From the Office of New York State Comptroller
Thomas P. DiNapoli
FOR RELEASE:
Immediately
August 29, 2007.
DiNapoli Presents West Hempstead Water District with final payment
from State Oil Spill Fund
More than $1.2 million spent to clean
up MTBE contamination
The
West Hempstead-Hempstead Gardens Water District received its third and final
payment from
the New York Environmental Protection and Spill Fund for the clean-up of four
public wells
contaminated by methyl tertiary-butyl ether (MTBE), New York State Comptroller
Thomas P.
DiNapoli announced today.
The
$594,980 payment is the third installment of a $1.204 million damage claim
settlement the Fund
negotiated with the water district in 2006. A significant portion of the
settlement funded the
installation of a new drinking water supply well at an alternate location.
“This
payment brings the District one step closer to finally operating at full
capacity to supply
residents with clean drinking water,” DiNapoli said. “Timing is crucial when
dealing with MTBE
because it spreads so quickly through groundwater and soil. By moving quickly to
resolve the
District’s damage claims, we were able to provide vital funding for the
construction of a new supply
well.”
“This
is what happens when agencies work together to solve a problem,” said District
Superintendent
Robert P. York. “The drilling of a supply well and putting it into service to
meet the summer’s
demand was done expeditiously. The cooperation of all agencies involved was
terrific.”
The
West Hempstead-Hempstead Gardens Water District submitted a damage claim to the
Oil Spill
Fund in September 2006, after four of the District’s ten public water supply
wells were found to be
contaminated with MTBE, a gasoline additive which has been banned in New York
since 2004. The
MTBE contamination resulted from a petroleum discharge that greatly reduced the
District’s clean
water capacity. District costs included expenditures for sampling, installation
of a new well system to
replace lost capacity, and modification of two wells to place them into the
filtration and treatment
system.
The
Oil Spill Fund, in partnership with the Department of Environmental
Conservation, is also
acting to clean up the petroleum discharge. The Fund has spent more than $1.8
million remediating
the contamination, bringing the total costs to more than $3 million. Clean-up
efforts are continuing
under the oversight of Department engineers.
The
Oil Spill Fund has referred damage claim payment to the Office of the Attorney
General who
will pursue cost recovery from those determined to be responsible for the spill.
About the Oil Spill Fund
The New York Environmental Protection and Spill Compensation Fund is
administered by the
Office of the State Comptroller and pays for the remediation of petroleum spills
conducted with the
oversight of the New York State Department of Environmental Conservation.
Individuals and
entities who sustain financial losses because of a petroleum spill may file
damage claims with the
Fund.
The
Fund’s major sources of revenue are a license fee charged on each barrel of
petroleum sold in
New York State ($.08 per 42-gallon barrel), and reimbursement from petroleum
spillers. When the
party responsible for a petroleum spill is identified, the Fund pursues
reimbursement from that party
for claims paid in relation to that particular spill.
_____________________________________________________________
Newsday, Thursday, August 30, 2007
Final payment made in wells contamination
BY JASON DEL RAY
The West Hempstead-Hempstead Gardens Water District has received a final payment
the state to help
cover the cost of dealing with gasoline spills and contaminated drinking water
wells.
The
$594,980 payment is the third installment of a $1.204 million damage claim
_____________________________________________________
Click here to view archive of original MTBE alerts and
updates
_____________________________________________________

Celebrating 80 years of
community service
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a little better. Learn some history of the District and how it
developed, then meet the Board and Staff. Have any
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