2004  Demonstration  Project
 Butterworth   Landfill:

Grand  Rapids,  Michigan

THE SITE:  Located near the center of Grand Rapids, Michigan, the
Butterworth Landfill Superfund site occupies 120 acres along the Grand
River. Beginning in 1950, the landfill operated first as an open dump and
later as a sanitary landfill, leading to the contamination of both ground
water and soils. Approximately 1,300 people live within a mile of the
site.

THE OPPORTUNITY: In 2002, the  City of Grand Rapids began to
discuss possible future uses of the Butterworth Landfill  site. The City
of Grand Rapids approached EPA to inquire about what must be done to
extend an existing bike trail onto the southern portion of the site. At EPAs
request, the City performed a risk assessment to evaluate risks at the site
post-remedy implementation. EPA also approached the City with an offer
to participate in the Return to Use Initiative, a collaborative local and
Agency effort to usher cleaned-up Superfund sites into reuse. Together,
EPA and the City of Grand Rapids determined that there were manageable
barriers  that  would hinder the recreational reuse  of the Butterworth
Landfill.

THE BARRIER: Once  construction of the 2001 site remedy  was
completed, the fenced 120 acres remained unused by the nearby residents.
Before reuse  could move forward EPA needed assurance that any future
users would not negatively impact the remedy and that the remedy would
be protective  for future recreational use.

THE SOLUTION: The City completed a risk assessment in July 2003
and submitted it to EPA for approval. On November 12, 2004, EPA made a
national announcement to commemorate the Return to Use Initiative and
community involvement at the Butterworth Landfill (pictured at right and
below). At the announcement, then-Superfund Director Michael B. Cook
and Grand Rapids Mayor George Heartwell endorsed the Initiative and
the activities  at Butterworth Landfill and rode bicycles on the landfill's
former utility road as a demonstration of what the landfill's future will
hold. The City of Grand Rapids Master Plan includes a bike route that
will connect  with existing roads on the Butterworth Landfill site. With
EPAs approval, City  of Grand Rapids officials plan to open the site to
allow pedestrian and bicycle use. This is still planned but it has not yet
been implemented.
                              Barriers: Perimeter fence
                              restricting access; uncertainty
                              about what future uses were
                              appropriate on what areas of the
                              site

                              Solution: Evaluating and
                              implementing potential future
                              uses; install gates in perimeter
                              fence; qualitative risk assessment
                              approved by EPA; enhanced
                              stakeholder and community
                              involvement process
                              Before: Cleaned-up landfill, ready
                              for reuse; 120 acres of vacant,
                              riverfront land surrounded by a
                              fence

                              After: Extension of existing bike
                              trail to go through the site and
                              other recreational uses
           United State
           Environmental Protects
          . Agency
Superfund Redevelopment Initiative
                                                                                 updated July 2009

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                                                THE PARK: EPA Region 5 is working with the City as it
                                                performs an enhanced stakeholder process at the Butterworth
                                                Landfill. EPA's participation in the process will  ensure that
                                                the reuse activities  do not interfere with  the  remedy  or
                                                damage the landfill's vegetative cap. Public meetings were
                                                held in 2005 to  help develop conceptual designs for the
                                                site and gather feedback. Several  recreational groups  have
                                                expressed interest in using the site for recreational purposes.
                                                Department of Parks and Recreation officials expect that the
                                                Butterworth  Landfill recreation area will complement the
                                                nearby Millennium Park.  Recently, EPA Region 5 provided
                                                resources to revise  the site's conceptual reuse plan and
                                                continues to work with the city to evaluate appropriate reuse
                                                options. A new bike trail extension, which will allow bikers
                                                access to the site and its paths, is scheduled to be constructed
                                                in 2009.
                                                FOR  MORE   INFORMATION,   CONTACT:  Dion
                                                Novak, Remedial Project Manager, at (312) 886-4737 or
                                                novak.dion@epa.gov; or Tom Bloom, Region 5 Superfund
                                                Redevelopment Coordinator, at (312) 886-1967 or
                                                bloom.thomas@epa.gov.
Top to Bottom: Superfund Director Michael B. Cook (far left) announces the Return to Use Initiative at the Butterworth Landfill in
November 2004, joined by George Heartwell (second from left), Mayor of Grand Rapids, and Jay Steffen (far right), Director of
Parks and Recreation in the City of Grand Rapids; paved path to be used by bicyclists and pedestrians; view of the Grand River
from the site.
           United State,
           Environmental Protection   Superfund  Redevelopment Initiative
                                                                                          updated July 2009

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