[CPEO-BIF] Visit to Gates Rubber site, Denver, Colorado
Lenny Siegel
lsiegel at cpeo.org
Fri Sep 22 20:31:21 PDT 2006
[For a formatted version of this report, with photos, download the 408KB
Word file from http:www.cpeo.org/pubs/GatesCPEO.doc.]
Gates Rubber Site - Denver, Colorado
Lenny Siegel
September, 2006
On September 7, 2006, I visited the Gates Rubber redevelopment site just
south of downtown Denver. The 80-acre site, which straddles Broadway,
produced belts, hoses, and even tires for the automobile industry.
Established in 1911, in its heyday it provided over 6,000 workers a
living wage and strong benefits. Once the nation's sixth largest rubber
company, Gates began downsizing in the 1980s, as it moved operations
overseas. It closed permanently in 1995.
The 30-acre parcel east of Broadway, formerly operated by Samsonite, is
being developed by Lionstone Redevelopment. The 50 acres on the west
side are being developed initially by Cherokee Denver LLC, which plan to
conduct environmental cleanup and install infrastructure before selling
sections to other builders.
When, Cherokee bought its property in 2001, the Denver Labor
Federation-affiliated Front Range Economic Strategy Center formed the
Campaign for Responsible Development, a broad coalition of neighborhood,
labor, disabled, and environmental groups to influence its plans. With
financial support from Making Connections Denver, the Campaign now
brings together 55 diverse organizations.
In 2003 the coalition contacted Cherokee. Over a three-year period it
extracted a series of promises, embodied in a series of complementary,
enforceable Community Benefits Agreements. In turn it backed Cherokee's
zoning proposal as well as subsidies, from the City and County of
Denver, which should total $126 million.
Cherokee plans an eight-million-square-foot mixed-used residential,
office, and commercial complex, fronting an already operating
light-rail station connecting directly to downtown Denver. It has
pledged local hiring, prevailing wages for construction workers, no
big-box stores, parks and open space, and wheelchair friendly
facilities. Plans call for 200 affordable rental housing units and 150
affordable ownership residences.
Not surprisingly, the Gates site is contaminated. Among its problems are
three TCE plumes, though the company reportedly blames Samsonite, which
leased the eastern parcel. TCE was originally discovered by workers
drilling for the light rail construction project. One plume has migrated
under Interstate 25 into the West Washington Park neighborhood, along
South Lincoln Street. At the insistence of community activists,
officials and the responsible parties have installed monitoring wells
and sampled air - indoors, subslab, and outdoors - in the residential
area. Groundwater concentrations of TCE on Lincoln Street exceed the MCL
(maximum contaminant level) of 5 parts per billion, but in most cases
they aren't much higher than that level. Furthermore, groundwater at the
site does not serve as a source of drinking water."
U.S. EPA and Envirogroup, on behalf of Gates and Cherokee, have sampled
indoor air and soil gas at 53 homes. The Colorado Department of Public
Health and the Environment (CDPHE) concluded that indoor air levels of
TCE "are safe and do not pose a health risk to residents." At least one
home registered indoor air readings above the .8 micrograms per cubic
meter Colorado screening level, requiring further investigation.
However, Colorado's current action level - that is, for requiring
mitigation such as subslab ventilation - is 1.6 micrograms per cubic
meter. Before activists met with the CDPHE, the trigger level was even
higher.
Personally, I don't believe the 1.6 micrograms per cubic meter action
level is stringent enough. In fact, I believe that the Denver-area
residential indoor air background level of .46 micrograms per cubic
meter poses an unacceptable risk to the entire population. Nevertheless,
Cherokee and Gates, under CDPHE supervision, are aggressively treating
the source areas with in situ technologies. According to CDPHE, TCE
concentrations in those areas "have decreased up to 99%." So, even
though I question the finding that residents are safe, the response of
groundwater cleanup makes better sense than installing mitigation
systems (such as subslab depressurization) in neighboring homes.
Since 2005, a number of members of the Campaign have been meeting as the
Voluntary Cleanup Advisory Board (VCAB). Cherokee is enrolled in
Colorado's Voluntary Clean-Up Program (VCUP), which has not required
public participation or even notice. The VCAB has negotiated with CDPHE
and Cherokee to receive notice of each cleanup plan that Cherokee
submits for the Gates site, as well as the creation of a document
depository in a local library. Now the VCAB is working with state
legislators to propose that the state incorporate public involvement
into the VCUP statute or regulations.
Demolition has begun on parts of the Gates complex, but it will take two
or three years to properly remove and dispose of asbestos-containing
materials. The Campaign and the VCAB intend to monitor and ensure
Cherokee's compliance with its agreements, but meanwhile, satisfied with
the relationship it created based upon hard work and broad-based
organizing, it is supporting Cherokee projects elsewhere in the Denver area.
For a more detailed description of the Campaign for Responsible
Development's achievements at Gates, as well as lessons learned, see
"The Gates Cherokee Redevelopment Project: 'A Huge Step Forward for the
Low-Income People of Denver,'" by Tory Read, (Making Connections,
August, 2006), a 1.6 MB PDF file, at
http://www.cpeo.org/pubs/GatesMakingConnections.pdf.
More information about the Brownfields
mailing list