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Fourteen years later, monitoring continues at North East landfill

Town Engineer Ray Jurkowski was at the Town Board’s meeting on Thursday, March 14, to talk about the landfill maintenance agreement and the town’s efforts to satisfy the requisite monitoring imposed by the state’s Department of Environmental Conservation (DEC). Jurkowski is a partner at Morris Associates Engineering Consultants, PLLC, in Poughkeepsie. He came armed with a proposal that included “all costs associated with the quarterly field visits, laboratory sampling, data review and preparation of the required Annual Groundwater Quality Monitoring Report ... for the town landfill,” as he described it.“We have to put it in place to satisfy the DEC,” said town Supervisor John Merwin when speaking about the landfill the following day. “Some of the things they’re asking for we’re already doing, and some we’re not.”That’s why when Jurkowski noted the $17,000 cost for the monitoring, the board knew it would only be a fraction of that.“A good portion, maybe half, is already being done,” Merwin said. “As far as the history, I was on the Town Board when they closed the landfill in 1999, and because some of the issues, especially some of the contaminants and the people dumping at that time, that cranked up a higher level of concern,” he added. “But the town closed the landfill successfully and did the right things and we’re just making sure we’re in compliance.”Some of the tasks that need to be done, according to Jurkowski’s report, include groundwater and surface water quality monitoring, with an estimated cost of $14,100; quarterly explosive gas sampling, with an estimated cost of $1,400; and quarterly cap inspections, with an estimated cost of $1,500. Groundwater and surface water quality monitoringThe field services include purging wells, sample collection and conducting a chain of custody, as well as laboratory analysis of well samples, data review/validation and generating reports for 10 wells and two surface water/sediment sites during the monitoring period.Quarterly explosive gas samplingThe explosive gas monitoring is to be done during the last three quarters of 2013 and the first quarter of 2014, “in the gas vents located on top of the landfill surface and in selected perimeter locations,” according to the report. There will be sub-surface monitoring for gases that travel through the soil along the waste/mass perimeter. Both methane and hydrogen sulfide will be monitored.Quarterly cap inspections“Morris Associates will provide quarterly visual surface inspection services of the landfill cap to assess conformance,” wrote Jurkowski, “[and] will attempt to coordinate inspection after major rainfall events to visually assess landfill cap integrity. This task also includes reporting findings to the town and to NYSDEC.” “It’s going to have to be monitored forever, most likely,” said Merwin. “We have no real choice in the matter. We have already arranged things with the DEC and they’re happy with this plan, now we just have to contract with Morris Associates and they just have to do it. “The landfill is going to be an ongoing project,” the supervisor added. “[Ray] said if we do this level of monitoring for a couple of years, and nothing out of the ordinary is found, then maybe the DEC will let us crank the standards back a little bit.”

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