| Defendants to pay $100 million for contaminated
landfill
Jan. 8
Defendants will pay about $100 million to help remediate a Superfund site
that’s being called one of the nation’s most contaminated landfills.
More than 200 defendants are paying the cash to help cover the clean-up cost
of the long-closed Combe Fill South landfill in Morris County, N.J., a
Superfund site.
New Jersey reached a settlement with the parties for $43 million that
includes $12.7 million for the state’s past remediation costs at the
landfill in as well as $3.2 million for natural resource damages.
The defendants also will have to pay $27 million to cover future remediation
costs, according to state Attorney General Anne Milgram and Mark N.
Mauriello, acting commissioner for the state Department of Environmental
Protection. The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, meanwhile, will
receive $56 million to cover past remediation costs, the state said.
The site was a municipal landfill from the 1940s to 1981, coming under Combe
Fill Corp.’s ownership in 1978. That company went bankrupt in 1981 and the
site was not closed properly, according to the U.S. Environmental Protection
Agency.
The landfill accepted industrial waste, sewage sludge, septic tank waste,
chemicals and waste oils for decades, the state said. Subsequent testing
found significant levels of hazardous substances, specifically volatile
organic compounds, in ground water and surface water at the site, the state
said.
Contact Waste & Recycling News senior reporter Jim Johnson at (937) 964-1289
or jpjohnson@crain.com

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