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Gas prices around the nation are pushing all time highs and with current geo-political conditions, don’t seem to have a chance of lowering anytime soon. In this years up coming election, it is important to look past the hype and base your decision on the facts. This presidential election may wind up being the most important election in this county’s history and when you cast your vote, make sure you think it through.  Our town and country are facing historic level financial troubles and your vote can be the one to turn it around.

If you stand for nothing, you’ll fall for anything.

 

1 Categories : National Issues, Videos

A proposal to build a soil recycling facility to foster redevelopment of a former industrial site along the Rahway River in Carteret has won the initial backing of Middlesex County officials, after a public hearing in which almost every statement was disputed.

The county Solid Waste Advisory Council’s endorsement of the Rahway Arch project is only advisory, though members could not recall an instance where the Middlesex Freeholders rejected one of their recommendations. For that reason, supporters and opponents argued the matter intensely, contradicting each other in detail.

For the developer and Soil Safe of Columbia, MD, which would operate the recycling facility for an estimated five years, the project would rectify past environmental problems, allowing the development of 20 to 25 acres while preserving about 100 or more as a wildlife area along the river.

For opponents such as the Edison Wetlands Association and the Construction Materials Recycling Association, the plan would re-open an already cleaned up site for an unnecessary industrial facility with little oversight.

With state Sen. Bob Smith (D-Middlesex), the attorney for the applicant, watching from a front-row seat, the outcome was never in doubt. The members present voted 18-0, with five abstentions, to send the proposal on to the Freeholders for inclusion in the county’s solid waste master plan.

Afterward, though, supporters acknowledge they still have a ways to go to bring the project to fruition. Bill Roberts, Soil Safe’s Mid-Atlantic program director, estimated it will take a year to continue through the county and state permit process to construction.

That’s not least because the application takes the position that the state Department of Environmental Protection erred in 2002, when it issued a notice that no further action was required to remediate the so-called Cytec property, named after an American Cyanamid subsidy that used it for sludge disposal.

“I have no idea how they got an NFA finding,” said Al Free of EastStar Environmental Group, Rahway Arch’s consultants. The DEP “didn’t follow their own regulations” and left surface materials standing lagoons that could be washed into the river in a storm, he said.

“It’s full of alum, it’s a contaminated property,” said Carteret representative Michael Sica, who grew up near the site and used to play their despite his parents’ admonitions. There are also no workable alternatives for the site, “Carteret’s largest unutilized industrial tract,” he said.

“These guys aren’t the ones who polluted the site,” Smith said of his clients. Instead, they are offering the chance to “finally get one of the most contaminated sites in the state of New Jersey fully cleaned up,” he said.

 

But the DEP, which had no representative at the meeting disagreed. Later in the day, the agency said the site already was properly cleaned up and capped. “There’s no problem at the site,” said DEP spokesman Larry Ragonese, adding the agency “has nothing before us” to re-open that finding.

If the site were as contaminated as the developers say, they should bring in the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency to investigate and “maybe it should be added to the Superfund” chemical clean-up list, said Robert Spiegel, executive director of the Edison Wetlands Association.

He described the scope of the application as “overkill,” paving the way for the material recycling facility to continue after its projected five-year life. During that time, Soil Safe projects it will bring in one to two million tons of soil, including some containing construction debris and petroleum-contaminated materials, to provide a new layer about eight-to10-feet high on that portion of the property.

In doing that, the company expects to wind up with soil concentrations of polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons — commonly found in fossil fuels and some considered carcinogens — at levels 15 tons higher than the residential standard, said Debbie Mans of the New York/New Jersey Baykeeper. That is not necessarily a disqualification for an industrial site, but does raise questions about the effects on nearby areas, including the wildlife area.

“It’s means the levels you’re starting with are much higher,” Mans said.

For that reason, environmental groups pressed for more details about how the company would process material on the site. But county solid waste planner Carol Tolmachewich advised the council that such matters are beyond its jurisdiction. She added that neither the county nor the borough are able to collect a host community fee from the facility, whose revenues were estimated at $50 million over the five years.

Wayne DeFeo, representing the Construction Materials Recycling Association, said the facility would be potentially big enough to recycle soil waste from throughout New Jersey and New York City. He complained the application lacks basic details about the relationship between the owners and operators and their future plans. But Tolmachewich said it met Middlesex County requirements.

The two sides sparred over conditions at Soil Safe’s two South Jersey facilities, in Salem City and Logan Township. Six of seven violations have been for administrative matters, a record “actually better than anyone else in our industry,” Roberts said.

But the environmental groups released DEP records showing small fines of the company for bringing in arsenic, cadmium and other hazardous materials, as well as exceeding permitted levels in the first three quarters of 2007, then failing to report an extra 148,528 tons dumped in the fourth quarter.

Source: http://www.newjerseynewsroom.com/science-updates/carteret-contamination/all-pages

CARTERET — Middlesex County officials yesterday threw their support behind plans for a soil-recycling project in Carteret, despite opposition from a string of environmental groups.

Members of the county Solid Waste Advisory Council voted to recommend that the plan to fill in 125 acres of the former Cytec Industrial site be included in the county’s recycling master plan.

Soil Safe, a Columbia, Md.-based company, proposes bringing in petroleum-contaminated dirt from northern New Jersey and southern New York and treating it to reclaim the land, creating 100 acres of wetlands and grassy areas, and 25 acres for commercial development.

The land along the Rahway River holds old sludge ponds that, according to the company, are deteriorating and releasing cyanide into the river. Company officials expect to bring in a million tons of dirt over three to five years, but work won’t begin for more than a year.

Soil Safe’s attorney, state Sen. Robert Smith (D-Middlesex), told advisory council members this tract is “one of the most contaminated sites in New Jersey” and said this proposal would cap and contain the pollutants.

Carteret Mayor Daniel Reiman, in a letter to the advisory council, said the project meets the environmental and economic needs of the borough. This project, he said “represents a vast improvement over the current property condition.”

However, representatives of the Edison Wetlands Association, the Baykeeper of New York and New Jersey and the Rahway River Association said the project would result in a toxic dump.

 

Source: http://www.nj.com/news/index.ssf/2012/02/middlesex_county_supports_proj.html

CARTERET — Five environmental groups have lined up to oppose plans for a soil-recycling program intended to cap and reclaim 125 acres of long-vacant industrial property in Carteret.

Soil Safe Inc., a Columbia, Md.-based company, is proposing to cap and stabilize land at the former Cytec manufacturing plant.

The company has proposed bringing in and treating petroleum-contaminated dirt from northern New Jersey and southern New York to reclaim 105 acres of wetlands and provide 20 acres for commercial development.

However, five organizations recently sent a letter to Department of Environmental Protection Commissioner Robert Martin, urging the state to deny the project.

The letter was signed by leaders of the Baykeeper of New York-New Jersey, the American Littoral Society, the New Jersey Conservation Foundation, Clean Ocean Action and the Edison Wetlands Association.

The project, the groups say, “would allow a private company to bring in and deposit millions of tons of highly toxic material on this site.” They say the work would also endanger the Rahway River and the Arthur Kill.

The tract is along the edge of the Rahway River.

Soil Safe, in an application to the Middlesex County Solid Waste Advisory Committee, said it wants to bring in 1,500 tons to 7,000 tons of soil a day for treating and dumping on the site to raise the grade and to stabilize barriers around the old Cytec sludge ponds.

The advisory council this week is expected to consider Soil Safe’s request to be included in the county recycling plan.

Borough Mayor Daniel Reiman wrote to the DEP in support of the proposal.

“The project is a good one and will be a vast improvement over the current property condition,” Reiman said in his letter. He also said the project would bring business and jobs to the borough.

Several environmental groups, including the Baykeeper, had also written letters of support.

However, the Baykeeper has now reversed its position and joined project opponents.

Since 2003, Soil Safe has operated a soil-recycling operation on a 160-acre tract in Logan Township, Gloucester County, according to the company’s website.

Source: http://www.nj.com/news/index.ssf/2012/02/groups_urge_nj_to_halt_soil-re.html

0 Categories : Videos

On November 8th, Carteret will VOTE for Change. The lies and questionable deals will come to and end. Carteret needs candidates that represent the resident’s best interests and Urban & Pinchak are up to the task. Proven leadership, integrity and a commitment to change will have a place in the Carteret Borough Council come Novemeber 8th 2011.

VOTE COLUMN “A”

0 Categories : Steve Pinchak, Videos

September Republican Banquet

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As a resident of Carteret for 12 years, I have seen this once nice working class town be turned into an urban nightmare. So when I read Ms. Beepat’s letter (“Endorses Naples, Krum in Carteret election,” Aug. 23), singing the praises of the “better Carteret” created by the current administration , I thought what “Better Carteret “ is she speaking of? —Carteret, North Carolina?

I personally know both Rudy Urban and Steve Pinchak. They offer the residents of Carteret something we have not had in over nine years, a voice on our council. They also have something neither incumbent has. It’s called integrity.

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