Lower Fox River PCB cleanup project officially complete - Wisconsin Examiner

2023-01-13 12:42:10 By : Ms. Lisa Zhou

A fisheries researcher tracks tagged muskies in the Fox River. (Photo courtesey of Dan Isermann)

The Wisconsin Department of Natural Resources (DNR) has announced that it has finished the Lower Fox River PCB clean-up project. The clean-up focused on polychlorinated biphenyl compounds (PCBs). Although the clean-up itself was completed in 2020, a final stage known as a state closure was only recently approved. State closures can only be issued once clean-up work is done, and the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) certifies that it’s complete. Cnc Machining Milling

Lower Fox River PCB cleanup project officially complete - Wisconsin Examiner

The Lower Fox River basin covers four counties including Brown, Claumet, Outagamie and Winnebago. According to the DNR, 24 pulp and paper mills line the basin, and it includes an active shipping port supported by a variety of industries. Over time, the basin had become polluted by stormwater runoff and pollutants from both urban and agricultural areas. “For over 40 years, environmental regulations and clean-up work have not fully protected or improved this ecosystem,” a background brief on the  DNR website states.

The PCB Cleanup Project was completed with the help of the DNR, EPA, U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service, tribal nations and the corporations responsible for the clean-up and care of the river and bay. State closure letters will be mailed to people who live and work on the river before the DNR issues the final closure approval. The letters will be mailed in January to about 1,400 riverfront property owners.

Partnership for the project began between the DNR and EPA in 2004. At that time, clean-up started along 39 miles of the Lower Fox River and the bay of Green Bay. PCBs are toxic chemicals that were used in the production and recycling of carbonless copy paper in the 1950’s and 70’s. Contamination moved downstream to the bay and Lake Michigan and flowed into other Great Lakes freshwater systems. By 1979, PCBs were banned by the federal government due to health risks to humans and wildlife. Although discharges of the toxic compounds have ceased, their presence remains in waterways.

The clean-up project removed 6.5 million cubic parts of contaminated sediment, accomplished through hydraulic dredging. Engineered caps were also installed on another 275 acres of riverbed. The caps must be protected and not disturbed to ensure the clean-up remains successful for years to come. As such, the caps will require routine monitoring by the clean-up companies including Georgia Pacific, Glatfelter Corporation and NCR Corporation, which are responsible for all the work and costs.

Long-term testing for PCBs in fish tissue, sediment, and surface water will continue. The test results show significant reductions of PCB concentrations compared to measurements in 2006 for the upper reaches of the river. The entire bay will be tested every five years until cleanup goals are achieved to the satisfaction of the EPA and DNR, a DNR press release notes.

by Isiah Holmes, Wisconsin Examiner January 11, 2023

by Isiah Holmes, Wisconsin Examiner January 11, 2023

The Wisconsin Department of Natural Resources (DNR) has announced that it has finished the Lower Fox River PCB clean-up project. The clean-up focused on polychlorinated biphenyl compounds (PCBs). Although the clean-up itself was completed in 2020, a final stage known as a state closure was only recently approved. State closures can only be issued once clean-up work is done, and the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) certifies that it’s complete.

The Lower Fox River basin covers four counties including Brown, Claumet, Outagamie and Winnebago. According to the DNR, 24 pulp and paper mills line the basin, and it includes an active shipping port supported by a variety of industries. Over time, the basin had become polluted by stormwater runoff and pollutants from both urban and agricultural areas. “For over 40 years, environmental regulations and clean-up work have not fully protected or improved this ecosystem,” a background brief on the  DNR website states.

The PCB Cleanup Project was completed with the help of the DNR, EPA, U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service, tribal nations and the corporations responsible for the clean-up and care of the river and bay. State closure letters will be mailed to people who live and work on the river before the DNR issues the final closure approval. The letters will be mailed in January to about 1,400 riverfront property owners.

Partnership for the project began between the DNR and EPA in 2004. At that time, clean-up started along 39 miles of the Lower Fox River and the bay of Green Bay. PCBs are toxic chemicals that were used in the production and recycling of carbonless copy paper in the 1950’s and 70’s. Contamination moved downstream to the bay and Lake Michigan and flowed into other Great Lakes freshwater systems. By 1979, PCBs were banned by the federal government due to health risks to humans and wildlife. Although discharges of the toxic compounds have ceased, their presence remains in waterways.

The clean-up project removed 6.5 million cubic parts of contaminated sediment, accomplished through hydraulic dredging. Engineered caps were also installed on another 275 acres of riverbed. The caps must be protected and not disturbed to ensure the clean-up remains successful for years to come. As such, the caps will require routine monitoring by the clean-up companies including Georgia Pacific, Glatfelter Corporation and NCR Corporation, which are responsible for all the work and costs.

Long-term testing for PCBs in fish tissue, sediment, and surface water will continue. The test results show significant reductions of PCB concentrations compared to measurements in 2006 for the upper reaches of the river. The entire bay will be tested every five years until cleanup goals are achieved to the satisfaction of the EPA and DNR, a DNR press release notes.

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Isiah Holmes is a journalist and videographer, and a lifelong resident of Milwaukee, Wisconsin. Holmes' video work dates back to his high school days at Wauwatosa East High, when he made a documentary about the local police department. Since then, his writing has been featured in Urban Milwaukee, Isthmus, Milwaukee Stories, Milwaukee Neighborhood News Services, Pontiac Tribune, the Progressive Magazine, Al Jazeera, and other outlets. He was also featured in the 2018 documentary The Chase Key, and was the recipient of the Sierra Club Great Waters Group 2021 Environmental Hero of the Year award. The Wisconsin Freedom of Information Council also awarded Holmes its 2021-2022 Media Openness Award for using the open records laws for investigative journalism. Holmes was also a finalist in the 2021 Milwaukee Press Club Excellence in Journalism Awards alongside the rest of the Wisconsin Examiner's staff. The Silver, or second place, award for Best Online Coverage of News was awarded to Holmes and his colleague Henry Redman for an investigative series into how police responded to the civil unrest and protests in Kenosha during 2020. Holmes was also awarded the Press Club's Silver (second-place) award for Public Service Journalism for articles focusing on police surveillance in Wisconsin.

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Lower Fox River PCB cleanup project officially complete - Wisconsin Examiner

Custom Pcb Our stories may be republished online or in print under Creative Commons license CC BY-NC-ND 4.0. We ask that you edit only for style or to shorten, provide proper attribution and link to our web site.