13
SUMMARY OF EXISTING MUNICIPAL SOURCE DATA
Union County, NJ
89
1. BOROUGH OF NEW PROVIDENCE
Treatment - Primary
Sludge Disposal - Discharged to the Joint Meeting for treatment
and disposal
Flow - 1.0 mgd treated and discharged to Passaic River
'1.15 mgd discharged to Joint Meeting untreated
Population Served - 18,000
Toxic Effluent Data - No application or DMR data
Industrial Waste Flow - No flow total listed
No. of Contributing Industries - 7
Summary of Significant Industries
Name
City
SIC Products
Flow Constituents
(mgd) (mg/1)
Azoplate
Bell Telephone
Electrical Industries
Murray
Murray
Murray
Hi
Hi
Hi
1
1
1
1
1
1
3555
7391
3679
Al. Plate &
R & D Lab.
Electronic
Chem.Sol .
Compon'ts
0.
0.
.0.
03
717 -
06 Cu,Ni
3.8
2. THE JOINT MEETING - ESSEX & UNION COUNTIES, Irvington
Treatment - Primary
Sludge Disposal - Ocean disposal
Flow - 73 mgd to Arthur Kill
Population Served - 480,000
Toxic Effluent Data - Heavy metals discharged - no DMR data
Industrial Waste Flow - 12 mgd
No. of Contributing Industries - 83
Summary of Significant Industries
Name
City
Apex Chemical Co. Elizabeth
Exact Anodi;:ing Co. Elizabeth
Nuodex Prod ,Div. Jenneco Elizabeth
Phelps-Dodgo Co. Elizabeth
Reichold Chemicals, Inc. Elizabeth
The Singer Co.
Thomas & Betts
Co.
Westinghousu Electric
Acme-Fresco PI
Revlon, Inc.
Fresco Silver
ating
Co.
Universal Chain Co.
Elizabeth
Elizabeth
Hillside
Irvington
Irvington
Maplewood
Maplewood
SIC
2818
3471
3351
2821
3636
3643
-
3471
3471
-
Products
Chemicals
Anodizing
Copper Products
Flow
(mgd)
0.
0.
0.
03
082
560
Constituents
(rng/1 )
Cd
> Hg
Cu
Synthetic Resins
Sewing
Electr
Electr
Metal
Machines
.Fittings
.Switchboard
Finishing
0.
0.
0.
0.
175
048
060
020
Appliances
Silver
plates
Ornamental chains
0.
_
057
Cr
Cr
Cd
Cr
Ag
Cr
2.8
10,
Zn
Zn
,Cu,
3,
,Cu,
10,
Ni
Cd
5
Ni
Ni
CN,
Cu
1
1
11
Ni
15
Murray Hill - See Borough of New Providence List
-------
TABLE 11-13
SUMMARY OF EXISTING MUNICIPAL SOURCE DATA
Union County, NJ
90
2.
THE JOINT MEETING (Continued)
Summary of
Significant
(Continued)
Industries
Name
City
SIC Products
Flow Constituents
(mgd) (mg/1)
Ciba-Geigy Co. Summit
Adams Industries Union
Airco Welding Prod. Union
Alcan Metal Prod. Union
Amerace Corp. - ESNA Union
Breeze Co. Union
2834 Pharmaceuticals
3461 Metal Prod.
3548 Welding Equip.
3339 Metal Powders
3452 Metal Fasteners
3729 Metal Parts
0.920
0.133
0.088
0.200
0.050
0.020
Cr 24, Ni 5
Cu 7, Zn 3
Cu 11, Ni 12,
Pb 14, Zn 6
Cd 2, Cr 11 ,
CN 6
Cd, Cr, Cu
Ni, Pb
Foremost
Red Devi
Jacobson
Schering
Tenneco
1
Mfg.
Co.
Mfg.
Corp.
Chemic
Co.
Co.
als
Union
Union
Union
Union
Piscataway
3642
2851
3729
2834
2818
Precision Reflectors
Paint & Chemicals
Metal Parts
Pharmaceuticals
Vinyl stabilizers
0.
1.
0.
-
037
-
220
200
Cu
Cr
Cd
Ni
>
,
2,
Zn
Zn
CN
Pb 1,
3
3. THE LINDE;N-ROSELLE SEWERAGE AUTHORITY
Treatment. - Primary
Sludge Disposal - Ocean disposal including Rahway Valley Sewerage
Authority sludge
Flow - 13.6 mgd to Arthur Kill
Population Served - 70,000
Toxic Effluent Data - Heavy metals - no DMR data
Industrial Waste Flow - 4 mgd
No. of Contributing Industries - 50
-------
91
TABLE 11-13
SUMMARY OF EXISTING MUNICIPAL SOURCE DATA
Union County, NJ
3. THE LINDEN-ROSELLE SEWERAGE AUTHORITY (Continued)
Summary of Significant Industries
Name City
Glasseal Prod. Co. Linden
Am. Flange & Mfg. Inc.
Apex Plating & Polishing
B & B Electroplating
D'Angelo Metal Prod. Co.
Domar Buckle Mfg. Co.
E. Side Lighting
Gen. Magnaplate Corp.
Hatfield Wire & Cable Co.
Ideal Plating & Polishing
Marco Chem. Co.
Platronics Inc.
Resyn Corp.
Merk & Co. , Inc.
Linden
Linden
Linden
Linden
Linden
Linden
Linden
Linden
Co. Linden
Linden
Linden
Linden
Rahway
SIC
3471
3469
3471
3471
3471
3964
3471
3471
3351
3471
2821
3471
2821
2833
Products
Plating
Metal Stampings
Electroplating
Electroplating
Electroplating
Belt Buckles
Lighting Fixtures
Alum. Prod.
Copper wire
Electroplating
Polyester Resin
Gold Plating
Epoxy, alkyd &
Polyester
Vit.C, Thiabendazol
Flow Constituents
(mgd) (mg/1)
0.081
0.092
0.005
0.003
0.002
0.055
0.104
0.007
0.286
0.072
0.084
0.053
0.294
e 1.110
Cu 3, Ni 1.5
CN 1.5
Zn 18
Cu 44, Zn 17
CN 4, Cu 17,
Zn 14
Ni 120,
Cu 30, Zn 3
Cu 16, Zn 4
Cu 39, CN 13
Cu 6
Cu 33, Ni 12
Cu 5, Zn 2
CN 2
Pthalic
anhydride
Cu 4, CN 4
-
4. THE RAHWAY VALLEY SEWERAGE AUTHORITY
Treatment - Primary
Sludge Disposal - To the Linden-Rose!le Sewerage Authority for ocean
disposal
Flow - 3!i mgd to Arthur Kill
Population Served - 203,000
Toxic Effluent Data - No data
Industrial Waste Flow - 9 mgd
No. of Contributing Industries - 138
-------
TABLE 11-13
SUMMARY OF EXISTING MUNICIPAL SOURCE DATA
Union County, NJ
92
4. THE RAHWAY VALLEY SEWERAGE AUTHORITY (Continued)
Summary of Significant Industries
Name
City
SIC Products
Flow Constituents
(mgd) (mg/1)
Merck Chemical
U.S. Gypsum
Hyatt Roller E.earing
Reynolds Metals
Nat'l Gypsum
Monsanto Co.
Schering Corp.
M & T Chemicals
Reynolds Metal Co.
Alcan Alum. Corp.
Englehart Ind.
Bright Sol
Merck & Co., INc.
Meton Plastics, Inc.
East Photo Lab
Atlas Electroplating
Star Plating Corp.
The Merck Corp.
Haarmann & Reimer Corp,
ESB Inc. Stokes
Molded Prod. Civ.
Montomco Ind.
US Gypsum
US Gypsum
Polychrome Corp.
Reed & Carnrick
B & M Finishers
The Palnut Co.
Amer. Alum Co.
Rahway
Clark
Clark
Woodbridge
Garwood
Kenilworth
Kenilworth
Woodbridge
Avenel
Avenel
Menlo Park
Avenel
Rahway
0.85
2830 Drugs & Pharm.
3270 Gypsum
Roller Bearings
3360 Aluminum
3270 Gypsum
2821 Plastics
2830 Drugs & Pharm.
2865, 69 Organotin Cmpds.0.1
3353 Aluminum cans
3353 Al. siding, gutters
R & D, paint, ink,
catalysts
Wash Tank Trucks
2833 Sulfathrazole,
narcotics
Plating
Film processing
0.7
1.0
0.47
0.5
0.2
0.05
0.94
0.03
0.7
0.02
Cd
Cranford
Roselle Park -
Roselle Park 3471 Electroplating
Roselle Park 3471 Zinc & Electr.
1.2
0.05
0.28
0.08
Cr, Cu,
Cu, Cr
Cr 20
Cr
Cr 11
Cr 11
Low cone.
Cr, Zn
Cu 5, Ni 9
Roselle Park -
100 gpd
Liquid Foaming Agent 0.001
Springfield 2844 Aromatic Chem.
and food ingred.
Clark
0.02
2281 Plastic Battery Cases
Uses 3% antimony lead
Clark 2841, 79 Blending surfactants
& pesticides-small amt. 0.001
Clark - Wallboard facing 0.400
Clark - Wallboard facing 0.680
Clark - Mix photo chem.,
convert, film 0.002
Kenilworth 2830 Drugs & Pharm. 0.008
Kenilworth 3471 Job Anodyzing Shop 0.026 Alum. Cr
Mountainside 3452 Stamped Steel Fastn. 0.100 Cu, Zn, CN
Mountainside 3461 Metal Fabrication Cr 6
-------
93
TABLE 11-13
SUMMARY OF EXISTING MUNICIPAL SOURCE DATA
Union County, NJ
TOWNSHIP OF BERKELEY HEIGHTS
Treatment, - Secondary (Trickling Filter)
Sludge Disposal - No data
Flow - 1.5 mgd
Population Served - 15,000
Toxic Effluent Data - No data but should be minor
Industrie! Waste Flow - nil
No. of Contributing Industries - None
-------
94
TABLE 11-14
SUMMARY OF EXISTING MUNICIPAL SOURCE DATA
Middlesex Co.
1. CITY OF PERTH AMBOY
Treatmert - Primary with chemical additions
Sludge Disposal - Landfill
Flow - 61.5 mgd to the Raritan River
Population Served - 40,000
Toxic Ei'fluent Data - Effluent contains 2 mg/1 Cu & 1 mg/1 Zn
Industrial Waste Flow - 3 mgd
No. of Contributing Industries - 7
Summary of Significant Industries
NameCitySlCProductsFlow Constituents
(mgd) (mg/1)
American Smelting
& Refining Co.
NL Industrie?;
Witco Chemicc'.ls Co.
Perth Amboy
Perth Amboy
Perth Amboy
3341
2816
2869
Copper
Pigment
Metallic
0.060
0.500
stearates 0.186
Cu <0.5
-
*
2. DEPT. Of PUBLIC WORKS, BOROUGH OF CARTARET
Treatment - Primary with chemical additions
Sludge Disposal - To landfill
Flow'- 2.5 mgd to Arthur Kill
Populat:on Served - 23,000
Toxic Effluent Data - Heavy metals <0.25 mg/1 each. Requirement to
monitor Cd, CN and Hg added in October 1976.
Industrial Waste Flow - 0.5
No. of Contributing Industries - 6
Summary of Significant Industries
NameCitySICProductsFlow Constituents
(mgd) (mg/1)
US Metals Refining Co. Cartaret 3331 Copper & non-ferrous
metals 0.200 Cu 25, Zn 1.
Engelhard Minerals
& Chemicals Cartaret 3339 Refine precious
metals 0.070 Cu 2.6
-------
95
TABLE 11-14
SUMMARY OF EXISTING MUNICIPAL SOURCE DATA
Middlesex Co.
3. MADISON TOWNSHIP SEWERAGE AUTHORITY, LAURENCE HARBOR
Treatment - Primary
Sludge Disposal - No data
Flow - 1.0 mgd
Population Served - 12,000
Toxic Effluent Data - No data
Industrial Waste Flow - 0.2 mgd
No. of Contributing Industries - 3
Summary of Significant Industries
Name
CPS Chemical Co
Food Additive;;,
City
Old Bridge
Inc. Old Bridge
SIC
2869
2812,
16,19
Products
Custom refining,
solvent recovery
Zn Cl & Zn S04
Flow Constituents
(mgd) (mg/1)
0.123 No data
0.035 Zn 140
4. MIDDLESEX COUNTY SEWERAGE AUTHORITY, SAYREVILLE
Treatment - Primary plus clariflocculators
Sludge Disposal - No data
Flow - 80 mgd -x
Population Served - 470,000
Toxic Effluent Data - Heavy metals, many others, no data. Required
to monitor for CN & Cd beginning January 1977.
Industrial Waste Flow - 40 mgd
No. of Contributing Industries - 46 '
Summary of Significant Industries
City SIC Products
Name
Flow Constituents
(mgd) (mg/1)
Ashland Chem.
Hatco Chem. Div,
Fords
WR Grace Fords
Stauffer Chemical Co,
Item. Div.-Tenneco
Union Carbide
Union Carbide
Hercules Inc.
DuPont Photo Dept.
Middlesex 2869
Fords 2865,79
Piscataway
Piscataway
Parlin
Parlin
2818 Resins & Plastics
2818 Plasticizers,
Synthetic Lubr.
Benzy Chloride
Cl Aromatics
2865/21 Plastic Interm.
2865 Organic Chemicals
2823 Nitrocellulose
3861 Film
DuPont Fabric Finishes Parlin 2851 Paints & Finishes
Fine Organics Inc.(Hexcel) Sayreville 2899 Brominated fire
retardants
New Brunswick 2869 Organic Chemicals
New Brunswick 2865 Organic Chemicals
Interstab Chenicals
Rhodia Inc.
Delco Remy
Triangle PWC
Triangle Pipe & Tube
Aromatic Chem &
Special ties
New
New
New
Brunswick
Brunswick
Brunswick
3691
3643
3351
Lead Acid
Copper tube
0
0
0
1
1
0
2
0
0
0.
0.
0.
BatteriesO.
0.
0.
424
330
380
200
800
320
883
275
130
120
003
204
273
500
431
Cr 225, Cu 50
Pb 80, Zn 285
CN 35
Phenols 250
Phenols 135
Cu 4, Ni 15
C19 Org. 7
Pb 7
Cu 100
Zn 1
East Brunswick 2869 Organic Chemicals 0.491 Organics
-------
96
TABLE 11-14
SUMMARY OF EXISTING MUNICIPAL SOURCE DATA
Middlesex Co.
TOWNSHIP OF SOUTH BRUNSWICK
Treatment - Secondary (contact stabilization)
Sludge Disposal - No data
Flow - 2.5 mgd
Population Served - 13,000
Toxic Effluent Data - No data - should be low
Industrial Waste Flow - 0.7 mgd
No. of Contributing Industries - 11 - all small
-------
III. POTENTIAL DISCHARGES OF TOXIC SUBSTANCES
TO THE ENVIRONMENT
The review of existing data summarized in the previous section
showed that available data on actual releases of toxic substances were
very limited. From the information available, however, some predictions
can be made of the probably types of toxic substances being handled by
specific industrial plants and other sources. Because of the various
levels of pollution control that can be achieved by a specific plant and
the alternative processes and/or raw materials used to produce the same
products, it is not possible to quantify releases of toxic substances or
state with certainty that a specific substance is released. It is
evident that certain industrial plants and municipal wastewater treatment
plants along with disposal of hazardous wastes have a major potential
for producing environmental impacts from their handling of toxic substances,
This section summarizes predicted releases of toxic substances from
industrial plants developed from a review of available data by industrial
process experts. Potential releases from municipal wastewater treatment
plants and hazardous waste disposal sites are also summarized.
POTENTIAL DISCHARGES FROM INDUSTRIAL SOURCES
As presented in Tables II-8 and II-9, existing data were compiled
on 29 industrial plants in Union County and 52 in Middlesex County.
Existing data on 31 of these plants were adequate to define that no
toxic problems existed at the facility or that it was minor and adequately
quantified. Available data on the remaining 50 plants were reviewed by
experts familiar with the types of industry involved and, in some cases,
the specific plants.
-------
98
Four typus of results were obtained from this review. Data on some
plants were so limited that no predictions other than very general ones
could be made as to the probable presence of toxic substances. Some
plants were found to present no toxic substance hazard. About half of
the plants were found to be using or producing one or more toxic substances
that could be predicted to be present in air emissions, wastewater
discharges and hazardous wastes to be disposed of on or off-site. Four
large plants use or produce numerous toxic substances and it was not
practical to try to list all potential releases.
The results of the plant-by-plant evaluations are presented in
Tables III-l and III-2. For many of the sources, known releases of
toxic substances were defined in Tables II-8 and II-9. These two sets
of tables should both be used to define known and potential discharges
of toxic substances from a specific plant.
From the summaries of existing data and the predicted releases of
toxic substances, 22 industrial plants were selected as representing
major potential sources of toxic substances. In most cases, the actual
emissions and discharges of toxic substances from these plants are not
defined with certainty. However, the processes, raw materials, products,
size of facility and known emissions or discharges in combination indicate
the major potential. These plants should have first priority for review
if any detailed source evaluations are undertaken.
It should be emphasized that there are other industrial plants in
the study area that are possible sources of toxic substances but the
probability of them being major sources is lower. There are also numerous
small sources of toxic substances that in the aggregate have the potential
for major releases of toxic substances. This is especially true of
metal finishing operations.
-------
99
TABLE III-l
SUMMARY OF POTENTIAL DISCHARGES OF TOXIC SUBSTANCES
FROM INDUSTRIES IN UNION COUNTY, NEW JERSEY
1. ALCAN METAL POWDERS
Air Emis:;ions - Metallic Dusts, Cu, Zn, Cd, Sb, As, Pb & Hg
Water Discharges - Same materials to municipal system
Solid Wastes - Not defined
2. ALLIED CHEMICAL CORP., Elizabeth
Air Emissions - Chloroform, carbon tetrachloride, chlorotrifluoroethylene
Water Discharge - See Table II-8
Solid Wastes - Heavy metals, acid sludges
3. AMERICAN CAN CO., Hillside
Air Emissions - Varnish and ink solvents not defined
Water Discharges - No problem expected
Solid Waste Disposal - Varnish solids
4. AMERICAN CYANAMID, WARNER'S PLANT, Linden
Air Emissions - See Table II-8
Water Emissions - See Table II-8, Various pesticides possible
Solid Waste Disposal - Disposal other than ocean dumping not defined
but numerous toxic problems possible
5. ARMOUR PHARMACEUTICALS (REHEIS CHEMICALS), Berkeley Heights
Air Emissions - No toxics expected
Water Emissions - See Table II-8. Possible Zn and chlorophenols
Solid Waste Disposal - Not defined
6. B.P. OIL, CORP., NJ Terminal, Linden
No toxics expected
7. CHEMICAL CONTROL CORP., Elizabeth
Destruction of toxic substances has the potential for release of
many toxics to the air, to the wastewater stream from the scrubber,
and to the ash for solid waste disposal. Toxic substances emitted
will be as varied as the wastes received for disposal.
8. CIBA-GEiGY CORP., Summit
Air Emissions - Solvents such as ethylene dichloride, acetonitrile and
benzene
Water Emissions - As, Cu, Zn, Se, Hg, Cr
Solid Waste Disposal - Residue of above substances
-------
100
TABLE III-l (Continued)
SUMMARY OF POTENTIAL DISCHARGES OF TOXIC SUBSTANCES
FROM INDUSTRIES IN UNION COUNTY, NEW JERSEY
9. COOPER-ALLOY CORP., Hillside
No toxics expected
10. DUPONT, Linden
This large plant has the potential for releasing numerous toxic
substances to the air and water and in solid waste that must be
disposed of.
11. EXXON-BAYWAY REFINERY, Linden
This very large plant has the potential for releasing a large
number of toxic substances to the environment through air emissions,
water discharges and solid waste disposal.
12. GAF CORP., Linden
Air Emissions - A large number of toxic substances are possible
emitted including benzene.
Water Discharges - See Table 11-8. Also herbicides
Solid Waste Disposal - A variety of toxic residues are generated
including heavy metals, herbicides and
chlorinated hydrocarbons.
13. IRON OXIDE CORP., Elizabeth
Air Emissions - Minor heavy metals
Water Discharges - See Table 11-8
Solid Wc.ste Disposal - Unknown
14. KUEHNE CHEMICAL CO., INC., Linden
No toxic: substances expected except chlorine
15. LINDEN CHLORINE PRODUCTS, INC., Linden
Potential emissions of chlorine and mercury
16. MERCK & CO., Linden
Air Emissions - Possibly analine and sodium thiocyanate
Water Discharges - See Table 11-8
Solid Waste Disposal - Hazard not defined
17. MILLMASTER ONYX CORP., Berkeley Heights
Limited data available. Potential for releases of organic solvents,
heavy metals and organic residues.
18. MONSANTO CO., Kenilworth
No toxic substance releases expected
19. PHELPS-DODGE COPPER, Elizabeth
Heavy metals, primarily Cu, released to municipal system with
potential for air emissions, direct surface discharge and solid^
waste residue.
-------
101
TABLE III-l (Continued)
SUMMARY OF POTENTIAL DISCHARGES OF TOXIC SUBSTANCES
FROM INDUSTRIES IN UNION COUNTY,-NEW JERSEY
20. POLYPLASTEX UNITED, Union
Potential toxic substance emissions from incineration of plastic
waste material.
21. PUBLIC SERVICE ELECTRIC & GAS, Linden
Potential for addition of heavy metal corrosion inhibitors and
algicides in cooling water. Heavy metal loads due to water source.
22. RHEEM MANUFACTURING CO., Linden
Potential emissions of paint and varnish solvents, solid waste disposal
of paint and varnish residue.
23. SCHERING - PLOUGH CORP., Union
Air Emissions - Potential solvent emissions from reactors including
chloroform and carbon tetrachloride
Water Discharges - Heavy metals and above solvents
Solid Waste Disposal - Solvents, heavy metal residues, toxic "off-spec"
& returned Pharmaceuticals
24. SCHERING-PLOUGH CORP., Kenilworth
Data on plant operations is limited. Potential toxic releases could
be similar to the Schering-Plough facility at Union (Item 23).
25. SINGER COMPANY, Elizabeth
Heavy metals discharged to municipal system and surface waters to
be discontinued. Heavy metals solid waste disposal problem.
26. SOLVENT RECOVERY SERVICE OF N.J., Linden
Air Emissions - A wide range of toxic solvents could potentially be
released depending on the solvents being processed.
Water Discharges - Potential for spills, cleanup and runoff to
carry toxic substances to surface waters.
Solid Waste Disposal - Ultimate disposal of still bottoms not defined.
Contaminants include heavy metals and other toxics
depending on what contaminants in solvents processed.
27. THE DISTILLER'S CO., LTD., Linden
No toxic substances expected
28. VOLCO BRASS & COPPER, Keniliworth
Potential heavy metal releases to air, water and solid waste
29. WILKINSON SWORD, INC., Berkeley Heights
Potential heavy metal releases wo water and solid waste
-------
102
TABLE III - 2
SUMMARY OF POTENTIAL DISCHARGES OF TOXIC SUBSTANCES FROM INDUSTRIES
IN MIDDLESEX COUNTY, NEW JERSEY
1. AIR PRODUCTS AND CHEMICALS, Woodbridge
No toxic problems probable
2. AMERADA HESS, Woodbridge
No toxic problems probable
3. AMERICAN CYANAMID CO., Woodbridge
Some potential for heavy metals and other toxics in
wastewater discharge but smaller operation (60 employees).
4. AMERICAN SMELTING AND REFINING CO., Perth Amboy
Air Emissions - Arsenic and Sulfur Dioxide
Water Discharges - As, Cr, Cu, Cd, Hg, Pb, Ni and Phenols - See
Table II-9
Solid Wastes - Heavy metals in metal hydroxides and slags
5. ASHLAND CHEMICAL CO., Fords
Information on plant operations was limited. Possible toxic
substances used in process include phenols, formaldehyde,
carbon monoxide, hydrogen cyanide, phenolic derivatives,
alkylated diphenyl amines (possible nitrosamines).
6. BIRD & SON, Perth Amboy
Air Emissions - Phenols
Water Discharges - Phenols, heavy metals
Solid Waste Disposal - None
7. CAPTIVE PLASTICS, INC., Piscataway
No probable toxic emissions
8. CARTER WALLACE, INC., Cranbury
Air Emissions - Potential for toxic emissions small
Water Discharges - Minimal potential
Solid Waste Disposal - Wastewater treatment sludges and off-spec.
Pharmaceuticals to be landfilled could contain
substantial quantities of toxic substances
9. CHEESEBCROUGH -PONDS, Perth Amboy
Air Emissions - Possibly some toxic solvents
Water Discharges - Zn, zirconium, chlorophenols
Solid Waste Disposal - Still bottoms and "off-spec" materials
containing heavy metals
10. CHEVRON OIL CO., Perth Amboy
Air Emissions - NO , S02 and H^S
Water Discharges - See Table IT-9, trace amounts of organics
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103
TABLE III - 2
SUMMARY OF 'OTENTIAL DISCHARGES OF TOXIC SUBSTANCES FROM INDUSTRIES
IN MIDDLESEX COUNTY, NEW JERSEY
11. CITIES SERVICE - MAPICO, S. Brunswick
No toxics expected
12. CON/CHEM INC., Sayreville
Potential toxic substances include urethane and associated raw
materials - 1,4 butane diol and isocyanates
13. C P CHEMICALS, INC., Sewaren
Air Emissions - Limited potential for toxics
Water Discharges - See Table II-9. Also CN, Hg & Cd
Solid Waste Disposal - Filter cake contains heavy metals and organic
complexing agents.
14. CPS CHEMICAL CO., Old Bridge
Air Emissions - Hydrogen cyanide, chlorinated hydrocarbons
Water Discharges - Chlorinated hydrocarbons, possibly heavy metals
Solid Waste Disposal - Still bottoms contain hazardous materials
15. DELCO-REMY, New Brunswick
Air Emissions - Possibly Hg
Water Discharges - Cd, Pb, Sb and possibly Hg
Solid Waste Disposal - Metal hydroxides and faulty products
16. DESIGN AND MOLDING SERVICES, Piscataway
No potertial toxic emissions
17. DOW CHEMICAL, Cartaret
Freon 12! and methyl chloride vented to atmosphere
18. DU PONT - Fabrics and Finishes Plant, Par!in
Air Emissions - Possible solvent emissions
Water Discharges - Process wastes reportedly not discharged by
finishes operations - If discharge occurs, could
contain heavy metals.
Solid Waste Disposal - Heavy metals and solvents present in solid
waste from finishes operation.
19. DU PONT - Photo Products Division, Par!in
Air Emissions - trichloroethane, trichloroethylene, chloroform
Water Discharges - Same plus Ag and phenols
Solid Waste Disposal - All of these may be present in a more concentrated
form.
20. FMC CORP. - Inorganic Chemicals Div., Cartaret
Potential hydrogen sulfide emissions to air and water
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104
TABLE III - 2
SUMMARY OF POTENTIAL DISCHARGES OF TOXIC SUBSTANCES FROM INDUSTRIES
IN MIDDLESEX COUNTY, NEW JERSEY
21. FMC CORP., Plainsboro
See Table 11-9
22. F.EDDERS CORP., Edison
Air and water discharges of trichloroethylene and fluorocarbons.
Paint residue in solid water disposal.
23. FORD MOTOR CO., Metuchen
Air Emissions - Hydrocarbon solvents
Wter Discharges - Zn, Cr, CN, phenols, hydrocarbons
Solid Waste - Metal hydroxide sludges and paint residues
24. GULTON INDUSTRIES, INC., Metuchen
Air Emissions - Degreaser solvents
Water Discharges - Heavy metals
Solid Waste Disposal - Heavy metals residues
25. HERCULES, INC., Parlin
Air Emissions - Nitric acid vapors and oxides of nitrogen,
carbon tetrachloride
Water Discharges - carbon tetrachloride
26. INMONT CHEMICALS, Middlesex
Air Emissions - Hydrocarbon solvents, heavy metal particulates
Water Discharges - Heavy metals including Pb and Cd, hydrocarbons
Solid Waste - Toxic paint residues
27. JERSEY CENTRAL POWER AND LIGHT, Sayreville
See Table II-9
28. JERSEY CENTRAL POWER AND LIGHT, S. Amboy
See Table II-9
29. KAISER ALUMINUM, Edison
Air Emissions - Possible toxics in hydrocarbons including phenols
and nitrosamines
Water Discharges - phenols
Solid Wastes - Possible toxics in ink and varnish residues
30. MOBIL CHEMICAL CO, Cartaret
No toxic problems at present
31. MOBIL CHEMICAL CO., Edison
Air Emissions - Possible toxic solvents
Water Discharges - Heavy metals
Solid Waste - Heavy metal residues
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105
TABLE III - 2
SUMMARY OF POTENTIAL DISCHARGES OF TOXIC SUBSTANCES FROM INDUSTRIES
IN MIDDLESEX COUNTY, NEW JERSEY
32. NATIONAL CAN CORP., Edison
Air emissions - Possible solvents and solder fumes
Water Discharges - Nil
Solid Waste - Solder residue (Pb) and vinyl resin
33. NATIONAL CAN CORP./CONSOLIDATED CORK, Piscataway
Air Emissions - Methyl ethyl ketone and other solvents, nitric acid fumes
Water Discharges - Nil
Solid Waste Disposal - Potential toxics in ink and finish residues.
34. NL INDUSTRIES - Titanium Pigments Div., Sayreville
Air Emissions - Toxics not a problem
Water Discharges - See Table II-9. Cd should be higher. Also will
have gross alpha radioactivity from thorium and
possibly Radium
Solid Wastes - Metal bearing sludges
35. PREMIUM PLASTICS, INC., Metuchen
Air Emissions - Potential emissions of PVC, polyethylene or polypropylene
36. PROCESS SYSTEMS, INC., Woodbridge
No toxic problems probable
37. PUBLIC SERVICE ELECTRIC AND GAS, Edison
No toxic problems
38. PUBLIC SERVICE ELECTRIC AND GAS, Sewaren
No toxic problems
39. REBEL ONE CORP., Old Bridge
Air Emissions - Hydrocarbons
40. REICHOLC CHEMICALS, INC., Carta.ret
Possible raw materials and products include C7-Cg alcohols,
napthalene, o-xylene, vanadium pentoxide, phtnalfc anhydride,
phenols, formaldehyde, cresol, benzene, acetone, toluene, phenolmethylol,
hexamethylene tetramine, ammonia, stearic acid, metal stearates, wax,
castor oil.
41. RHODIA, INC., New Brunswick
Air Emissions - Numerous potential toxics including formaldehyde,
coumarin, analine, cyanide, phosgene, cresols and
chlorinated phenols.
Water Discharges - Same compounds plus heavy metals
Solid Wastes - Solvent residues, heavy metals, off-spec product
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106
TABLE III - 2
SUMMARY OF POTENTIAL DISCHARGES OF TOXIC SUBSTANCES FROM INDUSTRIES
IN MIDDLESEX COUNTY, NEW JERSEY
42. TENNECO CHEMICALS, Fords
See Table II-9 for list of products and raw materials.
Toxic substances of concern include benzene, formaldehyde, phenol
and pesticides
43. TENNECO PLASTICS, Edison
Potential emissions of PVC
44. THE OKONITE CO., New Brunswick
Minor potential for Cu and other heavy metals
45. UNION CARBIDE CORP. - Chemicals and Plastics Div., Piscataway
See Table II-9 for list of possible toxic releases including
formaldehyde, phenols, styrene and polyethylene
46. UNION CARBIDE CORP., Woodbridge
Minor potential for toxic substances
47. UNION CARBIDE CORP., Perth Amboy
No toxic emissions
48. US GYPSUM CO., South Plainfield
Air Emissions - Hydrocarbons from coke
Water Discharges - Heavy metals and CN
Solid Waste - Heavy metals
49. U.S. METALS REFINING CO., Cartaret
Air Emissions - Possibly Hg, Zn, phenols and nitrosamines
Water Discharges - See Table II-9, Cd, Hg, CN, phenols, As, Sb, nitrosamines
Solid Waste - Metal sludges and slag
50. WARBERN PACKAGING INDUSTRIES, Woodbridge '
No toxic emissions probable.
51. WITCO CHEMICALS CO., Perth Amboy
Air Emissions - H-S, S02 & NO
Water Discharge - Methyf ethyf ketone peroxide, phthalic anhydride
52. W. R. GF.ACE & CO., Hatco Chemicals Div., Woodbridge
Potential releases of phthalic anhydride, naphthalene,
orthoxylene and vanadium pentoxide
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107
Eight of the major sources are in Union County and 14 in Middlesex
County (Table III-3). Linden has the most sources (5) followed by
Parlin with three and Elizabeth, Fords, New Brunswick and Perth Amboy
with two each. Single sources are at Cartaret, Old Bridge, Piscataway,
Sayreville, Sewaren and Union. Industry types include chemical and
petrochemical plants (14, some very large), two solvent recovery and
hazardous waste disposal plants, a large pharmaceutical plant, and five
primary and secondary metal operations.
Toxic substances released to the environment by the 22 major sources
include arsenic, cadmium, chrome, copper, cyanide, mercury, nickel,
zinc, phenols, pesticides, chlorinated hydrocarbons, benzene, chloroform,
carbon tetrachloride, formaldehyde and trichloroethylene.
POTENTIAL DISCHARGES FROM MUNICIPAL SOURCES
Four large municipal sewerage systems, three in Union County, serve
a majority of the industries and municipalities in the study area. All
of these treatment facilities provide only primary treatment or primary
with chemical additions. This level of treatment is inadequate to
remove many toxic substances found iri industria^ wastewaters. Thus,
industrial process wastewaters discharged to these municipal systems do
not receive adequate treatment.
Data on "ndustrial wastes discharged to municipal systems show that
substantial loads of heavy metals are received by the treatment plants
but essentially no current data are available to show.what the heavy
metal content is in the plant effluents. Two plants were recently required
to begin monitoring for two or three heavy metals in their effluents. There
are no data available on other toxic substances. The types of industries
known to discharge process wastes to municipal systems indicate a high
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108
Table III-3
MAJOR POTENTIAL INDUSTRIAL SOURCES OF TOXIC SUBSTANCES
Industry
City
SIC
UNION COUNTY
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
8.
Allied Chemical Corp.
American Cyan amid
Chemical Control Corp.
Du Pont
Exxon -Bayway Refinery
GAP Corp".
Schering-Plough Corp.
Solvents Recovery Service of NO
Elizabeth
Linden
Elizabeth
Linden
Linden
Linden
Union
Linden
2818, 2819
2818, 2819
2869
2818, 2819
2818, 2911
2812, 2815,
2819, 2843
2834
2811, 2818
MIDDLESEX COUNTY
9.
10.
11.
12.
13.
14.
15.
16.
17.
18.
19.
20.
21.
22.
American Smelting and Refining Co.
Ashland Chemical Co.
CP Chemicals, Inc.
CPS Chemical Co.
Del co Reny
DuPont-Fabrics & Finishes Plant
DuPont-Photo Products Div.
Hercules , Inc.
NL Industries
Rhodia, "nc.
Tenneco Chemicals
Union Carbide-Chemicals & Plastics
US Metals Refining Co.
Witco Chemicals Co.
Perth Amboy
Fords
Sewaren
Old Bridge
New Brunswick
Parlin
Par! in
Parlin
Sayreville
New Brunswick
Fords
Piscataway
Cartaret
Perth Amboy
3341
2818, 2821
2819, 4930
2869, 2899
3691
2851
2818, 2851, 3861
2823, 2892
2816, 2819
2818, 2834
2818
2818, 3569
3331, 3341
2869, 2952
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109
probability that other toxic substances are present in municipal effluents
in significant quantities.
Municipal treatment plants receive about 70 mgd of industrial
wastewater, mure than half of the industrial process wastewater discharged
to surface waters in the study area. This large flow suggests that even
at low concentrations, volumes of toxic substances discharged will be
substantial.
Based on the types of industrial wastewaters treated, it is probable
that municipal effluents would contain all of the substances listed
above for the 22 major industrial sources.
Sludge from the large municipal plants is barged for ocean disposal.
It is known to contain high levels of heavy metals, PCB's and other
toxic substances.
HAZARDOUS HASTE DISPOSAL
Essentially every toxic substance used or manufactured in the study
area could po-'sentially be present in solid, semi-solid (sludge) or
liquid wastes disposed of in landfills, storage'ponds or dumps. Air
emissions fron stored materials and from new disposal can contain many
toxic substances. Leachate can contaminate both surface and ground
water. Surface runoff from disposal areas also can contain toxics.
Solvent recovery, incineration and other recovery or destruction
activities potentially could release numerous toxic substances to the
atmosphere and waterways. Disposal of still bottoms, ashes and other
residual wastes is a source of concentrated toxic materials. Since many
of the hazardous wastes processed are from outside the study area, the
full range of potential toxic substances handled is unknown.
-------
no
Hazardous wastes barged to the ocean contain some of the most toxic
materials (such as pesticides) generated in the study area. Reduction
or cessation of ocean dumping would increase the potential for release
of toxic materials in the study area.
As increased levels of treatment are provided for municipal and
industrial wastewaters, larger volumes of sludges and liquid wastes
containing toxic substances will be generated. Disposal of these wastes
will also increase the potential for release of toxic substances.
-------
IV. SUMMARY AND CONCLUSIONS
Data summarized in this report were obtained solely from EPA sources,
primarily program files maintained by Region II. Additional data
are known to be available from State and local agency files and
other public and private sources but neither the time frame nor
scope of this study allowed for compilation of such data. Such
research would refine the data base but would require a doubling of
study resources without substantially improving the definition of
toxic substance related environmental problems.
An inventory of all known industrial facilities in the study area
was compiled from three lists: 1) the 1975 New Jersey Industrial
Inventory of all plants employing six or more persons, 2) a listing
of all facilities with active files in the NPDES water permit
program, and 3) a listing of all air pollution sources being monitored
for compliance with State Implementation Plan requirements. This
inventory listed 2,100 individual industrial plants with 1,100 of
these being in Union County. Only about 350 of these facilities
have NPDES permits for wastewater discharges and/or are tracked by
the air program. An additional 350 industrial facilities are
listed as major contributing industries discharging wastewaters to
municipal sewerage systems. EPA program files thus have records of
the existence of only one-third of the industrial facilities in the
area.
Difficulties encountered in preparing a complete inventory included
listing of facilities by different names in different files (i.e.,
a parent corporation name in one file and the division name in
another file), different or incomplete addresses for the same
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112
facility, and different SIC codes for the same facility because
different operations generated air and water discharges.
3. Less than one-third of industrial plants are considered to be
significant souces of water pollution and 10% are considered
significant sources of air pollution. As defined by air and water
program criteria, there are about 45 "major" water pollution sources
and 133 "major" air pollution sources. These classifications are
based on emissions and discharges of classical pollutants and are
not necessarily related to the magnitude of toxic substances released
to the environment.
4. A review of the SIC code and products for each facility in the
inventory indicated that about 480 plants were potential sources of
toxic substances. Only one-third of these were listed in NPDES and
air program files. It is estimated that nearly one-fourth of
industrial plants in the area are potential sources of toxic substances.
5. Eighty-one industrial facilities with NPDES permit files or air
program files were selected for detailed review. Field inspections
and/or compliance monitoring had been performed at 16 water pollution
sources and 41 air pollution sources. Quantitative data on the
levels of toxic substances in wastewater discharges were limited
and consisted primarily of heavy metals data submitted in 1971.
Current data were almost non-existent. Only 37 water permit holders
are required to monitor for any specific toxic substances and these
are primarily limited to chrome and zinc if used as corrosion
inhibitors or in water treatment. Quantitative data on toxic
substances in air emissions were almost non-existent. Some current
process, raw material and final product information was available.
A substantial increase in the number of parameters monitored would
be needed to accurately define point source contributions of toxic
substance:;.
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113
6. Fifty of the 81 plants were selected for review of available data
by industrial process experts. For some plants data were inadequate
to accurately predict if a toxic substance problem existed. For
other plants it was evident no toxic substance problem existed.
About ha'lf of the plants were found to be using or producing one or
more tox'ic substances that could be predicted to be potentially
present in air emissions, wastewater discharges or hazardous wastes
to be disposed of. Four large industries used or produced so many
toxic substances it was impractical to list all of them.
7. Twenty-two industrial plants were identified as being potential
major sources of toxic substances. Eight were in Union County and
14 in Middlesex County. These included 14 chemical and petrochemical
plants (some very large), two solvent recovery and hazardous waste
disposal plants, a large pharmaceutical plant and five primary and
secondary metals operations.
8. Toxic substances released to the environment by these 22 industries
included arsenic, cadmium, chrome, copper, cyanide, mercury, nickel,
zinc, phenols, pesticides, chlorinated hydrocarbons, benzene,
chloroform, carbon tetrachloride, formaldehyde, and trichloroethane.
9. There are four major municipal treatment facilities serving a
majority of the industries and municipalities in the study area.
These pUnts currently provide only primary treatment, some with
chemical additions. Of the 218 mgd of wastewater treated at municipal
facilities in the study area, 70 mgd is reportedly from industrial
sources. . This volume equals or exceeds the volume of industrial
process wastewaters treated and discharged directly to surface
waters by industrial plants. Data on pretreatment of industrial
wastes discharged to municipal systems are sketchy but indicate a
lack of adequate pre-treatment for toxic substances in most cases.
Thus, a majority of the industrial process wastewaters in the study
. area does not receive adequate treatment.
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114
10. Data on -;oxic substances in municipal effluents are very limited.
Two plam;s have recently been required to begin monitoring for two
or three toxic substances. Data on the 350 major contributing
industries show that at least 65 discharge substantial amounts of
toxic substances (especially heavy metals) to municipal sewerage
systems.
11. Disposal of hazardous solid, semi-solid (sludges) and concentrated
liquid wastes containing numerous toxic substances poses a special
problem in the study area. Ocean disposal is currently used for
sludge from the four large regional municipal wastewater treatment
plants. This sludge is known to be high in toxic substances including
heavy metals and PCB's. Several large industries also use ocean
disposal for substances such as concentrated pesticide wastes and
acid wastes. Reduction or cessation of ocean dumping would increase
the potential hazards in the study area from disposal of these
wastes.
12. More than one million tons of industrial wastes were generated in
the study area in 1973. About 74% of the 300,000 tons in Union
County were landfilled, about 19% were incinerated and 6% were
recovered. Only 15% of the Union County wastes were landfilled in
the County with the remainder exported to adjacent counties, primarily
Middlesex. Until closed recently, one large landfill in Middlesex
County was receiving 300,000 tons per year of hazardous wastes,
much of this from outside the study area. This and other landfills
pose a continuous potential source of toxic substances through air
emissions, surface runoff and leachate. The current disposal of
hazardous wastes formerly going to the closed landfill is unknown.
Also unknown are the volume and makeup of hazardous wastes stored
in landfills, open dumps and ponds at industrial sites.
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115
13. There are three firms in the study area that receive large volumes
of hazardous wastes from both inside and outside the study area and
provide solvent recovery, incineration and destruction services.
There are numerous other similar captive operations at industrial
plants. These activities are potential soruces of numerous toxic
substances through air and water emissions and through disposal of
waste residues.
14. As higher levels of waste treatment are implemented at both industrial
and municipal facilities, as more pretreatment is required for
industrial wastes discharged to municipal systems, and as additional
,air pollution controls are installed, the volume of hazardous
wastes requiring disposal in the study area will increase substantially.
15. Air quality in the study area is poor with ambient levels of sulfur
dioxides, hydrocarbons and suspended particulates not meeting air
quality standards. There is an almost complete lack of ambient air
data on toxic substances. Special monitoring in 1975 and 1976 was
performed at three stations near industrial sites and nine stations
near a large landfill receiving hazardous wastes. An average of
about 75 substances were identified at each site. Substances of
concern that were identified (some at high levels) included analine,
benzene, carbon tetrachloride, para- and ortho-dichlorobenzene and
1-chloro-2-bromomethane.
16. Large volumes of industrial and municipal wastewater are discharged
to the Arthur Kill, Raritan Bay, the lower Raritan River and reaches
of the Elizabeth and Rahway Rivers and Morses Creek with adverse
effects on water quality and aquatic life. The Arthur Kill and
Raritan Bay are most seriously affected. Although large amounts of
water quality data have been collected during the past 14 years at
more than 400 stations, only 50 stations reported any data on toxic
substances. These were primarily heavy metals and phenols with a
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116
few samples for PCB's, pesticides and chlorinated hydrocarbons.
Most data were from 1972 or earlier. The data were too sparse to
identify sources or trends. Special sampling at seven stations in
the Arthur Kill and Raritan Bay in 1976 identified the presence of
various organic substances including benzene, carbon tetrachloride,
chloroform, trichloroethane and trichloroethylene.
-------
APPENDICES
A HAZARDOUS WASTE DISPOSAL IN
MIDDLESEX COUNTY
B AIR QUALITY DATA
C SUMMARY OF WATER QUALITY DATA
IN THE STORET DATA SYSTEM
D SELECTED WATER QUALITY DATA
-------
APPENDIX A
HAZARDOUS WASTE DISPOSAL IN MIDDLESEX COUNTY
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- 9 - .
Industrial Solid Waste Sources and Quantities
In 1968, 578,000 tons of industrial-.solid waste were produced
in Middlesex County. This is approximately 13£ of New Jersey's
total industrial refuse .production for that year. '-' Present
estimates indicate the County's industrial'solid waste production ,
exceeds 680,000 tons per year - 18£ above the 1968 level.''-'
If industrial solid wastes brought into the County from adjacent
regions are included, total industrial refuse disposed of in the
County could exceed 750,000 tons per year. At present growth
rates industrial refuse disposal in the County could exceed
1,000,000 tons annually by 1985.
Some of the County's largest industrial waste producers
are listed in .Attachment *{ along with their estimates of
the types and quantities of waste they produced in 1973- These J.
twenty-two industries together produced 77,021 tons of solid
waste, 17,595 cubic yards of sludge and 1,718,350 gallons of
industrial liquid wastes in that year.(3)
The Middlesex County Sewage Authority's treatment facility
in Sayrevllle (the State's second largest such facility) produces
'325,000 tons of sewage sludge per year.^1' At present, this
sludge is disposed of by ocean dumping. By 1977 this primary
treatment facility will be upgraded and expanded from its present
size (78 HGD) to provide secondary treatment at a maximum capacity
of 100 MGD.('->) At maximum flow this facility will pro'duce
500,000 - 600,000 tons of sludge per year.(°' Total industrial
and municipal sludge production in Middlesex County may exceed
500,000 tons in 1975.
In addition to these solid and semi-solid industrial wastes,
an estimated 2,262,000 gallons of industrial liquids and septic
tank wastes were collected in the County in 1972.''' Nearly
800,000 gallons of these liquid wastes were disposed of at land-
fills in the County. The remaining 1.4 million gallons were
ocean dumped. . '
Eighty-five industrial firms and six municipalities in the
County have applied for effluent discharge permits under the _/
Federal Water Pollution Control Act of 1970. The composition
and total quantity of these industrial waste water discharges
have not been fully determined as yet. Rigorous enforcement of
this law, particularly those sections requiring the installation
of the "best practical methods" of waste water treatment by 1977
may result in large quantities of these liquid wastes being treated
and disposed of on land.
It should be noted that although these quantities are not
small, potentially larger but unknown quantities of industrial j
waste are disoosed of directly by their producer-, either at
on-slto landfills (there are five such facllitlos in the County)
or at numerous on-site storage areas and settling ponds; or those
-------
- 10 -
wastes arc Incinerated, recovered and recycled, or ocean dumped. '
As a result, the total quantity and composition of the County'::.
industrial waste stream is extremely difficult to measure, monitor
and manage
FOOTNOTES
(1) Bureau of Solid Waste Management, New Jersey Department of
Environmental Protection, Mew Jersey State Solid Waste
Management Plan. N.J.D.E.P., Trenton, N.J., 1970, p. 50.
(2) Middlesex County Solid Waste Management Program, Compre-
hensive Report Volume 1. Middlesex County Planning Board,
New Brunswick, N.J., 197^, pp. ''I-IB.
(3) Middlesex: County Solid Waste Management Programs, Industrial
Waste Management Survey (unpublished data for 1973).
(4) Middlesex County Sewage Authority, 16th Annual Report 1973.
Middlesex County Sewage Authority, New Brunswick, N.J., 19~73>
p. 9. *
(5) Ibid., p. 3.
(6) Middlesex County Planning Board staff estimates.
(7) Bureau of Solid Waste Management, New Jersey Department of
Environmental Protection, Collector-Hauler registration data
(unpublished), 1973.
(8) ML Industries (formerly Natural Lead, Inc.) presently dumps
7,700 tons, of acid wastes into the ocean daily from its
plant in Sayreville. EPA has ordered an end to this prac-
tice by 1977. The Home- News, Mew Brunswick, N.J., April '!,
-------
Hazardous Wastes
Potentially the most r-erlour, problem associated with in-
dustrial solid waste management .1 n Middlesex County is the pro-
duction, storage, transportation, treatment, and final disposal
of toxic or hazardous industrial residues. The U.S. Environmental
'Protection Agency in it's recent report to Congress on hazardous.
wastes report:'; that industrial process wastes are the principal ^
source of toxic and hazardous materials and that approximately
W% of the United States's total industrial solid waste, production
in 1970 consisted of such materials.^'
Applying this national ratio to Middlesex County and adjacent
regions, the quantity of hazardous wastes presently produced,
transported and disposed of in the County would exceed 75,000
tons per year. The County's large concentration of petrochemical,'-/'
primary metals, and .petroleum refining industries suggests that
the actual level of hazardous waste production In the County may
be substantially higher than this national average level.
The U.S.' Environmental Protection Agency has further iden-
tified thirteen industry groups as the primary producers of nearly /
^30 potentially hazardous waste constituents. (^) Middlesex
County presently contains over 200 firms in eight of these groups.
These industries employ over 35,500 people (approximately 35£ ,_/
of the County's total manufacturing employment) and produce over /'
380,000 tons of solid waste per year (approximately 56/' of the
County's total industrial waste production. These firms
produce over 20,000 tons of petroleum and paint residue, 82,800
tons of chemical wastes and nearly 13,500 tons of sludge. An
estimated. llO,881 tons of other unclassified solid wastes are also
produced by these firms (see Table 3 ).
The detailed composition of these wastes and the actual
amount of hazardous constituents have not been determined.
Specific production, storage, transportation, treatment, and ''
disposal methods used for these wastes are similarly unknown
beyond the individual producing firm. The present and potential
effects of these wastes on public health, occupational safety and
health, and environmental quality in Middlesex County have re-
ceived only limited research attention and remain largely unknown.
FOOTNOTES
(1) Office of Solid Waste Management Programs, U.S. Environ-
mental Protection Agency, Report to Congress on the. Dis-
posalof Hazardous Waster._. U.S. Government Printing Office,
Washington, D.C., 197^1, P- 3«
(2) Office of Solid Waste Management Programs, U.S. Environ-
mental Protection Agency, Memorandum from John P. Lehman,
Acting Director of Hazardous Waste Management Division to
Regional Solid Waste Management Representatives, dated
3 June 197'!, Appendix C (unpublished memorandum)..
-------
N'vs
-;dus trial Organic
.err.icals
_;bber ar.d Plastics
;ar.T.aceuticals
;ints and Allied
-oducts
^car.ic Chemicals
-;r. Pesticides
'.,.-?c. Chemicals
'ncluding explosives)
jtroleum Refining
-irr.ary Xetals
TOTAL
inary Survey from N'ew
mber
,rr(
32
52
11
20
12
7
16
5
37
202
Jer
and constituent productio
sne SteiJcer, Solid V.'sste
of Total
Employment
2,280
7,492
. 4,689
3,709
929
342
799
'1,764 . .
11,282
35,507
sey State Industrial
r>s estimates by Middl
G«ne ration Coefficien
SOLID WASTE PRODUCTION''- 1973(2;
Petroleum
Total Solid and Paint Waste /,^
Waste Hesidue Chemicals Sludge Other "*
(tons/yr.) (tons/yr.) (tonr./yr.) (tons/yr.) (tons/vr.)
69,614
49,550
'123,018
3,466
.* 3,023
2,309
6,495
4-3,911
82,210
383,700
Directory 1973
1,671
14,540
- '
-
362
143
1,794
1,730
20,240
esex County Planning Board'
ts: Monufacturinq Sector,
43,939 1,000
8,630 157
. 7,098 - 56,238
159
. -173
1,493 54 534
_
14,699. 8,820
6,608 ' 3.404 4.059
82,800 13,445 ' 40,831
.
staff using generation coefficients
Regional Science Research Institute,
sion #70, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, December 1973.
assified solid waste constituents other than v;ood, paper metal, glass, plastics, food
-------
- Ill -
Land Dic.r on a 1 of! n d u ;*. t r J a 1 S olid Wa's t e In M1. d d lesex County
- i " " .
Land disposal of industrial solid, semi-solid and la quid
waste are practiced at two commercial landfill Is, five private
industrial lar.dfills, and' numerous on-r-ite storage areas and
ponds throughout Middlesex County. The principal corr.r.ercinl
landfills permitted to accept industrial liquid and chemical
waste are the J.I.S. landfill in South. Brunsv:ick and the Kin-
Buc, Inc. landfill in Edison. (See Attachments 5 and 6)
The Kin-Etuc, Inc. landfill is by far the largest and most
important industrial waste disposal area in the County and in
central New Jersey. The facility accepts mixed municipal refuse,
normal commercial, institutional and industrial refuse, indus-
trial process waste and industrial liquids and chemicals from
five counties in central New Jersey and industrial wastes from
northern New Jersey, flew York, Connecticut and Pennsylvania.
In 1972 this landfill accepted 175,000 tons of solid, semi-solid
and liquid wastes. This site is presently receiving over 300,000
tons of waste per year.^'
In addition to conventional landfill operations, temporary
seepage pits are also used at the? Kin-Buc landfill for the
disposal of or'.ls, acids and industrial liquid wastes. The
seepage pits are made by excavating about 12-2^1 inches of the
existing fill and allowing deposited liquids to percolate into
the landfill. No other means of pre-treatment are presently
employed at this landfill.'
During the past five years, 12-15 major fires have occurred
iis facility. The most recent fir
in the death of an equipment operator.
at this facility. The most recent fire, in October 197*1, resulted
Although the Kin-Buc landfill includes a total area of 220
acres, active landfill operations(are presently confined'to a
30 acre parcel adjacent to the Rar.ltan River. The estimated
remaining life of this existing disposal site Is i_2 years.^'
This landfill also abutes marine tidal marsh of the Raritan
estuary and appears to overlay the northern extension of the
'Farrington Sands aquifer, which is.a major source of County ,/
groundwater. Specific occurrences of surface water from the
Kin-Buc landfill have recently been documented (see Attachment 7);
the possibility of present and future groundwater pollution must
also be considered a real and persistent possibility at this site.
The State Department of Environmorrtal Protection has recently
ordered the site operator to install monitoring wells at the
Kin-Buc facility to Identify and inonpure the extent of water
pollution caused by this operation.^)
-------
State regulations affecting the environmental aspc*cts of
. land f 13.1 design and operations prohibit:; any landfill in the-
State from accepting any pesticide, hazardous waste, chemical
waste, bulk liquids, or semi-liquids af^cr September 15, l()'f-.>
unless it includes a system for the interception, collection
and treatment of any and all loachate generated at thfso fa-
cilities.^^ At present no landfill in Middlesex County includes
a system., ,
Recent discussions with the staff of the- State Bureau of
Solid V.'aste Management (DEP) indicates that the Bureau intends
to extend this deadline, indefinitely because no acceptable
alternative disposal or treatment method has been determined
by the State. It appears highly likely, therefore, that no
specific pollution control requirements will be placed on
industrial waste disposal operations at the Kin-Buc and J.I.S.
landfills -within the near future.
i
The limited amount of State level research and planning
for non-landfill treatment and disposal methods completed to
date also suggests that the development of such alternatives
in Middlesex County may not occur until after 1980 or later.
Scientific, Inc.', the owner and operator of the Kin-Buc
landfill, has recently filed a new engineering design with.
the State Department. of Environmental Protection for the
development of a new Industrial solid waste disposal site ad-
jacent to the existing Kin-Buc landfill. If approved, this
new facility would be approximately twice as large as the
existing landfill, would be landfilled to a height of approxi-
mately 85-90 feet and would operate unti.l 1990 or later. The
daily operating capacity .of this site, including municipal and
industrial waste, could approach 1500-1800 tons per day by
1980. No environmental impact assessment has been prepared for
the -operation of this new landfill.
As previously noted the Middlesex County Solid V.'aste
Management Plan contains the following policy recommendations
on industrial and hazardous waste- disposal:
1. No hazardous waste, chemical wastes, bulk liquids or
semi-liquids or pesticides should be deposited in any
Middlesex County landfill after 31 December 1976.
2. The generators and collectors of the above wastes
should, in cooperation with the private solid waste
industry, v/ith the assistance of the County and State,
provide alternate processing and disposal facilities
prior to 31 December 1976.
3. All non-hazardous industrial wastes should bo inte-
grated into the County's processing, resource recovery
and disposal system.
-------
The State Department of Envircnmenual Protection has rv.--
y proposed revisions in the roles of the Bureau of So! hi
Vaste Hanagement regulating the land disposal of I'l.'1 chemical
and hazardous wastes.^' The proposed list of ha::ardour; i:\iter
Is container; In Attachment 0 and includes liquid arid so I.Li .:a
which are highly toxic, corrosive ,'explosive or cancei'-i^-uJuc
This initial list is based primarily on previous fedora] stud4, <>:.
.and will be revised from time to time as more information, or.
chemical wastes become available. °'
.-
The proposed rules would prohibit 'the disposal of these
.hazardous wastes at any landfills in the State unless such: fa- '
cilities have first installed systems for the safe and proper
handling, storage and disposal of these materials and received.
specific approval of the Department for each was.te material listed
Special exceptions to this proposed rule are also provided.
Persons who wish to dispose of these wastes in a landfill must
show the Department that alternative disposal methods are not
available and that potential Impacts on the environment will be
"minimized."
The Department olf Environmental Protection has also promul-
gated a rule delaying until further notice a regulation adopted
in June of 197^ requiring all disposal facilities that take any
chemical or hazardous waste to have a leachate collection and
treatment system.(9) This regulation was to become effective on
September 15, 1975- The principal reason for the delay is the
lack of facilities in Hew Jersey which meet this requirement.
These recent actions suggest an increasing need for the
early development of non-landfill alternatives for the treatment
and disposal of hazardous chemical and liquid wastes. Specific
treatment alternatives and management strategy for hazardous
wastes are presently under review as part of the Department's
Phase I Work 'Plan and will be presented in a future staff memo-
randum. This work plan is described in the sections that follow.
-------
- 17 -
FOOTKOTES
(1) From disposal site registration statement filed by the
site owncr/opo-rator v/ith the fiew Jersey Department of
Environmental Protection, Bureau of Solid Waste Management,
for
(2) Middlesex County Planning Board, M i dd 1 e s ex Co u n t y S o ] i d
W a s t e f-1 a n a re rr. e 111 _Pror.ram, Volume 2: Appendix. Middlesex
County P1 a n n i n g Board , New Brunsv;ick, N.J., 197*1, pp. B-^i^-V/.
(3) Office of Solid V.'aste Management Programs, U.S. Environ-
mental Protection Agency, Hazardous V'aste Disposal D.-.n'.an;e
Reports, EPA/530/SV.'-151. U.S. Government Printing Office,
.Washing'ton, D. C. , June 1975, p^ 6.
(^) Middlesex County Solid V.'aste Management Programs, Compre-
hensive Report: Vol_umo 1. Middlesex County Planning Board,
New Brunswick, N.J. , 1971!, p. '10-8.
₯
(5) New Jersey Department of Environmental Protection Order,
November 197'i.
(6) Nev; Jersey Department of Environmental Protect ion-, Rules
of the Bureau of Solid V.'aste Management, M.J. A.C. 7:20-1
et seg. effective July 1. 197'!, Section -2.6.4.*! as amended
on March 1*1, 1975.
(7) Hew Jersey Department of Environmental Protection, Nev;s
Release, September 17, 1975-
(8) Key federal studies include the follov;lng:
Office of Solid V.'aste Management Programs. Report to Congress;
disposal of hazardous wastes.. Environmental Protection
Agency Publication No. SW-115. Washington, D.C., U.S. Govern-
ment Printing Office, 197jl, 110 p.
Part 1910, Title 29 of the Code of Federal Regulations-
issued by the Federal Department of Labor.
(9) NJ DEP, News Release, p_n. cit. .
-------
Number
1 Citicr. Serv5.ce Research Center
Cranbury
Research and Development
Total Solid W*stc 4,160 (tons/year)
Liquid Waste 22,000 (gallons/year)
Total Sludge .\'R
Dilly Manufacturing Company
South Plainfield
Candleabra-die casting, vacuum plating an:I lacquering
Total Solid Waste 1,350 (tons/year)
Liquid Waste 3,000 (gallons/year)
Total Sludge NR
Dupont
Sayreville
Lacquers and Adnesives/Chernical Processing
Total Solid Waste 1,250 (tons/year)
Liquid Waste 281 (tons/year)
Total Sludge 433,033 (gallons/vear)
E.R. Squibb and Sons, Inc.
New Brunswick
P'na rruaceu t ic a 1 s
Total Solid Waste 4,000 (tons/year)
Liquid Waste 71,000 (gallons/year)
Total Sludge 1,010,000 (gallons/year)
FKC Corporation - Chemical Group
Plainsboro
Chemical and chemical by-products
Total Solid Waste 966 (tons/year)
Liquid Waste 9,600 (gallons/year)
Total Sludge 24,000 (gallons/year)
Ford Motor Company
Edison
Automotive Assembly
Total Solid Waste 20,436 '(tons/year)
Liquid Waste 96,000 (gallons/year)
Total Sludge 211,200 (gallons/year)
General Synarnics/Electro Synotnic
V.'oodbridge
Electric Motors
Total Solid Waste 1,404 (tons'/year)
Liquid Waste 2,000 (gallons/year)
Total Sludge MR
-------
I.B.M.
South Brunswick (Dayton)
Data Cards
Total Solid Waste 3,151 (tons/year)
Liquid Waste 30,COO (gallons/year)
Total Sludge NK
National Can Corporation '
Edison
Beer and Beverage Metal Con'.ainors
Total Solid V/asto 1,200 (tons/year)
Liquid Waste NR
Total Sludge 24,000 (gallons/year)
10 Natuar Corporation
Woodbridge
Manufactures electrical insulation
Total Solid Waste 810 (tons/year)
Liquid Waste 5,000 (ceillons/year)
Total Sludge 72,000 (gallons/year)
11 Oakite Products, Inc.
Metuchen ' '
Industrial cleaning compoundr.
Total Solid Waste 1,300 (tons/year)
Liquid Waste 52,000 (gallons/year)
Total Sludge NR
The Okonite Company
North Brunsv/ick
Insulated wire and cable
Total Solid Waste 2,500 (tons/year)
Liquid Waste 10,000 (gallons/year)
Total Sludce NR
Patterson Sargent Vita Var
New Brunsv.'ick
Paint manufacturing
Total Solid Waste 975 (tons/year)
Liquid Waste NR
Total Sludge 787,000 (gallons/year)
1'i Permucel
North Brunswick
Pressure sensitive tapes
Total Solid Waste 4,680 (tons/year)
Liquid Waste 5'10,000 (gallonr./ye,v.r)
Total Sludge Nit
-------
Reynolds Metal Company ' .
Woodbridgo .
Aluminum Ccin.i
Total Solid V/,ir.tf ?,0?0 ( ton-./year) "*
Liquid Wast.r V.O.non (gallons/year)
Total Sludvjf (cjnl l.cjnr./yo.'ir)
-'6 Rhodia, Inc. .
New Brunswick-
Cehmical manufacturing
Total Solid Waste 3,135 (tons/year)
Liquid Waste '«'*
Total Sludge 10,000 (gallons/year)
17 Shell Oil Company
Woodbridge
.Petroleum products distribution
Total Solid Waste 3,770 (tons/year)
Liquid Waste 234,000 (Gallons/year)
Total Sludge 26,000 (gallons/year)
IB Stauffer "Chemical Company, '.
Edison '.
Organic Intermediates (manufacturing)
Total Solid Waste 312 (tons/year)
Liquid Waste m*
Total Sludge 49,170 (gallons/year)
1!3 Tenneco Chemicals, Inc.
Woodbridge
Chlorinated aromatics and turpenes, formaldehyde, etc.
Total Solid Waste 2,166 (tons/year)
Liquid Waste 350,000,000 (gallons/year) (to Middlesex Coun^
, Sewage Authority)
Total Sludge 748,006 (gallons/year)
20 Union Carbide Corporation
Piscataway
Synthetic organic chemicals, resins - plastic compounds
Total Solid Waste 15,000 (tons/year)
Liquid Waste 10,000,000 (pounds/year) (6 million pounds inc
eroted on site, 4 mi
at Kin-Buc Inc.)
Total Sludge 100,000 (gallons/year)
21 Westinghouse Electric Corporation
Edison
Air conditioning, humidifiers, dehuniidifiers
Total Solid Waste 1,630 (tons/year)
Liquid Waste 11,000 (gallons/year)
Total Sludge 1,616 (gallons/year)
-------
15 Reynolds Metal Company
Wobdbridrje
Aluminum cans
Total Solid Waste 2,020 (tons/year)
Liquid W««;to 540,000 (gallons/year)
Total Sludge (gallons/yoar)
Hi Rhodia, Inc.
New Brunswick
Cehmical manufacturing
Total Solid Waste 3,135 (tons/year)
Liquid Waste NK
Total Sludge 18,000 (callons/year)
17 Shell Oil Company
Wcodbridce
Petroleum products distribution
Total Solid Waste 3,770 (tons/year)
Liquid Waste 234,000 (Gallons/year)
Total Sludge 26,000 (gallons/year)
18 Stauffer "Chemical Company*
Edison ',
Organic Intermediates (manufacturing)
Total Solid Waste 312 (tons/year)
Liquid Waste Ni*
Total Sludge 49,170 (gallons/year)
19 Tenneco Chemicals, Inc.
Woodbridge
Chlorinated arornatics and turpenes, formaldehyde, etc.
Total Solid Waste 2,166 (tons/year)
Liquid Waste 350,000,000 (gallons/year) (to Middlesex Count
Sewage Authority)
Total Sludge 748,006 (gallons/year)
* .
20 Union Carbide Corporation
Piscataway
Synthetic organic chemicals, resins - plastic compounds
Total Solid Waste 15,000 (tons/year)
Liquid Waste 10,000,000 (pounds/year) (6 million pounds inc
ernted on site, 4 mi!
at Kin-Hue Inc.)
Total Sludge 100,000 (gallons/year)
21 Westinghou.se Electric Corporation
Edison
Air conditioning, humidifiers, dehumidifiers
Total Solid Waste 1,630 (tons/year)
Liquid Waste 11,800 (gallons/year)
Total Sludge 1,G1G (gallons/yoar)
-------
Number
22 V.'itco Chemical Corporation
Perth Arnboy
Industrial chemicals and asphalts
Total Solid Waste 790 (tons/year)
Liquid Waste 5,000 (gallons/year)
Total Sludge 2,000 (gallons/year)
NR - None Reported
Total Selected Industries
Solid Waste 77,021 (tons/year)
Liqjid Waste 1,718,350 (gallons/year)
Sludge 3,554,080 (gallons/year) or
17,595 (cubic yards/year)
-------
;fe^:^ai.J.^
KAJOEl IHDUSTIIIAL V.'ASTB PRODUCES
wir)Di.Esir.x coiiin1* - 100+ EIPLO'^;-.- - 19/3
28 chemicals
29 petroleum
30 rubber i'c plastic
33 primary petals
35 nachlnery
(oxccp. elec.)
-------
^ahi«&^ i^^sVt^W»&i£l;^^
1-K TO71 T7iO'JS'''v\I '\L V'ASTFi F
HIDDLSSEX COMITY - 50-99 E^LOi'EES - L973
o 20 chemicals
D 29 pctrol.eurr.
3Q rubber ^ plastic
o 33 prirr.p.ry r; eta IE
-------
Facility
Type of
Treatment
Type of
Waste Accepted
Blackwocd Carbon Products
Little Gloucester Road
'Blackwood, NJ
(609) 227-8822
Browning Ferris Industries
Chemical Services Division
P.O. Drawer C
Pedricktown, NJ 08067
(609) 299-0835 ' '
'Chemical Contrsl Corp.
23 South Front Street
.Elizabeth, NJ
(201) 351-54GO
'Marisol, Inc.
125 Factory Lane
Oil Treatment
Chem-Fix
Lagoon
Incineration
Neutralization
Solvent Recovery
Solvent Recovery
Middle:
NJ 08846
Neutralization
; (201). -159-5100 -..-- '
Modern Transportation Co.
75 Jacobus Avenue
S. Kearny, NJ 07032
; (201) 589-0277
-Rollins. En viro.nrr.ental.. Serv. Inc. Incineration...
:TTO7"rBo:-rr-2-2-l'' -- T-- ---.-Neutralization -.----
Bridgeport, NJ 08014 Chemical Treatment
(609) 467-3100 Recovery
Scientific Chemical Processing
216 Paterson Plank Road Solvent Recovery
Carls tad t, l.'J 07072
Solvent Recovery Service
of New Jersey
Sylvan Sir root
iLinden, :.VJ 0703G
! (201) 925-2600
Solvent Recovery
Recycle v:aste oil to
obtain Grade 4 Industri
fuel oil
Liquid and semi-liquid
V7aste that can be cheir;-
"fixed -(Liq-V7a-Con Mstho
If approved by BSWM, th
wastes may then be land
filled at a designated
site; Facility should
operating in about 2 rno:
Various liquid and soli
chemicals, acids, solve
etc.
Liquid organic chemical
cleaners, halogenated
hydrocarbons, oil waste
.for reclamation
Inorganic acids and
caustics
Industrial chemical v;as
limited explosives, poi
including: acids, caus
chlorinated and non-chl
inated organics, platir
and etchant solutions,
paint sludges, pesticid
cyanide, scrubber efflu;
etc. .
Solvents, paint, oils,
chlorinated hydrocarbon
acids, bases, slurries,
etc.
Chemical V.MS ten, solver
Specialize in dint.il i;: L
for recovery or solvcnL
-------
APPENDIX B
AIR QUALITY DATA
-------
CHEMICAL COMPOUND
AceUldchydo
Dichlorcr.cthar.o
Benzene nu"w\\»-> leosev
'Carbon totrachlcride
C_l!., isor.cr and trichlcro-
7 10
ethyl one
Bcnzaldchydc ajid phenol
Dincthyl nsphtlialcno isorr.crs
Dichlororcthaio
Chloroforn <>e^^-vN-^rlzxv-v
1,1,1-trichloroethane
Allyl acetate (tent.)
Hcxar.cthylcyclotrlsiloxsr.o
ar.d totrsclilcrocthyleao
m
CKIKinUC) ORGANIC VAPCJ'IS IDn:mnr.D IN AMBirXT AIR
CON'CnN'TRAtlON'
3
249,000
!
125,000
200,000
20,000
9,000
3,000.
SO;
IS,000 j.
30 !'
trace
t,
trace ;-
LOiy.TIO.V
fill, East Brunswick, NJ
Tovcr M-rina
'"
1.0'-:ilcs upwind frcn
Ki:i-buc SLF NJ Turnpike
(TM/3) .
*«*ovt W76
S/^PLIN'G DATE
»* 4 «
Inarch 26, 1976
REFERENCE
TiMe" 6
-------
'KIK-3UC.ORGAKIC VAPORS IDENTIFIED IN AK3IENT AIR
CHEMICAL COMPOUND
Dichloronethano
Chloroforc
1,1,1-trichlorocthano
Benzene
Phenol
Dichloror.cthana
Dicthyl ether
1,1,1-trichlorocthar.o
Carbon tctrachloxide
Tctrachlorocthliylcno
C-lorobcnzcnc
Phenol
Dincthyl naphthalene isosorr-
CON'CENTRATION
3
10
20,000.
SO
900
^8,000
15,000
33,000
40
trace
8,000
traco
^10,000
^20,000 .'
LOCATION
Kin Due, 1 nile upwind
Sa/reville, NJ (TM/4)
Kin Buc' near NJ Turnpike
(TP/5)
SAMPLING OATS
March 26, 1976
March 26, 1976
RTI Ouirterly
Report No.2
T-.:> \ t. 7
>ij*l-ii'
fable S
-------
CHEMICAL CCI-70UXD
Dichloror^thar.c
Chlorofota
1,1,1-trichlorccthane
Eentcne H^
Carbon Tctrachlcrido
Trichlorocthyler.3
Tolucno
o-chlorotolucne
I' I .
'>: \
- CONCF.M'TKATIOM.
: I
KIN-B'JC, CttCAN 1C VAPORS IDENTIFIED IN ORIENT AIR
iLOCATION 5A>
trace
Upwind from Kin Buc and
'. downwind £rcr>. Staffer
',; Chcniical Cor.pany (ST/S)
KG UA'iu
l>!arch 25, 1976
a
Vinyl ncthyl other
Dichlovoncthane
Dicxhyl ether
Vinyl isopropyl ether
Ch lore-Torn
DUsoprcpyl ether
1,2-dichloroothano
11\ ,l-trici\loroothano
5,000,000
1,250,000
30,000
13,000,000
26(i;,000
.57,000
500,000
On to's of ro'j.d in.
Xi^-Euc, Edison XJ CM/4)
March 25, 1976
Table 10
-------
KIN'-EL'C:, ORGAN'IC VAPORS inEMTIFIUD IN AMBIENT AIR
i CHEMICAL COMPOUND
Benzene
Dibro.TOncthano
l-chlcro-2-brc-oc thane
Tolutr.c
Totrachloroothylono
CONCENTRATION'
900,000 !
63,000
27,000
260,000
50,COO
142,000
LOCATION
SASPLIN'G DATE
On tco of round in
Kin-Sue, Edison, N'J (M/4) March 25, 1976
RHFERHN'CE
P.TI 0;:-rt2ily
Report .\'D. 2
Table 10 (cc:
ii
-------
PKCAMIC. VAPORS inr.NTiFinp IN AMBIENT AIR
D!L»',!CAL
COXCENTKATION
Ercrocthane
richloror.cthane
3-r.cthylpcntano and diothyl other
C!; 1 o ro for :.i
. fciisopropyl ether
Ethyl acetate
1 ,2-Jichlorccthano
1 ,1 ,1-trichlorocthano
Bcnicno '' ^~'-~>
Isopropyl acetate and
C7!!,6isor.cr;
Tricl'.lorocthylcnp
l-chloro-2-broroetliano
1 ,1 ,2-trlchlcroctr.anc
Toluene
. n-cctnnc
Chlorobcr.zctio
n-pr'opylbcnzcnc T( chlorotolueno
5 r.-cthyl toluene
1,000
375,000
.29,700,000
C^-alV.yi cyciohcxsr.e iso.-.or s
f.-r.cihyl styrcno 5 C,-alXyl bcn-
tcno I) C..H?2 isor.cr'' . ~69,COO,000 .
LOCATION'
0.25 r.iles downwind
from Kin-Euc Dur.p
SAILING DATE
torch 25, 1976
REFERENCE
F.coorc No. 2
Table 11
23/000 :. ' "
7-1 ,.000 ; "
17,000 . "
30,000 ' ' " .
20,000 . " .
35,000 ; . . "'. .
25,000 . ' "
1,550,000 ' . _ ».:
' 23,000 . . " :
93,000 " :
25,000 "
813,000 . "
17,000 ' .. " ;
2,600,000 ' '
15,000,000 ' "
50,000 '' ' "
it
ti
: "
tt
II
tt
tl
It
It
II
II
II
' "
.
' "
' "
li
II
tl
'
II
II
li
ll
II
'
11
= '
II
11
tt
11 Cesarir.uei r.
-------
KIK-B'JC, ORGANIC VAPOIIS IDENTIFIED IN AMBIENT AIR
CHEMICAL COJ-TCUND
C10!!16 iso"-cr * Cl.l!!22 lso=er
5 C.alkyl benzene isoncr
p-r.ethyl naohthalcno
«L-r.ethyl naphthaleno
DichloroiMthane
TrJchloronothano (CSIC1-)
1,1,1-trlchloroothar.o
Benzene IN^-V
Cnrbon tctrachlorldo O
Toluene
Tetr^chlorocthylcr.a
ChloroUcr.zcne
1 ,1 ,2,2-tctrachlorocthano
BcnzalUchydc
/j -methyl r.aphthalcr.c
niphth^lcr.o
COXCENTPATION
12,S40,QOO
3,100,000
3,000,600
30,00
. 130
i'
10,000.
trace -|
i5o;ooo
60^000
. 4JOOO
2,000
56^000
trace.
trace,
LCCATICis
0.25 r.ilcs downwind from
Kin-Cue Dump (PL/1)
Jersey Central Power 5 Light
Co., 1.25 Triles dov,i\wind
fror..Kin-Suc Durro
SAWLIK'C DATE
Mzrch 25, 1976
n
n
. 11
n
"
RT! Q.-rtcrrly
Report Ni. 2
?.TI Quarterly
' Report No. 2",
Tab.le 12
-------
i
ilf./l Cv.crice ;'~
{ i'.:;hylen8 Chlorido
| tcr.rcr.o '.v-r-^
BnLI.E.KVjOKCANIC VAPORS IDHNTIFIED IN' AM3IENT MR
^"\
CONCENTRATION
' 2 - 4,000 '
~ 9,800 ;
8,700 i
-^400,000 - ;
^ 76,000 .
LOCATION i SAMPLING DAT!
Location B?lle/,f/-3 12/1/75
(Scs Table 14, Pc.2e 44)
n n
;T it
il n.
it ' . . it
REPEKIiXCE
RT! Quarterly
Rct>or* No. 2
Tcilc 15
n
n
n
-------
KCV/AR:-:, KJ, ORGANIC VAPORS ICJ-STIFIED i.v AMBIENT AIR
CHEMICAL COMPOU.VD
Vinyl acctcto
Chloroforta
2-butanone
Benzene
Methy -acr/lu
n-butyl ccctiito
r.-buiyl acrylato
CONCENTRATION'
57,000
37,000
200,000
300,000
4,545,000
113,000
17,000
LOCATION'
SAMPLING DATE
REFERENCE
60 yd c'.ovr.vincl from r.or.c rec
Ccicnesc Corp. near Newark,N.J. (possibly March 75)
.v!or:thly
Report' 11
K^y 76
-------
t
H
\"
\
\
\
Table
Cc-:r.;;ound
bcnz^c Ku.-,^j^^y;
n -butyl acetate
chloroaniliae
chloroboar-cip.e
chloroform c/'-Ac^v^-y.v^
dibronoethane c-<~v-.i^ (
1,2-die'r.loroethar.e --c^*-
c-ncthylnaphthalene
nitrobenzene
tetrachloroothylene t<-vc>
1 , 2 ,-t-tr ichlorobtnzcne
1,3, 5-trichlorobenzer.e
1,1,1-trichloro ethane
trichloroethylcne u^-.c/-v.
vir.yl chloride rw'.vx^c^
r.euhyl acrylate
v.-butyl acrylate
:: 1
i.1- i
i1 i
. CONCENTRATIONS OF; AMBIENT
IN THE NEW JERSEY: AREA ; "V
' !
>! i
Round
^ 9,000
ND
33
20,000
4,167
KD
^ trace
134
126
^trace
99
867
trace
,y^ trace
<rv.
trace
' ND
KD
trace
2,083
ND
trace
ND-
ND
trace
ND
ND
trace
trace
ND
KD
ND
2,270
ND
ND
trace
20,330
ND
ND
ND
ND
trace
.'.'u
ND
cvaca
J;D
ND
ND
ND
\ - '
*E.xact SQnipling locations are given in monthly report Ho. 9 and in final report.
-------
Table- 7. SAMPLING PROTOCOL
FOR CENTRAL AND. NORTHERN HEW JERSEY
. Slue Sampling
County/Municipality Location
Target
. T rt/»;i I--T"-
, ...
in /eartriage
Ktninrki
Passaie, r.'J/Pateraon 12 St. & t,th Ave. 150 Wa^araw K
4
39 0.300 3-22-76, 3:2H-'i:U7 I'M
/;5&1', 25% rt-Jativc
humidity, clear, 'J0..52"
llj^. C!.!.vandals Co. Organic
Passaic, KJ/l'a:3saic First St. &
Ei;:ie>: St.
N.)/liobokon New County Rd.
U. S. Post
Office Depot
26 Jefferson St. :39
Pau«alc, NJ ' ...
South; Kearny, NJ 3'9
0.300 3-22-76, 5:.15-5:5'j I'M
'iU°l', 22% rttJativi.!
liismidity, cJtai:, 'J'-)..'j8"
llj-.. , Panra::otn Co . ,
vinyl shueL and r'!!!.
0.300 3-23-76, 32:23-1:02 I'M
5J°[', 17X rolafivo
hu!:!Jd:i.fy, cluar, 30.69"
!!:.;., South Kc-:irny ln-.!uw
trJa!. Co.'isp.l .':>:. Dyes.,
reuin:;, ciil ofO!jL-i:::i.:i!i.-iJ,
paint.';,
-------
table 7 (cont'd)
Site
CUUllLy/ MuiVxv.: j. £ u a. j. u y
Sair.pl.ini^
1 *+ *-. .\ *- I* »-. n
^^s^ t_ *.* h, j- v> 1 1.
Samiiling
| Target . Tiu^e - »
: 1 ,-./.<. i- T /~,o ! ^n.-ln^ rn / f^ ;vr f" T 1 H (' F-
: .' * ' *-*
Remarks
Essex, KJ/Newark Doreruu.s Ava,
l.'ici.i,:oi:d, NY/
now York City
Middlesex, NJ/
lid i^(JM
Ford a
CheJ.sea Rd. ac
infield Ave.
Mill Rd.
Moadov/ Ud.
ke
Linden, HJ
(Union Co.)
:Mill Ud,
Meadow Rd.
:'i'urrspik(i
38
37
0.300 3-23-76, 2:00-2:38 I'M
53°r, 207. relauivt.-
luii'.,ii!icy, t:J-;:ar, 30.65"
.Us.',., Ctlanosc Plastics
Co. , i>] as:; Ics .
0.300 3-23-76, 5:02-5:39 I'H -
5/i&F, '±'17. rc.iativu .
'lusmidity, clc-ai- 30.tVjJI
!l^r. , Tri.::;'iloy i'u. Ir,d:!-j-
trJa-1 Co;!iu !(.'::, O!:^..:^. i-.:
, dye's, L'^L; in:; .
0..300 3-25-76, 5:?:j-t:02 I'M
62ST, A5% r;:i:iLiv-L:
lit'.'.nui i.Ly , (J/!'.) i-li>i-a
30.14" ii;-, Sumffui-
Ciic:r.ical. Co . , c!,c;::l;:a.ls
0.300. . :3--2t'-V6, ^-.Is'J-'ii-'rj i'M
72" T, J-iZ ro.J.aLivu
...... humidity, cloar, 30.35".
Hg, Tei'.neco, vinyl fihcju
and film.
0.300 :>~2i)-7u, 5:34--6:.L(i I'M
huiftidiuy, clt^r, 30.32"
1!;.;, American Cy:;iia:;iid
Organic Chu!;ij.c.:ls
-------
19
particular case, the methodology of the quantitat.i.::: of ambient air
samples had not bee:: completely defined. The use .. i: external standards
was not included in :his particular case. The qu,;:-.cities of each of the
.constituents were nc:: determined in this sample, ;:,'vever the relative
amounts coulc be ascertained. Table 4 also depict organic vapors which
were identified near the Union Carbide Plant in South Charleston, W.
This particular location was near a U. S. Public Health Service Dept.
located on 167 115th Avenue (see Table 1, Monthly Report No. 2). Many
of the compounds that were identified in the previous sample (Table 3),
are also seer.:, in this sample.
Table 5 lists the pollutants which were identified in ambient air
from St. Ann's, MO. The sampling protocol was given in Table 1 of
Monthly Report No. 3. The predominant composition consists of alkanes
and alkenes. . '..' .'.._-. "'.",.. ~ ':':."':V.V..-1. L'^--^:.".:^.!::...'.... _. . : .'
- ' "V..-> " : ' . -,'..:-v .-
Table- 6-12 lists the hazardous and other organic vapors which were
identified in ambient air taken near several industrial areas in the
central and northern New Jersey areas. Table 6 lists compounds which
were identified in ambient air near Tremley Point Industrial Area in
' / ' ' '
Staten Island, NY. Many oxygenated and halogenate.d compounds were
>
observed. This industrial complex synthesizes organic chemicals which
Include petroleum products, rubber, dyes and resins. In Hoboken, NJ,
sampling was conducted near South Kearney Industrial Complex which
%
produces dyes, resins, chlorobenzenes and other paiat- products. Several
halogenated compounds were identified in these samples.
In Passaic, NJ, sampling was conducted.near Pantasote Corp. This
company is responsible for the production of vinyl sheet and film.
Vinyl chloride and chloroethane was clearly identified in this sample.
-------
Table 6. ORGANIC VAPORS IDENTIFIED IX AMBIENT AIR NEAL\
TREMLEY POINT INDUSTRIAL AREA IN
STATEN ISLAND, NYa
Chroma tographic
Peak No.
1
2
3
5
6
7
8
9
.:. --10-:;. -.
11
12
13
v. . 14 v. ... ..
::r vu'~r.":
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
30
31
32
Elution Temperature
72
73
80
85
92
97
98
102
-.: --104-7-- -
106
108
111
... . ,,..112^ - '.
. ...... .... ..- .IIS..-,
117
122
126
127
129
131
134
137
140 :
142
.144
145
146
147
149
151
153
Compound
N2, 02
CO,
CC12F2 (Freon 12)
isobutane
acetaldehyde
CHFC12
CH3NH2 or CHCH2NH2 (tent.)
0,-H.. « isomer
-? JL«
CFC13~ (Freori II)
acetone
methyl n-propyl ether
CH9C1,
£ £ -
2.-raethyoxyethyl acetate . ...
dimethylbutane isomer -- -
2-pentanol (tent.)
C..HT , isomer
6 14
C^H. _ isomer
7 17
C6F6
C7H1, isomer
CHC13
C7F8
n-butyl acetate
2-chloroethyl acetate
1, 1, 1-trichloroethane
benzene
cci4
2 , 3-dimethylpentane
C.-IL- isoncr
6 12
C7H1<, isomer
t rime thy Ipentane
C^H, ., isomer
-------
31
Table 6 (cont'd)
Chroma tog raphic
Peak No.
33
33A
34
35
36
36A
.37
38
39
40
41
42
_
44
45
.46
47
48
49
50
51
51A
54
55
56
56A
56B
58
59
60
60A
El... : ion Temperature
(°C)
154
154
160
162
163
163
165
.166
168
170
172
174
'. :. ;-' "'.
178
186
188
190
193
195
196
201
201
208
212
214
214
214
220
222
223
.223
Cot:,;
i.-joamyl r. 1.
C?H , isc:..u.
C H- , isoiner
CftH o isorner
CqH _ isomer
CgH.. - isoiner
C10H?.. isomer
C H isomer
toluene
CnH. o isomer .
CgH16 isomer
C0H 0 isomer
O J.O
~hexamethylcyciotrisiloxane (3KG)
tetrachloroethylene
chlorobenzene
ethylbenzene
£-xylene
styrene
£-xylene ' .
CinH_-. isomer
isopropylbenzene
ri-decyl chloride
acetophenone
trimethylbenzene
n.-decane
trimethylbimzene
C ..H^. isomer
C10H22 fsomer
CUH20 isomer
CUHU iso,ac.r
C, ,H, , isomer
-------
32
Table 6 (cont'd)
Chroma top3rap:;iic
Peak No.
62
62A
63
64
.65
65A '
66
67
Elution Temperature
(°C)
227
227
228
230
231
231
238
240
Compound
C11H20 is0iner
C_-alkyl benzene
decamethyl cyclopentasilcxar.t
acetoxypropyltridecane (tent.)
C.-alkyl benzene
C11H20 isomer
C,,H.,,. Isomer
phenoxydiphenylether (tent.)
3See Table 7 in Monthly No. 9 for sampling protocol.
-------
Table 10. ORCAXi VAPORS IDENTIFIED IN AM3IEN'
T.. . HCO PLANT IN rORDS, NJa
Chrotna togr;-phic
Peak No.
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9 -"' -
10
11
12
13c
_14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
30
31
::'. : ion Temperature
rc)
60
62
68
72
77
81
88
90
94:-
98
100
101
1041
108 -.' . .
112
114
116
118
119
121
126
130
133
137
138
145
146
143
150
152
157
Co*.,- , -,.-.;
N2, O,
C02
CF2C12
isobutane
chloropropane (tent.)
acetaldehyde
isopentane
CC13F
' C5-H12 : -.
CH2C12
dimethylbutane
. diethyl ether
acetone .
methyipentane
trimethylpentane
perf luorobenzene
XJ n tl 1 /
7 14
CHC13
diethyl sulfide
perf luorotoluena
1, 1,1-trichloroethane
benzene
C-ll^ , isomer
7 16
C0H.. 0 isomer
8 18
C H, .. isomer
7 16
methylethyicyclopentane iso:ner
CQH 0 isoraor
8 18
C H10 isomcr
9 18
C0Hn - isomer
8 16
toluene
C0Hn , isoinor
-------
44
Table 10 (cont'ci)
Chrornatographic Elution .Ter.perature
Peak No. (CC) Compound
33
34
35
36
37
38
39
40-- -
41" ' ,
42
43
44
^6 .
47
48
49
50,
51
52
53
54
55
56
57
58
59
60
61
'62
63
159
161
165
169
172
173
178
.179
179
180
182
184
188
" " . 189""
190
191
193
197
200
202
206
207
208
209
211
211
213
214
215
217
218
nexar.iethylcyciotrisiloxane (:iK.G)
tetrachloroechylene
C H2Q isomer
chlorobenzene
ethylbenzene
xylene
cyclooctatetraene
- . xylene
C9H20 isomer
CQH?n isomer
ditolyl ether (?)
C,-alkyl benzene
V .CQH, r, isomer " -: -- - '.'' ...
"C--alkyl benzene ~-~'--~-~ -- --- ..-=..-.
octamethylcyclotetrasiloxane (BKG)
benzaldehyde
C,-alkyl benzene
C_-alkyl benzene
CpH-o isomer
dichlorobenzene
C,-alkyl benzene
C_-alkyl benzene
C,-alkyl benzene
CpH-_ isomer
C,-alkyl benzene
tolualdehyde
C2-alkyl styrene (tent.)
CT.H,.. isorr.er
11 24
methyl benzoate (tent.)
C;-alkyl benzene
dich.lorotoluene (tent.)
-------
Table 10 (cont'd)
Chronatographic
Peak No.
65
66
67
68
69
70
71
Mi ._ .on Temperature
(°C)
. 224
225
226
229
232
233
237
Com ; ..".)":
C^-alkyl
trimethyl- ..-.
silane
C,--alkyl btnz
C,0H0, isc~er
12 Zo
naphthalene
methyl methyl
C13H28 iS01r'er
. /.ylcthoxy-
er.e
benzoate
£See Table 7.in Monthly No. 9 for sampling protocol.
-------
The ^r.:;.!Ysis :,:: 5a:v.";er, collected near the Coianeso. Corp. ir. N ._./.::.:.
N'J rcvtaiiid the presence of several haiogonated compounds includir.^
methyl chloride, ethyl chloride, methyl brcmide as well as nuethyler.s
chloride, ci.rbon tetrachlcride and others. Also several ethers, es~or.-
and acrylatcs were identified. Quantitation of benzene indicated that a
level of 300 ug/n was present. The most intense component of this
3
sample was methyl acrylate which was determined to be 4,545 v;g/n . The
Celanese Corp. in Newark, NJ is primarily involved in the production of
plastic materials.
."'' '-'Sampling was also conducted.-near Inmont Co.,-the producers of dyes
and intermediates located in Paterson, NJ and the Givandan Corp., produ-
cer of many organic chemicals. The pollutants identified in these
. atabient' air samples are given in Tables ..-11 and 12. Again .vinyl chloride
was identified in a": sample "taken" near Givandan Corp. -Also present were
1,2-dichloroethane, 1,1,1-trichloroethane, methyl chloride as well as
other haloj^enated compounds. The concentration of 1,2-dichloroethane
reached a signficiant level (Table 11). The significant pollutants
listed in Table 12 are benzene, dibroiuomethane and dichloroethylene.
1,2-Dichloroethane, carbon tetrachloride and chloroform were also detec-
ted.
i
Several acrylates, aniline, pyridine, N-methylaniline, nitroben-
zene, chloraniline, o-naphthylamine, and 2-ethyl-quinoline were identi-
fied in air near American Cyanamid Corp. (Table 13). Ethers, acetates,
.ketones, alcohols and halogenated organics were also present.
Listed in Tables 14 and 15 are organic vapors which were identified
in atnbien: air at sampling sites in Torrance CA. Table 14 lists the
-------
53
Table 13. ORCANIC V, >RS IDENTIFIED IN AMH1ENT AIS :>.\.-Z .ED
NEAR A>£Ri::.. VfANAMID CORF., BCUMDBRCOK, NJ'1
Chrosatogrcphic £.!:::
Peak Xo.'D
1
2
3
3A
, 3B
4
" 5. .- .. ' ,.
." " '" g -''.'"" """.-' .....''?' ''
6A
6B
-'- . . #;>.. -.,-...-,, :^-- -.
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
ISA
16
17
18
18A
19
20
21
22
.-n Temperature
ro
63-4
68
74
75
76
80
86
87 - '''- --~:
90
91
92 ______
.Jo. v.; ~i~.
100
106
110
112
115
118
123
127
128
.130
:,32
133
134
.135
139
141
1A4
Corapc
difluordich. orcT^ -:hane
propane
1-butene
n-butane
2-butene
acetaldehyde
isopentane
"-".".-"chloroetHane and tr'Ichloro-" "~
f luormethane
furan
CrH.- isomer
_. ; ti=pentane
...-_, 'dichlororaethahe ; " .'.."". """
propanal
2-raethylpentane
ter-butanol and 3-methylpentane
hexaf luorooenzene and n-hexane
chloroforTn
perfluoro toluene
1,2-dichlorcethane and 1,1,1-
trichloroe thane
benzene
carbon tetirachloride
Cj^if, isomer and cyclohexane
t
isopropyl acetiata
trichloro'ethylene and n-heptane
ethyl aery lace
2, 2-dimethy 1-3-hexane
diisobutylone
dimathylcyc lohc-xant. isomer
CTH... iSOITi'Vl'
-------
Tr.Kj 13 (ccr.tM)
ironaccvtrnphic
Peak No.
23
24
25
26
26A
27
28
28AV- V . /.
29
30
30A
.3.1-..:. .:..-. -.-
332 ;.: ;-;-;::---;;.--
32A
33
34
. 3 4 A
. 34B
35
37
38
39
40
41
42
42A
43 -
43A
. 44
Eluliion Temperature
(°C)
145
148
150
153
155
156-7
158-60
: ' ,160 -. ' ':"'
165-8
169
168
. .; 171.. .. . .... ..
.'"/' .'-"i'721'.:.;.' .;.'"; .
173
175
176
177
178
181
185
187
188 '-- ;
189
191
194
197
198
199
200
Compound
rcethyl nethacryiate
dime thy Icy clohexnr.e isoraer
toluene
dimethylcyclohexane isoiner
C0Hn . isomer
o 14
n-octane
silane compound and tetra-
chloroethylene
2-hexanone ..../.:;..:: ...... .. : -.-...
chlorobenzene
ethyl benzene
pyridine (tent.)
. ._p_-xylene . _ . ., ^--.
.' dibutyl ether" " '" -----=----- -.==-.,=.=.-.-.-.. ,-, :.,i,=i.J=..=
C9H18 isomer
styrene
n-nonane and £-xylene
CgH18 isomer
C-H,, isomer
9 lo
isopropylbenzene
n-propylbenzene
ra-ethyl toluene
phenol
benzaldehyde
silane compound
1,2,4-trimethylbenzene and
tv-decane
aniline
m or p_-dichlorobenzene
^11^2A ^somer
1,2,3-trimethylbenzerc and
2~tr.ethyi--2~pentc:nul (Cent.)
-------
55
Tablo 13 (ccmt'd)
Chrc-.atographic
Peak No.
44A
45
45A
46
46A
47
_.,, ..47A ..._. .'.
"' -':"48. :-";:',: --.''.
48A
49
50
..:..-.; 51... .;.-.X.. .._._.
V ..52 -..-'.. -. -.".'."
53
54
56
57
58
59
60
Elluiii-- :: Temperature
,'°C)
?02
203
204
205
206 .
207
208
:::,: 'v;: 211 .;..:;:.'-.
212
214
217
.-,. .218 : .... - ..
':::." r:;:222.-:'":^:"'."'~'
227
229
233
240
240
240
240
Compc;;: :
C11H2Q isoi. .
o-dichloroben ..: .
sec-butylbe:i.,.^.nc:
m-diethylbenzene
N-methylaniline.
acetophenone
fluoranisolc (tent.)
.-nitrobenzene and. n-undecane ; . ... .
diraethylaniline isomer
C/-alkyl benzene isomer
chloroaniline isomer
silane compound
.._.C--H9/ .isomer.
12/4 - --.-,... - .
'1,3,5-trichlorobenzene
naphthalene
1,2,4-trichIorobenzene
a-naphthy lamina
B-methylnaphchalsne
a-methylnanhthalene
2-ethyl quino'iine
Air sampling was conducted downwind from American Cyanamu'd Corp.
^A 100 m glass SCOT coaled with OV-1Q1 stationary phaae programmed from
20-240°C @ 4°C/min was usad.
c'£xternal standard:; (200 ng each).
-------
APPENDIX C
SUMMARY OF WATER QUALITY DATA IN THE STORET DATA SYSTEM
-------
Middlesex iinc1 Union Counties New Jersey Toxics Survey
of STORET Data
Figure 1 displays the STORET ambient water sampling stations that
have reported toxics data. There are many other stations in the area
that report ot'.ier water quality data. The approximately 50 toxics
stations are located in four hydrological areas:
°0n the Raritan River and its tributaries
°In Raritan'Bay
0Along the Arthur Kill
°0n the Elizabeth, Passaic and Rahway Rivers
( emptying into Arthur Kill and Newark Bay)
In a prior analysis of STORET toxics data in the Pittsburgh area,
we divided the area into 7.5' cells (approximately 75 square miles)
and displayed the varying pollutant concentrations as different degrees
of shading in each cell. Lack of sufficient data precludes such an
approach in this analysis. Figure 2 shows a 7.5' grid imposed on the
study area. Only 11 cells have any data, and not all 11 have data .
for the saire parameters.
Table 1 presents the toxics measured in the area and the numbers
of observations and sampling-date ranges for each. It may seem that
for, say, chromium, the 180 samples could provide sufficient data for
a detailed analysis. On closer inspection of the data,however, of the
59 Cr observations in the Raritan system, 5 are Cr in sediment, 34 are
dissolved Cr, 7 are suspended Cr, 4 are hexavalent Cr and 9 are total
Cr. Of the 34 dissolved cliromium observations, 12 are at one site, and
7 and 6, respectively, are at two others, leaving the remaining 9 observa-
tions scattered among the rest of the stations. In Raritan Bay, where
all the chromium samples are total Cr, the sampling ended in 1972. In
the Arthur Kii.l, hexavalent chromium was measured in 1963 and total
chromium from 1970 to 1972 with no samples after 1972.
Despite l±ie differing sampling periods and varying measures of
contamination, Figures 3-8 present concentration data for 7 of the toxic
pollutants found in STORET (see Table 1) in the area. Included are
phenols, for which there were 766 observations, although very few after
1972, and several dissolved metals. BHC and PCBs are included to provide
some indication of the extent of pesticide and complex organics monitoring,
although there is almost no data.
Table 2 presents a summary of the effluent data in STORET in the
area.
Also attached are profile plots of a number of toxics in the Arthur
Kill, and contour maps of selected pollutants in Raritan Bay.
-------
Table 1.
Toxics Data Availability Surrmary, Middlesex and Union Counties NJ
Raritan R. & Tribs.
. No.
Ways
ubstance Reported
rsenic
eryllium '
laarrnum
"hrnrrniirn
:opper
^ead
iercury
;ickel
selenium
silver
'inc
vanide
-henols
-BCs
-Jdrin
)ieldrin
iHC
:hlordane
)DD, DDE, DDT
\ndrin
roxaphene
iCHLR, HCHLR-EP
.thion
'^alathion
^arathion
Oiazinon
!-Parathion
2, 4-D
2,4,5-T
Silvex
Trithion
M-Trithion .
4
1
4
5
4
4 -
4
3
3
2
4
1
1
1
2
2
2
2
6
2
1
4
No. Obs.
37
14
45
59
69
45
31
22
27
15
66
1
191
2
20 .
19
20
3
58
19
2
27
_
_
_
-
Date
Range
62-76
62-74
62-76
62-76
62-76
62-76
70-76
62-76 '
62-76
62-76
62-76
76
65-76
76
66-76
66-76
66-76
66-76
66-76
66-76
76
66-76
Elizabeth,
No. Ways
Reported
2
1
2
3
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
1
1
2
2
2
2
2
6
2
2
-4
1
1
1
1
1
1
. 1
1
1
1
Passaic, Rahway R.
NO.
Obs.
11
23
.27
29
28
46
6
26
6
24
30
4
57
9
15
15
15
9
45
15
7
22
7
7
7 .
7
7
10
10
10
7
7
Date
Range
70-76
'63-74
63-76
63-76
b3-7b
63-76
70-76
63-76
72-76
63-76
63-76
70-76
63-76
72-74
70-74
70-74
70-74
72-74
70-74
70-74
72-74
70-74
71-74
71-74
71-74
71-74 .
71-74
70-74
70-74
70-74
71-74
71-74
Raritan Bay
No. Ways No. Obs. Date
Reported Range
1 2 72
-
1 66 71-73
1 67 71-72
1 66 7173
1 38 71-73
1 61 71-73
1 60 71-73
-
1 59 71-73
-
1 24 64-72
-
-
-
.
-
'
-
-
- .
-.
''' -
*
\. -
-
- .
-' -
-
Arthur Kill
No . Ways
Reported
1
1
2
T
JL
1
1
1 '
. 1
1
1
1
1
3
1
2
NO.
Obs.
15
-
13
25
13
13
24
13
-
-
6
494
-
2
2
2
-
.4
2
- -
4
-
-
-
' -
-
-
-
-
-
Date
Range
72
70-73
63-72
70-73
70-73
71-73
70-73
72-73
63-72
69-70
69-70
69-70
69-70
69-70
69-70
Tot,
Ob=
65
37
151
180
176
142
122
121
33
39
161
5
766
11
37
36
37
12
107
36
9
53
7
7
7
7
7
10
10
10
7
7
-------
'Fable 2. Effluents in the Two-County Area
Middlesex and Union, New Jersey
Substance Dates Sampled No. Samples Mean Cone.(ug/1)
Arsenic 74-75 6 109
Barium 71-74 4 84
Beryllium 71-74 4 25
Cadmium. 71-74 5 114.
Chromium 71-75 8 94
Copper 71-75 8 . 392
Lead 71-74 5 142
Lead in Sediment 74. 3 33 rog/kg
Nickel 71-74 5 171
Silver 71-75 . 7 19
Zinc 71-74 5 . 456
Antimony 74 3 110
Phenols . 72-75 4 5600
.Mercury 71-75 8 25
Middlesex City Sewage Authority Influent sampled once in 1972 contained
30 ug/1 cadmium, 140 ug/1 chromium, 600 ug/1 copper, 430 ug/1 lead,
70 ug/1 nickel, 900 ug/1 zinc, 15,000 ug/1 phenols and 16 ug/1 mercury..
-------
-------
-------
-------
F/fi
SI
< /*
\ 4
o /v
0 1*1
-------
-w
O
-------
7V
-------
-------
p/£. B/ta-
37 orf5
-------
SYSTFN 12/23/76
o
i
o
o
2
A
P.
s
c
N
I
C
A
S
f
T
n
T
U
G
STATIONS
2.2CH+01
1 2
MULTIPLE STATION PLTT (MSP)
F".0>< 701109 TO 730328
10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19
1.30;»01
LOO^+Ol
7.0C=+00
STATIONS
RANGE
0?
PLOT NO. i
STATION'S
6.700+01
2
3
7
8
9
1 0
. 5.36E+01 I
2 0
3 2
4 7
5
6
7 C
8 - A
9 0
2 M
4.02S+01 I
2 U
3 M
5
6 C
7 D
8 ,
9 T
3 0
2.68E*01 T
2
3
^
5
6
7 U
8 G
9 /
4 L
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
5
3.00.T-02
STATIONS
05
RIGHT SIDE
R 85 PC1ILE
-------
STORcT SYSTEM 12/23/76
0
1
0
3
C
H
1
0
H
I
U
C
R
t
T
0
T
U
G
STATIONS
5.00^*01
1 2
MULTIPLE STATION PLHT (KSPI
FIOM 701109 TO 730328
10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19
(W
3.00H+01
STATIONS
. RANGE
PLOT NO. 2
STATIONS
1.5UE*02
2
3
5
6
7
8
9
5
i.oo-:-o2
STATIONS
0
i
o
4
2
C
0
P
P
E
C
U
t
T
0
T
U
G
CTFT SIDe
L 85 PCTILf
RIGHT SIDE
R 85 PCTILE
-------
STOP'T SYSTrK
STATIONS
7.705*02
12/23/76
O
O
O
O
MULTIPLE STATION PLOT IMSP>
PROM 701109 TO 730328
9 10 II 12 13 I* 15 16 17 18 19
t
1 6.161*02
L
E
A
n
p
B
*
T
0
T
U
G
2.505-02
STATIONS
RANGE
*l2
A 5 .6
8 9 10
12 13 U 15 16 17 18 19
1,
PLOT NO. 3
STATIONS
2
3
t,
5
6
7
8
9
1
2
3
3.60E*02
1.80E+02
5
6
7
8
9
3
]
2
3
4
5
6
7
B
9
9.01E«01
2
3
-------
0
I
0
9
2
I
I
N
C
Z
N
t
T
0
T
U
0
SYSTEM 12/23/76
STATIONS 1
MULTI°15 STATION PUT (MSP)
FROM 710603 TO 730328
9 10 11 12 13 1<* 15 1617 18 19
A
1.82S+02
1.805+02
STATION'S
RANGE
PLOT NO. ^
STATIONS
"3.00E-02
2
. 3
4
5
6
7
8
o
2.80f-02
2.600-02
1
2
3
*
5
6
7
8
9
2
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
3
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
2.40E-02
2.20E-02
2
3
A
5
6
7
8
9
5
2.003-02
STATIONS
0
1
1
5
2
T
I
T
A
N
1
U
M
T
I
f
T
0
T
U
G
SIDt
85 PCTILE
RIGHT SIDE
R 85 PCTlLfc
-------
SYSTEM 12/23/75
7
1
9
0
0
M
F.
a
C
U
R
Y
H
G
T
0
T
A
L
U
G
STATIONS
1.OOf+00
1 2
0.8^-01
7.68r-01
6.52!?-01
5.36?-01
2
3
4
5'
6
7
e
9
1
I
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
2
I
2
3
5
6
7
0
9
3
L
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
4
L-
2
3
5
6
7
8
9
5
A.205-01
STATIONS
RANGE
8 9
MULTIPLE STATIOM PLOT {MSPI
FRHM 710603 TO 730328
10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19
PLOT NJ. 5
STATIONS
1234
ucrT 5iSC
L 85 PCTILE
6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19
STATIONS
TM
I M
-------
STOPET SYSTcM 12/23/76
3
2
7
3
0
P
H
F
N
0
L
S
T
n
T
A
L
U
G
STATIONS
1. 72":*02
1 2
1.42E-»02
I.l2e*02
8.26^*01
5.28?»01
STATIONS
RANGE
MULTIPLE STATION PLOT (MSP)
FROM 630805 TO 720502
9 10 11 12 13 1^ 15 16 17 18 19
10 H 12 13 K 15 16 17 18 19
PLOT NO. 6
STATIONS
1.50E01
2
3.
t,
6
7
8
9
1
1.32E+01
3
2
2
3
t,
5
6
7
8
9
2
1.14E+01
Z
3
7
3
. 0
P
H
E
fj
0
L
S
9.606*00
8
9
3
c
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
Q
T
0
T
A
L
U
G
7.80E»00
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
5
6.006*00
STATIONS
ucn ji'JS
L 85 PCTILE
RIGHT SIDE
R 85 PCTiLE
-------
APPENDIX D
SELECTED WATER QUALITY DATA
-------
sly Unrecognized
Progress Report No. 3
Morch 1 te May 31,
EPA CONTRACT 68-01-3234
University of Illirtcij at Urbcoa -
INSTITUTE FOR ENVIRONMENTAL STUDIES
-------
ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY
OFFICE OF ENFORCEMENT
NATIONAL ENFORCEMENT INVESTIGATIONS CENTER
BUILDING 53, BOX 25227, DENVER FEDERAL CENTER
DENVER, COLORADO 80225
T° : Stan Coerr DATE: January 28, 1977
Office of Air1 Quality Planning & Standards
Research Tricingle Park, N. C.
FROM : chief, Technjcal Services Branch, NEIC
SUBJECT: & Middlesex Counties, N.J., Toxic Substances Data
Enclosed is my final report summarizing the toxic substances information
in EPA files on the subject geographic area. Most of this information
was in the draft copy you previously received or was covered verbally
at the January 11, 1977, Sub-Work Group meeting. A brief summary and
conclusions section begins on page 111.
I enjoyed working with you on this task and hope we will have a similar
opportunity again. If you have any questions, please contact me at
234-5306.
^
James R. Vincent
Enclosure
cc: Mr. Gallagher
Mr. Bliickman
-------
CONTENTS
I. IMTROOUCt'iOfl 1
Background and Objectives .............. 1
Organization . , 3
Progress Overview ..... 3
II. SITE SELECTION AND SAMPLE COLLECTION 5
Procedures. .,,...., 5
dross Analyses for Pollutants ....... 8
Future Puns 8
III. SA.MPLE PREPARATION 13
Methods and Procedures ............... 13
Future Plans .................... 22
IV. INORGANIC ANALYSIS : . . . . ... . . . 28
Spark Source Mass Spectral Analysis ....>-.' 28
X-i^y Fluorescence Analysis .... 30
Neutron Activation Analysis. . . . ^ . . 32
V. ORGANIC ANALYSIS . . . ; 34
Ide.ntiffiCiiticn of Organics "". "1" ." ..'"."." i ". '. . . 34
Quantitation and Gaa Chrcsr^togriiph Methbds Devolop^nt 35
VI. EVALUATlOfi OF DATA FROM THE CHICAGO AREA ........ 47
VI!, SUMMARY , , . 50
APPENDIX A: Results of de-nental Tnorgaafc Analyses . , 52
APPEflOIX B: Results of Organic Analyses ......... ; ?9
-------
. 1,. .lKT.Roniir,T.rn?j
This progress report for the period from March 1 to May 31, 1976,
suiwartzes the activities and accomplishments of a research project to detect
previously unrecognized pollutants in surface waters. The work Is Supported
by the U.. S. Environmental Protection Agency under Contract No. 68-01-3234.
The following information oh the background, objectives, and organization of
the project is repeated from the previous quarterly report for the reader's
convenience.
BACKGaOUMO AKO Q5JECTIVES
The heavy concentration of industry in selected areas of the United
States as well as the continued introduction of new industrial chemicals
have caused increasing concern about contaminants in our surface v/gters.
At the same tiri^e as waste discharges to our waterways have increased, we
hdve cone to rely more heavily on those water resources not only for indus*
trial but also for t^jnlcipal water supplies. Because seme constituents of
the waste discharges have proven to ba carcinogenic or toxic at trace levels,
it is vital to detect these contaminants wherever they may be present.
With the proliferation of such substances it is likely that some
potentially harmful pollutants in our surface waters have cane undetected.
The purpose of the present study is to undertake a sampling and analytical
survey to determine, insofar as possible, the identities and sejniquantftativo
concentrations of organic compounds and inorganic elements present in the
waterways around the industrial centers in the United States,
Approximately 2(30 water samples are being collected From fourteen
heavily industrialized river basins. These areas and the number of samples
to be taken from each are indicated in Figure 1. Each sawpie 1s analyzed
using state-of-the-art techniques for detecting trace contaminants.
-I-
-------
RARITA
RIVtft
ARTHUR 68
kiu
LOWER. SAY
HOHAWK
RIVER
HUDSGM
RIV^R
NEW YORK AREA
HUDSOJ! AREA-
Ffqun? 3.
SamoVd durfnc
-------
Sites Sampled During the Fifth FfeTd Trip
Sample Lfl
Wu:.'fcer Code
62
63
64
65'
66
67
63
69
70
71
1Z
73
74
75
76
77
78
79
80
81
82
83
84
85
86
87
.63
as
RRKRJ*
. A'tf 1
AKR12
Kater-way
Raritan Say
fcarltan Bay
Arthur :<111
Arthur K57T
i\\'2\ Arthur Kill
A.l'3S
Art hi:
" Kill
AKP-E. Arthur KU1
Station
Perth Anfcoy
Perth An'42'Oy
Perch Arnboy
Sevcaren
Tufts Point
T"£in)nry roliTrC
Porch £ lizoceth
M51R3 Newark Say Hc-.'jrarfc
H RUB 27
IIRVii
Hr;L;-i"13
HRI.B
HRPRU1
H R-r' R-I
KR.KP
HPC
HRfi
HRCIT
H3GF
H'P.T
HR:I
Mitt
K?..'i
PAP,
HAK
H2&JB
h'SPCC
HRE.'-3
Hudson
Hudson
HL-dacn
Hydsc-n
Ku-accn
Hudson
Hudson
Hudson
.H-jc'sc.1".
Hu-35-on
Hudson
Hudson
Huds.cn
f'Q.'lcv/k
JiDhawJ:
Passai'c
Hackees a*
h'u-dsion
Hudson
Hudson
.B:fver
Rfver
River
River
Rfv-er
R i v.jr
Tdver
Ri ver
P. i v cr
River
River
River
Rf '/er
Rfver
Ri ver
River
:k Rfver
River
River
River
Bayonne
X'arrcws
L-c^er Bay
Be&cor.
Poust-.keeps.ie
. Peug.'ikc-epsle
Kingston
Catskill
G'Jer.nant
Wats rfo rd
Thor'son
Gler.s- Fd)1s
Corinth
Sche^ectady
toterford
.Mouth
Mouth
Fort iee
PienTOnt
Ions
Latitude
40.29.12
40.29.46
40.30.44
4-0.33.05
40.
40.
40.
40.
40.
40.
40.
A J .
41.
41.
41.
32.
42.
42.
43!
43.
43.
4:2.
42,
40.
40.
40.
41,
M.
34.42
36. 1/
33.47
39.. 1 7
39\ 11
35.20
32. 10
30.13
44.05
44.GS
65.40
12.2:6
35.43
47.50
07.313
28..2Q
14.53
49.07
49.07
43.54
43.39
50.37
02.34
1G.51
Longitude Remark
74,14.21'
74.16.52-
74.15.34
7$. 75. CO
74. 13, CO
74. 12.03
74. 10.42
74. 08. -57
74.03.43
74,02.45
74.01.35
74.50.21
73.G6.35
73 . £6 . 1 5
73. 57.* 4
73.51.72
73.45.43
73.40.33
73.35.76
73.35.58
73.49.49
73,56.^9
73. 56. SO
74.07.04
74. OS. 57
73.53.03
73.53.43
73,59.03
mid channel; lew
mid channel; 1 cw
mid channel ; low
mid channe3; low
mid c^snnel;
nid channel ;
mid cihanftel ;
mid chdn«ei;
mid chdrinsl ;
mid ch5:inal ;
mid c h.an.o e ! ;
shore sample
shore s&nple
?ow
}CM
lew
lO-K1
1 o.-r
1 cw
1 ow
; lew
; low
slack
slack
slack
sle-ck
slack
slack
s 1 ac*
slack
slack
slack
slack
slack
slack
tide
fida
tide
tide
t. 1-d.*
tide
1 1 d-s
tide
tfc'o
tide
tide
tide
tide
finished wacer
shore sarr.pl e
shoi'G1 Siiffiple
shore sK*.ple
mid channel ;
rr:i'd channel \.
mic! char.nel ;
r.id chart n 1 ;
shore sao'clc
mid channel ;
rjiid chdnr.el;
rid channel ;
shore s&nple
shore s ample
shore' sample
; la-/
; lew
; low
non
non
nan
nm
; no P.
non
1
-------
TABU 5
Gros:; Analyses of Samples No. 62 Through 89
SasnpJe *£ * TurbidityCondyCtJv
Number ^JTj (JTU) ( i^o/or.;
62
63
64
65
66
67
63
69
70
71
72
73
74
75
76
77 '
78
79
80
81
82
83
84
85
86
87
83
89
30,4
31.1
31.6
32,0
29,6
5.3
64.4
22.5
28.2
28,5
2.6
4.2
6.2
73.2
13.5
3.5
6.7
5.1
6.7
22.5
14.2
26.4
17.6
31.6/11.9
37. 57 3.2
16.9/ 1.4
.32.7724.1.
14.87 0.1
6.7
6,, 8
6,,4
6,6
5.1
5,0
4,,8
7.5
7.1
8,1
2.7
18,9
35. .0
27.5
25,7
42.1
14.7
0.3
2.9
6.1
7.8
31.0
17.3
5.5
6-2
17.4
50.9
26.6
340
410
158
158
152
156
151
430
432
353
158
119
no
120
114
112
118
96
85
72
101
113
110
132
150
148
140
138
itv ,
!j(Ab-
7,39
7.12
6.90
7.02
6,81
7.20
7.14
7.03
5.21
5.50
7.33
7.58
7 .48
8.' 03
7.53
7.51
7.47
7.32
7,36
7.33
7.44
7.67
7.74
7.20
7.11
7,15
7.22
?.32
w«S'
0.041
0.045
0.045
0.030
0.025
0.031
0.024
0.032
0,046
0.030
0.015
0.076
0.128
0.543
0.107
0-162
0.053
0.015
0,020
0.028
0.028
0, 120
0.067
0.030
0.032
0.066
0.186
0,109
»$)
148
160
169
169
167
165
156
171
175
178
162
149
181
157
lag
189
192
187
183
197
197
193
193
209
205
390
407
380
*
SS
22
22
47
50
35
40
21
24
21
19
49
13
11
53
13
16
25
11
12
2
0
5
12
IS
1
10
15
5
**
vss
6
5
37
33
18
28
8
8
4
5
18
n
6
14
9
10
10
11
10
1 ,
0
0
7
13
0
4
3
0
SS = Suspended Solids
ir*
V5S = Volatile Suspended Solids
-j
-------
TABLE A13
Analyses by X-Ray Fluorescence
to/0
NO. 61
Ti
,Y
Cr
Mn
Fe
Ni
Cu
Zn
As
Sa
Hg
TI
Pb
Ti
V
Cr
Mn
Fe
Ni
Cu
Zn
As
Sc
H9
TI
Pb
APOC
pM 4
200 i 60
: SO
: 37
1270 t 130
_. * 15
< 15
100 ± 10
-- 10
< $
< 18
< 19
X 1 i-J
^ 1 0
Sample
APDC
PH 4
123 i 60
< 50
< 37
970 t )00
*
: 15
18 i Ti
65 i 1 1
< 20
: 20
< ?0
__ _$fhL^££_,
270 t 70
84 * 40
< 40
ISO t 2$
23(X) i 230
^ 15
: 15
__ 22 i 10
« 15
: 20
< 20
< 20
Ho. 63
SA-2, pH 2
< 85
< 50
< 37
360 >. 40
< Ts
< is
< 15
< 20
- 20
< 20
vJOI^V' ' u
APDC
pH 4
100 ± 60
< 50
< 37
590 t 60
< 15
< 15
28 t ia
-: 10
< 6
< 18
< 19
< 20
Sample
APDC
oi-i 4
< 85
: L>0
^ 37
590 ± hO
.20 -t >2
87 * 11
69 i 11
< ib
^ f>
. < IS
< 1<) ' '-
< 18
1 1 U c w £.
' SA-?, DM 2
< fi5
< F.n
< 37
159 - ?5
: 15
< IS
^ 14
: 10
< 18
< 19
< 18
Ho. 64
SA-?, oH 2
< 85
< 50
< 40
2SQ ± 25
-: !5
< fs
....._.. 15-
« 15
"TT3"~°^
- 20
< 20
-------
TASLE A3 continued
Sb
Te
I
Xe
Cs
B3
la
Ce
Pr
Hd
Sm
Gd
Tb
Oy
Ho
Er
T»
yt>
Lu
Hf
Ta
Re
Os
Jr
Pt
Au
Mg
Ti
Pb
Bi
Th
U
Composite XVII
(54, 55, 55, 57)
Q.8
_._.*
*:)
*---0.3
*-:{} J.
VN**X.«?«W9C
Con?pos!te XIX
(64, 65, 66, 67,
120
<20
*<5
-------
Si
Ar
K
Ca
$C
Ti
v
Cr
^
Fe
Co
Cu
Zn
As
Se
Br
Kr
Sr
Nb
Mo
Ru
Ag
Cd
In
Sn
ytta^^
TABLE A3
SSMS Analysts of Composite Samples
(wr/D
Composite XVII
(54, 55» 56, !>7)t
20jd
9QQ
goo
l.t500
3
200
IP
13
10
20
70
*-:Q.5
. 7
-------
APPENDIX A
Results of
Inorganic Analyses
by SSMS and XRF
Explanation of symb
< Detected but too. low for quantification; am
Indicated is equal to or more than the amount
actually present-
*< Unlit of detection.
i\ Present in background spectrum.
i. Error due- to counting statistics only; ail :5SM5
data without a syr.iboi have an error of */« ^
factor of three,
-------
-72-
TABLE A14
Inorganic Analyses by X-Ray Fluorescence
Sample Ho. 65
Tl
V
Ci-
Hn
Fe
Hi
Cu
As
Se
H9
Tl
pb
Ti
V
Cr
Mn
Fe
tii
Cu
Zn
As
Se
Hg
Tl
Pb
APQC
hH 4 !
< 85
_... jiL^O
< 37
935__t_95 ?'
27 * 12
- 19 i_U
no > n
<; 10
in * 4
< is
< 19
< )H
Sarrpl No. 67
APOC
pH 4 J
< 85
< 50
< 3?
i
800 A 80 2-
«: 15
x- 15
" n * n
< 10
"< 10
< IB
< 19
t IB
5A-2, DM ?
_^5Q__
-: 50
< 40
5(L£ 2f>
.< -IS
< 15
< ]S
< 15
< ?0
< 20
* go
< SO
< 50
< 40
?0 * ''5
< iS
< 55
< 16
< "1 ^\
< 10
< 20
< 20
< 20
APDC
Sample No, 65
-2, pH 2
< 85
-< 50
< 37
< 90
< 5U
T 40
630 t 65
30 ± 10
< is
90 i 10
< 10
3
-------
TABLE B126
Organic Compounds Identified in Sample ? 625
Peak 2
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
6
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
Relative
Retention
litre
0.864
0,935
1.000
1.002
1,187
U91
1.534
1.577
1.713
1.778
1.806
1.936
2.007
2,045
2.149
Volatile Compounds
Tetrahydrofuran
Dicntoroethane
Chloroform
1,2-DichlOroethane
l-Chlcro-2-(JrQnx)rrethanQ
1 ,1 y1-tr1chloroethane
Tri ch force thy ! ena
Benzehc
Hexane
bichloro-Sronxjethrxne
T r i b rorr.on'xi thane
4-HsthyI-2-£thyl-l ,3-Oioxolane
1 ,1 ,2,2-Tetrach iorocthane
Tefcrachloroethylerte
Toluene
Approximate
Uvel (PP8)
6
1
2
21
1
1
1
2
2
<1
<1
<1
<\
1
1
-------
-142-
TABLE &127
Organic Compounds Identified In Sample I 63S
Peak *
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
Relative
Retention
Tfrs
0,435
0.872
0.955
1.000
1.075
1.181
1.369
1.506
1.548
1.66!
1,741
1,773
1.895
1.970
2.007
2.103'
Approximate
Volatile Compounds Level (PP3)
blchlorcrcethane <1
Tetra'hydrofuran 3
Dichloroii-e theme 1
Chloroform 3
1,2-Oichloroc- thane 12
i»l»l-Trichtorcethane .1
Broffio-Chloroethane <1
Trkhloroothylene 2
Benzene ...
-------
TABLE
Organic Compounds Identified in Sample #64$
HA 1
1
z
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
Relatiw.
Retention
Time
0.83?
1.000
1.081
1,183
1.365
1.512
1.555
1.669
1.754
1,781
1.910
1,986
2.02
2.126
Volatile Compounds
Tetrahydrofuran
Chloroform
1,2-01 chlcrqe thane
1 .1 »l-Trichloroe thane
Brorao-QichlbroetharKi
Trfchloroethylene
Benzene
1 *Chloro-2-8rQ.T0prQpj»ne
Bromo-Dichloroethylene
THbromoir^thane
Ethyl -Ho thy 1 Oioxolanft
1,1,2,2'Tctirachloroetliane
Tetrachloroethylene
Toitfsne
u5SX(wat
9
5
16
*' 1
-------
TABU &129
Organic Co-pounds Identified in Sample f 6SS
Peak ?
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
Relative
Retention
TI.TS
0.456
0.535
0.741
0.876
0.957
1.000
1.086
1.193
1.231
1.243
1.302
1.382
1-431
1,522
1.560
1.679^
. 1,792
1.921'
1.991
2,023
2.131
Volatile Compounds
Of chlorarns thane
Acetone
pimgthoxysrfi thane
Yetrahydrofuran
1,2-bichlQfoethylene
Chloroform
1.2-Dichlorce thane
1 ,1 J-Trichloroethane
Carbon 7e trichloride
btoxane
Bronxi-Oi chlorowtlianc
DrOnxichloroe than?
Ii2-Dichloro{jroparw
Trichloroethylene
Benzena
1 -8 romo-2-Chl oropropsne
Tribroifioisfi thane
Ethyl-Hethyl Dioxolane
1,1 ,2,2-Tetrachloroathane
Tetrachlorocthylenc
Toluene
Level (P?3)
1
1
1
30
5
io
is
2
<1
<1
<1
<1
<1
6
<1
<1
1
4
<1
' 3
<1
f
«
-------
-U5-
TABLE B130
Organic Compounds Identified in SafapU
Peak ?
l
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
i H
- is
16
Relative
Retention
0.451
0.877
0.957
l.OOG '
1.035
1.186
1,240
1.410
1,506
,: 1.544
1.65$
1.773
.1.895
1.970
2.C07
2.108
Volatile Confounds
Qi chl orofi',0 tha ne
Tetrahycrofursn
1,2-Dfehloraethylenc
Chloroform
l.2-D|ch1on« thane
1»l,T'Trf'chloroe thgne
Dioxang
1,2-DichlQ^propdne
Tir i chl oroethy I erie
Benzens
1 « Chl oro-2-Bror^ propane
Tf i b rorrcrrs? th ane
Ethyl -Methyl Dioxolane
1 ,1 ,Z,2-Tetrach1oroeth3ne
Tetrachlor^etliylcna
Toluene
Level (PP3)
i
30
4
7
17
: ' ' i - '
1
1
:. 4 ,
:'" '.
-------
-147-
Organic
TABLE'B132
di Identified in Sample I 68$
Peak I
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
Relative
Retention
Tims
6.433
CL88T
0.951
1.00Q
1.G3S
1,183
1.512
1.748
1.78)
1.905
1.975
2.002
2.056
2.173
Appro jcicy^e
Volatile Compounds Level (??3)
Oichlorontothdne
TetrshycJrofuran
V.2-Dlchlon3ethylenc
Chloroform
)f2-Dkhlordetha-nc
1,1,1-Trlchlorbethane
TH ch 1 o ro e thy 1 en e
'Brosno-Oichloroothylene
TribrOfSoste thane :
Me thy 1 - E thy 1 D i o xol a no
1,1,2,2-Tetrachlorosthane
Tetrachloroethylcrse
Otchlprobenxsne IsoiTiCit*
Dichlornfaenzene Isoft^i*
1
2
2
1
2
1
4
<1
<1 :
<1
<1
3
<1
<1
------- |