Health and safety concerns

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SPRING VALLEY — Residents of Spring Valley seemed more confident about the safety of the Bassicks property after Wednesday’s public health and safety meeting, but they now are raising questions about the neighboring Hobbs property.

Alderman Walt Marini gave the packed house an overview of what has happened at the Bassicks property through the years. Everything started after the Bassicks property was shut down and the city went to the then-owners, Honeywell-Hobbs, and asked the organization find out if the property could be available for development.

Honeywell-Hobbs responded by saying that if the city pursued it, then they would close the Hobbs facility.

“The pursuit was dropped because the city didn’t want to see people lose their jobs,” Marini said.

The property was eventually purchased by Invensys, and they agreed to join the Illinois Environmental Protection Agency’s voluntary remediation program. Over the next several years, the Invensys worked with the IEPA and a No Further Remediation letter was given in April.

This signified that as long as all conditions of the letter were met, the land was safe for commercial and industrial use, but not residential. The only restrictions were a concrete cap was required over a section of contaminated soil; that no wells be dug on the property; and that if the cap is removed or broken, that construction workers follow proper safety procedures.

The meeting was designed to give the public an opportunity to voice their concerns and hear from former IEPA and current environmental attorney William Ingersoll of Brown, Hay & Stephens of Springfield.

“We, too, had many of the same questions as you do,” Spring Valley Economic Development Director Debb Ladgenski told the audience.

Ingersoll began by letting the people know exactly what the No Further Remediation Letter meant. The Bassicks property had a comprehensive review, which meant the IEPA looked for contamination from all areas of the property and tested for all common contaminants associated with an industrial site.

“They did press them through from property boundary to property boundary,” Ingersoll said.

They found several areas of contamination, but only one area was considered a hot spot that required action. A 40-by-70-foot section was capped with concrete to remove any possible inhalation of vapor from the known carcinogen, trichloroethane.

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