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Some surprises as work on Lambert Kay continues

WINSTED — A full environmental report on the former Lambert Kay property is scheduled to be completed in mid-June according to Robert Simmons, Chief Hydrogeologist of HRP Associates.

Simmons spoke about ongoing work at the property located at 32 Lake St. at the Board of Selectmen’s meeting on Monday, April 20.

The Farmington company was hired in November by the town to assist the investigation and remediation of the property.

Previously several assessments were completed by the company, including the building’s Hazmat study, Phase 1 Environmental Site Assessment and a Data Gap report.

At the selectmen’s meeting, Simmons said that the company has finished the first round of environmental testing on the building’s exterior.

“We are reviewing the preliminary results on that now,” Simmons said. “We still have interior work to do plus the work behind the dam on the property.”

Simmons said that the company is receiving results of previous tests that has shown “a lot of surprises.”

“We did find a few feet of contaminated material on the other side of the street below the dam,” Simmons said. “There’s mostly ash and cinder which contains lead and arsenic. The good news is that we did not get any PCBs (Polychlorinated biphenyls) in the old electric transformer location. That would have been a red flag we could have come into there.”

Simmons said that there was a hold-up with the company’s environmental investigation due to asbestos issues.

“Unfortunately, winter has not been kind to the building,” he said. “We have a few more spots where the asbestos is now compromised and falling off. The work scope is going to expand. It’s not so much additional costs as it is moving some of those costs forward.”

Simmons said work on the building will expand “a little bit” but he did not know to what extent.

“We don’t know what it’s going to be,” he said. “We’re going to need to quantify that part of it.”

Mayor Candace Bouchard asked Simmons if the company was on schedule when it comes to working on the property.

“The alternative work practice review has taken longer than we originally estimated in our timeline,” he said. “When we sent the application (to the Department of Public Health) we thought it would take a couple of weeks. Instead it took three-and-a-half weeks to get that done. Part of it is because it got lost in the department’s mailroom. They were very apologetic about it, and (representatives from the state) scheduled a time to come out and fast track it.”

Simmons said the company is at least a month behind its schedule for work on the building.

Selectman Glenn Albanesius asked Simmons how the company’s environmental studies would differ from previous studies on the property.

“This data we are collecting now will help to verify some of the earlier data that was collected,” Simmons said. “Sometimes you will pick up a site that has not been worked on for 15 years. Some of that early data, the analytical methodology really doesn’t measure up to the current standards. You always have to redo some of that work. We are looking at areas that were not looked at before, so there’s a lot of new ground.” 

Meanwhile, there has been no report of potential buyers for the building itself.

The town purchased the building in 2002 after voters approved the purchase of the building for $1.

The building has been vacant since 2002 when a pet food manufacturer left the area.

Over the years the town has announced buyers for the building, but each potential buyer pulled out.

The latest company that pulled out from purchasing the building was Brooks Ventures LLC.

Last year the company submitted a bid for the property of $25,000 plus a 50 percent reimbursement of any remediation grant funds used for the property.

However, the company pulled out of the purchase in February of this year.

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