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Superfund Designation for Gowanus Canal | REnotated

Superfund Designation for Gowanus Canal

  • The Gowanus Canal of Brooklyn is now designated as a Superfund site and the decade or more process of cleaning up the waterway has finally begun.  Despite fears that this designation will create a stigma that dampens development, it is in the best interest of the people of Brooklyn that the canal receives the attention and comprehensive clean-up it deserves.  The Gowanus Canal has been a toxic, fetid cesspool for one hundred and fifty years; and a legal label or lack of one does not change the obvious reality.  The City of New York had decades to address this problem, but for decades the canal remained a nasty mix of raw sewage and toxic chemicals – an 18th century sewer coupled with a twentieth century industrial waste dump.  The city’s arguments against Superfund status, mainly that it would discourage private investment, seemed more plausible before the real estate market collapsed.  Having a Superfund site in the heart of Brooklyn, isn’t what anyone wants, but chemistry and biology can not be ignored.  If not properly cleaned up, development would likely remain sporadic or stall altogether and public health would continue to be greatly compromised.  If work proceeds as now planned, the Gowanus area has the potential to be a significant environmental, cultural, and financial asset to the people of New York.  The history of the Gowanus Canal has been defined by some through a willful disregard for the environment and by others through simple neglect, but a different future can only be created through commitment and effort.  We may be cleaning up someone else’s mess, but the legacy we leave will be our own.

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