There is no argument that the longtime co-op owners could have known more. But then, they are now paying for not being more proactive. I will also say that it is fairly common knowledge that the whole lower downtown area, to the river, was historically oil fields and refineries. From east I-35 at the fort smith junction, all the way past the farmers market. The area north of Reno out by I-35 is an old superfund site. The area along Reno at Lottie was contaminated by heavy metals. Don Karchmer spent a ton cleaning it up. (He didnÂ’t own it when it was a metal site.). I would suspect that the Strawberry Fields project will require remediation. The park next door did. The main problem is as I said...a 100 years ago, no one thought about the long term consequences of dumping sludge and byproduct in pits and burying them. There are some old sludge pits out south of Reno east along I-40. Been there decades. Then if you want to talk about other contaminants...back in the 40s-70s there were dry cleaners all over OKC. Most of those sites are contaminated. Some extremely bad. And those contaminates cause cancer. Vapor degreasers. TCE and PCE. Those are also found around mechanic shops and airports. The old Gulfstream site is one such. Bethany is suing Gulfstream in federal court on that one. There is an old cleaners building in a strip mall that cannot be used except for storage because the vapor intrusion of PCE is too high for people to work there even a few hours a day. Many of these cleaners are in residential areas. But again...no one knew what those chemicals would do. We have only learned in recent years how dangerous these contaminates are. The Eagle Industries site is another. It will most likely be a superfund site. Tinker is a superfund site. Mostly PCE. We are learning more every day. But no one knows for sure how extensive sites are until you start testing. The Co-op was one such site.
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