Apologetic EPA seeks to reassure Superfund community

EPA apologizes at Ringwood meeting

EPA project manager Joe Gowers speaks in front of Ringwood residents at a meeting
on Tuesday, March 1, 2016. – Record photo by Marko Georgiev


Federal environmental officials apologized to Ringwood, NJ residents Tuesday night for not divulging sooner the discovery of another dangerous chemical at the Superfund site where Ford Motor Co. dumped paint sludge decades ago, but they maintained it poses no imminent health threat.

The Record’s Scott Fallon reports:

At a tense meeting attended by almost 200 people — so many they couldn’t all fit in the room at Borough Hall — Environmental Protection Agency officials admitted they should not have waited three months to inform the community of the presence of the chemical, 1,4-dioxane, at concentrations in groundwater almost 100 times the state standard.
EPA project manager Joe Gowers speaks in front of Ringwood residents at a meeting on Tuesday, March 1, 2016.

MARKO GEORGIEV/STAFF PHOTOGRAPHER
Ramapough Chief Dwaine Perry argues with EPA project manager Joe Gowers at a meeting in Ringwood on Tuesday, March 1, 2016.

But EPA officials said it was unlikely that the chemical’s discovery would halt a controversial plan that would leave hundreds of thousands of tons of contamination under a protective barrier rather than having it dug out and removed, as several community members pushed for Tuesday night.


“The data doesn’t indicate that it needs to be changed,” said Joe Gowers, the EPA project manager for the site.

He said work on the barrier may begin as early as next year. The agency is still developing a cleanup plan for the contaminated groundwater flowing under the site, but residents said it was premature to install the barrier before that was done.



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Indicted natural gas exec dies in fiery auto crash into wall

Aubrey McClendon

** Updated to add related stories**

Former Chesapeake Energy CEO Aubrey McClendon has died in a car crash.

It took place around 9 a.m. March 2 in Oklahoma and, according to officials, the car was going very fast.
“Speed was definitely a factor in the fatality,” Oklahoma City officials said in a press conference. “He pretty much drove straight into the wall.”
On Tuesday, McClendon, 56, was indicted on conspiracy to rig bids for oil and natural-gas leases. He and other companies allegedly colluded to figure out who would win the bids.

The car wreckage from the accident that killed former Chesapeake Energy CEO Aubrey McClendon in Oklahoma City on March 2nd, 2016.

Source: KFOR | NBC
The car wreckage from the accident that killed former Chesapeake Energy CEO Aubrey McClendon in Oklahoma City on March 2nd, 2016.

Related stories:
Ex-Chesapeake Energy CEO Aubrey McClendon dies
McClendon crashed traveling at ‘high rate of speed’
 



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Enviro, Energy and Ag bills set for action in Trenton-Mar. 3


Here’s the lineup of scheduled committee action on energy, environment and agriculture bills for Thursday, March 3, in
the New Jersey Legislature:


ASSEMBLY AGRICULTURE AND NATURAL RESOURCES
2 PM
Committee Room 15, 4th Floor, State House Annex, Trenton, NJ
A-939  Wolfe, D.W. (R-10); McGuckin, G.P. (R-10)
Changes law regulating size limits of lobsters.
Related Bill: S-1157
     
A-1645  Schaer, G.S. (D-36); Webber, J. (R-26); 
Expands definition of “acquisition,” for
purposes of county and municipal open space trust funds, to include demolition,
removal of debris, and restoration of lands being acquired.
    
A-2949  Andrzejczak, R.B. (D-1); Land, R.B. (D-1)
Provides diamondback terrapins protection as non-game
indigenous species.
Related Bill: S-1625
     
 ————————————————————————-
ASSEMBLY ENVIRONMENT AND SOLID WASTE
2 PM
Committee Room 9, 3rd Floor, State House Annex, Trenton, NJ
A-223  DeAngelo, W.P. (D-14); Benson, D.R. (D-14)
Requires NJ Energy Star Homes Program incentives be
available Statewide.
      
A-231  Danielsen, J. (D-17); Pinkin, N.J. (D-18)
Establishes position of State Oceanographer.
Related Bill: S-987
      
A-1493  McKeon, J.F. (D-27); Gusciora, R. (D-15)
Clarifies intent of P.L.2007, c.340 regarding NJ’s
required participation in Regional Greenhouse Gas Initiative.
      
A-1863  Wimberly, B.E. (D-35)
Changes types of development requiring CAFRA permit
from DEP.
   
A-2529  DeAngelo, W.P. (D-14)
Provides for replacement of incandescent light bulbs in
public school buildings with energy-efficient light bulbs.
    
ACR-115  Wimberly, B.E. (D-35)
Memorializes Administrator of EPA to expedite cleanup
of Garfield Ground Water Contamination site and provide for temporary
relocation of residents affected thereby.
     
ACR-160  McKeon, J.F. (D-27); Spencer, L.G. (D-29)
Prohibits adoption of DEP’s proposed rules and
regulations to revise its Flood Hazard Area Control Act Rules, Coastal Zone
Management Rules, and Stormwater Management Rules.
Related Bill: SCR-66
      
S-987  Smith, B. (D-17)
Establishes position of State Oceanographer.
Related Bill: A-231
    



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Legislation calls for 80% non-fossil energy for NJ by 2050

**Updated at 4:20 p.m. to add NJ Spotlight story. See ‘Related’ below**


Eighty percent of all electricity sold in New Jersey would have to come from renewable energy sources such as wind or solar power if a bill that cleared a Senate committee Monday becomes law.

John C. Ensslin of The Record reports today:

The measure mandates that starting with 11 percent by 2017, the percentage of renewable energy increases 10 percent every five years until it reaches 80 percent, a schedule the bill’s sponsor Sen. Bob Smith called “pretty aggressive” but not when compared to what other states are doing.

“New Jersey needs to be a leader in renewable energy because we are so impacted by global climate,” Smith, D-Middlesex, said shortly after the Senate Environment and Energy Committee he chairs voted unanimously to refer the bill for a vote by the full Senate.

“The truth is that renewables are becoming cheaper and cheaper,” Smith added. “It’s good public policy. It’s good for the rate payers. It’s good for our health and it helps reduce global climate change.”

Critics of the measure, however, predicted the bill would drive up already high bills by forcing utilities to buy more costly wind and solar power rather than rely on coal or natural gas and a free-market approach.


Related: 
NJ Spotlight provides an intro to the bill, S-1707 
NJ Spotlight’s Tom Johnson covers the hearing 



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Forced e-mail disclosure provides glimpse at high-level reaction to GWB scandal; Wildstein seen a PA ‘cancer’

New York’s top appointee to the Port Authority and his chief of staff went to great lengths to investigate, control and limit damage from the George Washington Bridge lane-closure scandal, according to a trove of emails released in response to a lawsuit filed by The Record.

An in-depth look at the scandal over the lane closures at the George Washington Bridge and related aftershocks. Click here to launch.
In a story published on February 27 and updated on February 28, Record reporter Paul Berger writes:

David Garten, working on behalf of Port Authority Vice Chairman Scott Rechler, probed the New Jersey side of the agency, reviewed emails before they were turned over to a legislative committee investigating the lane closures, and provided talking points to the agency’s executive director, Pat Foye, ahead of Foye’s testimony before that committee.

“We were trying to do our best to navigate trying times while still ensuring the agency could accomplish its mission for the public,” Rechler told The Record on Friday. “We didn’t want the agency to be paralyzed while this was going on.”

The emails show the deep divide between commissioners and employees appointed by the governors of New Jersey and New York.

As early as Sept. 18, 2013, five days after the lane closures were reversed, Garten wrote to Rechler that he was concerned about the influence of David Wildstein, an aide to Governor Christie at the agency who was at the heart of the lane-closure scandal. In particular, he was concerned about Wildstein’s influence over Brian Simon, a New York appointee who was then the agency’s director of government and community relations.

“The NJ side knows he’s weak and he’s not in the loop and they use him to plant seeds against us,” Garten wrote about Simon.

The following day, Rechler responded that Wildstein had to be neutralized as quickly as possible.

“His power base seems to be expanding and his actions are getting more and more outrageous,” Rechler wrote. “We need to move quickly to expose him but we also need to make sure that our first shot is powerful because he is not going to go down easily.”

Simon, who now works in the private sector, did not respond to a request for comment, and Garten declined to comment.

Rechler said: “It was my view that David Wildstein was a cancer to the agency and really his presence struck a sense of fear into many of the staff members and created a lot of dysfunctionality.”

Wildstein, who resigned from the Port Authority three months after the scandal broke, did not respond to a request for comment. He pleaded guilty last year to conspiring to close two of three access lanes to the bridge to punish the mayor of Fort Lee for not endorsing Christie’s 2013 reelection bid. The closures caused debilitating traffic jams in Fort Lee over five mornings and the resulting scandal plagued Christie’s failed presidential campaign.

Two Christie associates, his former deputy chief of staff, Bridget Anne Kelly, and the Port Authority’s former deputy executive director, Bill Baroni, are due to stand trial in May for their alleged roles in the conspiracy.

Rechler’s and Garten’s emails were released late Thursday in response to a lawsuit filed last month by North Jersey Media Group. The suit contends the Port Authority violated public records laws by denying two freedom of information requests late last year.

In response to the suit, the Port Authority released almost 900 pages, many of which were redacted in total or in part, while withholding other documents. Jennifer Borg, general counsel for North Jersey Media Group, said Friday: “We are reviewing the documents that the Port Authority provided to us last night as well as the index it provided explaining why certain material was redacted and why other records were not produced at all.”

Borg added: “The fact that records were provided only the day before the authority’s court deadline shows how the lawsuit was the catalyst for the production of records.”





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Enviro bills doing the Jersey jump on Leap Year Monday




Two New Jersey Senate committees are taking advantage of the Leap Year to schedule hearings on Monday,
February 29.





Here are their agendas:                                     


SENATE ENVIRONMENT AND ENERGY                  
10 AM
Aide: (609) 847-3855
Committee Room 10, 3rd Floor, State House Annex, Trenton, NJ
For consideration:

S-166  Bateman, C. (R-16); Doherty, M.J. (R-23)

Establishes Hunterdon-Somerset Flood Advisory Task
Force.
      
S-311  Van Drew, J. (D-1); Kyrillos, J.M. (R-13)
Increases amount annually credited to Shore Protection
Fund to $50 million.
Related Bill: A-2954
      
S-762  Smith, B. (D-17); Bateman, C. (R-16)
Authorizes creation of stormwater utilities for certain
local government entities.
     Feb 29, 2016   – Posted: Senate Environment
and Energy
For discussion only:
S-771  Smith, B. (D-17); Bateman, C. (R-16)
Requires large food waste generators to separate and
recycle food waste and amends definition of “Class I renewable
energy.”
     
_________________________________________________________________________ 
SENATE BUDGET AND APPROPRIATIONS
1 PM
Aide: (609) 847-3835
Committee Room 4, 1st Floor, State House Annex, Trenton, NJ
The Senate Budget and Appropriations Committee will hold a public
hearing on SCR-1 (1R) immediately following the committee meeting.
For consideration:
S-969  Smith, B. (D-17); Bateman, C. (R-16)
Implements 2014 constitutional dedication of CBT
revenues for certain environmental purposes; revises State’s open space,
farmland, and historic preservation programs.

     
________________________________________________________________________


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