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News
Steel Mill Clean-Up Issues
Aired April 20, 2001
Yesterday we heard about what happens to the economy
- and to people's lives - when a steel mill shuts down. What we didn't
hear was how the closure of a major industrial site affects the physical
environment. Who will oversee clean up after LTV's west side mill closes?
And how can that site be turned into land that attracts new businesses?
90.3's Karen Schaefer has this report on what happened in another community
- and what could happen here.
At the Youngstown Historical Center for
Industry & Labor, blown-up photos
provide a mural background for telling
the story of steel.
Photo by Karen Schaefer
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Karen SchaeferThey called it Black Monday.
That was the day in 1977 when the first steel mill in Youngstown closed.
In four short years, a domino effect of mill closings turned this former
capital of U.S. steel into an industrial wasteland.
By the early 1980's abandoned steel mills and other industrial
sites stretched for forty miles along the Mahoning River Valley. The closures
blighted 1,400 acres in the communities of Youngstown, Campbell, and Struthers.
They blighted the local economy as well. Nancy Haraburda is an educator
with the Youngstown Historical Center of Industry and Labor.
Nancy HaraburdaWell, they call it Black Monday
because it was on Monday, September 19, 1977, that the first of the major
mills here in the area closed, followed over the next couple of years
by four more. And it was the permanent loss of nearly 25,000 jobs in the
Mahoning Valley. This was life. This was the way life was, working ion
the steel mills.
Not all the memories of steel's heyday are
good. This sign is a vivid reminder that the environment was not
the steel industry's only victim.
Photo by Karen Schaefer
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KSCreating new jobs was vital to keeping
the Mahoning Valley alive. To do that, Youngstown and its neighbors had
to first clean up old industrial sites, then turn them into land that
could attract new businesses. 25 years later, that process is finally
nearing completion. But when LTV closes its west mill this year the initial
clean-up will be relatively quick. Rod Beals heads the Emergency and Remedial
Clean-Up Division of the Ohio Environmental Protection Agency.
Rod BealsI think today we have better established
clean-up standards, more technologies to apply, a better understanding
of what clean-up may be needed. Many of those were lacking in the 60's
and 70's when the steel mills went out of business and closure was performed
by dynamite.
KSBeals says that, in all cases, the industry
that caused the pollution is liable for clean-up. At LTV he says the process
will probably start with the EPA's Cessation of Operations program. As
soon as the mill is shut down, LTV will be required to remove all chemicals
and hazardous waste or secure them on-site so that nothing remains that
could harm people or local air and water resources. Because the EPA requires
more on-going clean-up than it used to, Beals says further action may
not be necessary. But if LTV decides to sell the property, another EPA
program could offer them a break on future clean-up. Caroline Watkins
helps administer the Voluntary Action Program.
Caroline WatkinsWell, the Voluntary Action
Program enables a property owner or a prospective purchaser to evaluate
hazardous substances that may or may not have been released on their property
and determine whether or not it is at a safe level or not.
Years after the last mill in Youngstown
closed, former workers stood at the gate to watch the final demolition.
Photo by Karen Schaefer
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KSIf a company like LTV Steel goes beyond
the assessment to actually clean up contaminated soils or remove underground
materials, Watkins says they may be eligible for a covenant not to sue,
a document that releases the polluter from future liability. She believes
it's unlikely that remedial clean-up like that faced by Youngstown would
be necessary. But however clean, a brownfield site once used by a steel
mill may still not be ready for re-use by another industry. Youngstown's
Director of Development John Chagnot says he's been working on that problem
for years.
John ChagnotWe've essentially converted all
of these steel properties. I mean, we've probably invested close to ten
million dollars in new infrastructure, new roadways. We've probably led
the nation in the redevelopment of brownfield properties - out of necessity,
of course.
KSChagnot estimates the city of Youngstown
has spent million dollars on developing new industrial parks from former
brownfields. That development has netted the city 5,000 new jobs. While
that can't replace the 15,000 high-paying steel jobs that were lost in
the 70's, Chagnot is not alone in urging cities hit by plant closures
to move quickly into the future. Nancy Haraburda at the Youngstown Steel
Museum puts it this way.
No longer the bustling hub of industry and
labor, downtown Youngstown is still recovering from the steel slump.
Photo by Karen Schaefer
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NHI think we've learned from that. A lot
of people have looked to us also that it doesn't happen to them, that
they try to diversify into different types of industries.
KSLTV Spokesman Mark Tomasch says it's too
soon for his company to be making decisions about selling the mill site.
Nor has the City of Cleveland expressed public interest in purchasing
it for redevelopment. Although much will be lost when the Cleveland mill
closes, there's one loss that no one will mourn. That's the sparkling
gray dust - or graphite - that has plagued Tremont residents for years.
In Youngstown, Karen Schaefer, 90.3, 90.3 WCPN®.
Suggested Websites
Youngstown Historical Center for Industry and Labor:
Ohio EPA Volunteer Action Program:
USEPA Youngstown Brownfields Clean-Up:
LTV Steel:
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