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Request That Governor Cuomo Require the Former Sperry Remington Site in Elmira, NY and All Legacy Toxic Sites in New York That Have Not Been Remediated After Five Years to Be Comprehensively Cleaned Up as Class 1 Inactive Hazardous Waste Disposal Sites


Honorable Andrew M. Cuomo
Governor of New York State
The Capitol
Albany, NY 12224

Greetings:

We, the undersigned, write respectfully to request that you immediately require all of the toxic site concerns associated with the former Sperry Remington manufacturing site in Elmira, NY to be consolidated into a single site that is given a Class 1 Inactive Hazardous Waste Disposal Site designation: "Causing or presenting an imminent danger of causing irreversible or irreparable damage to the public health or the environment -- immediate action required."

This action is warranted because it has been more than 20 years since high-level toxic pollution was discovered to have migrated nearly 1,000 feet from the former Sperry Remington factory site to Miller Pond in Elmira, NY. Yet, the full scope of that contaminated property's public health and environmental hazards has neither been fully investigated and delineated nor cleaned up in strict compliance with all applicable regulatory requirements.

The delay in achieving comprehensive clean up in strict compliance with all applicable regulatory requirements is unacceptable given that Elmira High School at 777 South Main Street is built directly on the contaminated site and a responsible party is required to clean it up. In addition, a residential neighborhood adjoining the former factory site has yet to be investigated for toxic pollution threats.

As you will see from the excerpted information provided below for your review, it is inconceivable that polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs) which constitute hazardous waste and other contaminants which exceed clean up requirements have been identified under the Elmira High School's football field, but have yet to be removed.

A wide variety of PCBs, toxic metals and potential cancer-causing agents also have been identified above clean up requirements under widespread areas of the school grounds and in contaminated groundwater. Those wastes also have yet to be removed.

See: Government Data Documenting Environmental Health Concerns at Elmira High School

For all these reasons, we request that urgent action be immediately undertaken to make sure that members of the school community as well as the public at-large cannot come into contact with any documented toxic pollution at the site involving contaminated dirt, indoor or outdoor air pollution, tainted groundwater, surface water or any other medium.

If the responsible party does not agree to remove all toxic pollution that exceeds regulatory requirements without further delay, New York should do so with the assistance of the U. S. Environmental Protection Agency and seek clean up reimbursement from the responsible party or its insurers.

All sources of toxic pollution must be removed to the fullest degree possible so that the school, nearby residential homes and the surrounding environment can be fully protected from contamination hazards. It is equally imperative that any residual pollution which cannot be removed due to structural constraints must not recontaminate areas that are cleaned up.

With due respect, these common-sense safeguards obviously should have been undertaken decades ago. Unfortunately, New York's on-going failure to clean up this site on a comprehensive basis is replicated at hundreds of legacy toxic sites that are known to have polluted the environment for decades.

This grim scenario underscores the need for dramatic changes to the state's inadequate toxic clean up program. That is why we request that:

First, any toxic site which is deemed to pose public health or environmental hazards due to regulatory exceedances must be cleaned up by responsible parties according to all applicable regulatory requirements within five years. If responsible parties cannot fulfill that obligation, the site must be designated a Class 1 site: Causing or presenting an imminent danger of causing irreversible or irreparable damage to the public health or the environment -- immediate action required. Urgent action must be undertaken by state and federal environmental authorities to resolve those concerns.

Second, New York State must have sufficient toxic site and spill remediation funds to clean up "orphan sites" in a timely fashion when responsible parties do not fulfill their "polluter pays" obligations. New York must increase its pollution clean up funds through dedicated fees.

In conclusion, toxic clean up delays stretching over literally decades must no longer be tolerated in New York. "Environmental justice delayed is environmental justice denied." Toxic polluters must not be allowed to evade their clean up responsibilities at the former Sperry Remington site or similar legacy toxic sites all over New York. State environmental authorities must strictly enforce New York's toxic clean up regulatory requirements or the legal protections are meaningless.

We trust that you will find our request to be self-explanatory, but please do not hesitate to contact us if you have any questions or suggestions.

Thank you for your consideration.

Very truly yours,

Total Signatory Count: 1180

John Given
118 Lieb Rd
South New Berlin, NY
Sarah Striffler
605 Hudson Street
Ithaca, NY
Joan Farber
Dr.
400 W 23rd St apt 6l
New York, NY
Melissa Spencer
431 Phoenix Ave
Elmira, NY
Eileen Gottschalk
3305 Walnut Pl NW
Salem, OR
Susan Sarabasha
Member
PAUSE
311 Tupper Rd
W Danby, NY
Sean Zigmund
Owner
Root 'N Roost Farm
64 Mineral Springs Rd
Livingston Manor, NY
William Granche
24 Lincoln St
Ridgway, PA
Cary Fassler
Easement owner Oswego County
398 State Route 69
Williamstown, NY
E. W. Browne
206 Eddy St.
Ithaca, NY
Mary Smith
Communications Coordinator
Church Women United in New York State
2001 S Clinton Ave
Rochester, NY
Heather Agan
13 Old Narrows Rd
Elmira , NY
Brytney Austin
Personal
None
Horseheads, Ny
Joseph Quirk
147 Avenue A Apt 2R
New York, NY
Nancy Lipshit
321 Oquaga Lake Road
Deposit, NY
Paul Packer
49 Bell Circle
Port Jefferson, NY
Michelle Thomas
199Lewis Road
Pine City, New York
Julie Parisi
36 Purdy Hollow Rd
Woodstock, United States
Carolyn Connelly
81 Demarest Pkwy
Elmira, NY
Susanne Carrier
117 aster dr
Horseheads, Ny
Mary Beth Oconnor
Dr.
119 Middaugh Rd
Brooktondale, NY
Elaine Sperbeck
Miss
618 E. Monroe street
Little Falls, New York
Barb Allington
Sing Sing Road
Horseheads, NY
Carol and Louis Piciullo
149 Co Hwy 12
Laurens, NY
David DeVivo
15 New England Dr.
Rochester, New York
Howard Barker
141 CollyerRd., Box 113
Smithville Flats, New York
Diane Spencer
Joseph Flynn
Distinguished Professor
SUNY / ALFRED STATE
42 High Street
Alfred , NY
Penny J. Beebe
2 Union St P.O. Box 102
FREEVILLE, NY
Leslie Gold
40 Downing St.
NYC, NY
Bill King
130 Westhaven Rd.
Ithaca, NY
Bruce Dunn
188 bell hill rd
morris, Ny
Karyn Sochacki
9176 Rhodes Road
Lodi, NY
Gary Holmes
265 Fisher Settlement Rd
Spencer, NY
Dawn Noble
40 Linn Ave
Auburn, NY
Bridget Wilson
P.O. box 4224
Ithaca, Ny
Martin Jorgensen
Mr
1692 Ellis Hollow Rd. Apt 2
Ithaca, NY
Aimee Ellis
3776 Shumway Road
Burdett, NY
brenda lee
16 quarry dr
wappingers falls , ny
Toby Stover
Founding member
Rochester Defense Against Fracking
81 Clove Valley Road
High Falls, NY
Sarah Kuczynski
368 Wallace Pl
Elmira, New York
Crystal Osborne
616 Decker Avenue
Elmira , NY
Frank Gage
Co. Chair of the WNY Peace Center Climate Justice Task Force
WNY Peace Center
87 Erb St.
Buffalo, NY.
DEBRA WALKER
451 Waters Dr.
Fort Pierce, FL
Laura Nowack
28 South Main Street
Earlville, NY
Marlene Barken
Ithaca College
125 Genung Circle
Ithaca, New York
Evvon Hickey
1708 bristol pl
Highpoint, NC
Christine Goulart
11212 Brighton Knoll Loop
Riverview , Florida
Elizabeth Watts
16 Starks Place
Lynbrook, NY
Tami Makin
629 Penn.Ave
Elmira, NY

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