Calls Grow for Navy to ‘Clean Up The Mess’ at Ex-Grumman Property

(Photo: Hank Russell) Suffolk County Executive Ed Romaine calls on the U.S. Navy to clean up the former Grumman site during a press conference in Hauppauge on February 21.

By Hank Russell

Local elected officials, environmental activists, health officials and concerned residents took part in a press conference at the H. Lee Dennison Building on February 21 calling on the U.S. Navy to clean up the former Grumman site in Calverton of dangerous chemicals such as perfluoroalkyl substances (PFAS) and 1,4-dioxane. Suffolk County Executive Ed Romaine blasted the Navy for failing to perform any remediation on the site.

The issue is close to Romaine, who lives in the area. He previously served as a county legislator in which his district covered Manorville and parts of Riverhead. He was also county clerk and supervisor of the Town of Brookhaven, where part of Manorville is located.

The contamination has “gotten so bad,” he said, that the chemicals made its way into the Peconic River, which has been used for fishing. It has also resulted in a “fish advisory,” in which no one is recommended to eat more than one fish per month.

“I know the community,” Romaine said. “I know what the people are going through. These people are being victimized by the Navy. … It makes my blood [boil]. Shame on them! I’m aggravated because this is government at its worst.” He also said that he will “use the clout of my office” to make sure the Navy fixes the problem.

(Photo: Hank Russell) Citizens Campaign for the Environment Executive Director Adrienne Esposito shows where the contamination is.

Adrienne Esposito, executive director of the Citizens Campaign for the Environment, said the amount of chemicals measured in the water comes out to 2,020 parts per trillion (ppt) — far exceeding the state’s recommended levels of 10 ppt. “The U.S. Navy is supposed to be protecting its people, not poisoning their people,” she said.

She also accused the Navy of hiding its findings on the property from the Suffolk County Department of Health regarding the extent of the contamination. Both agencies are supposed to share data, Esposito said hiding the data “only happens when the agency has something to hide. We need transparency.”

“It’s outrageous that the data is not being shared,” added Deputy County Executive Jennifer Juengst. She also put some of the blame on the New York State Department of Environmental Conservation (NYS DEC). There was outcry from Juengst and Riverhead Town Councilman Bob Kern that the state wasn’t doing a good enough job on oversight. “There’s no reason to wait one more day.”

Long Island Life & Politics reached to the DEC. The agency replied in a statement, “DEC is overseeing the comprehensive investigation of the Naval Weapons Industrial Reserve Plant (NWIRP) Calverton site through the agency’s regulatory authority under the Resource Conservation and Recovery Act (RCRA) and State Superfund (SSF) programs.”

The agency also noted that the Navy is investigating the nature and extent of contamination of PFAS and potential source areas both on and off the Calverton property. “DEC will continue to work with state and federal partners and the community to ensure a comprehensive investigation and cleanup.”

Esposito also called on the Navy to give Suffolk $2 million to hook up clean drinking water to the residents of River Road, and use a granulated carbonation system to get rid of the PFAS in the water. “It shouldn’t have to be so hard, especially when it’s a federal agency,” she said. “This should be done expeditiously; instead, they ar removing at a pre-global warming glacial pace.”

Also at the press conference was Kelly McClinchey, a Manorville resident impacted by the contamination. “We’ve been using bottled water for a couple of years,” she said. “That’s how it’s been. … It’s unacceptable. … I can’t say the Navy didn’t do anything; they did nothing.”

Romaine cited McClinchy’s story as one of many being told in the Manorville area. “Imagine that water being used to bathe your newborn, to give your child a drink of water, to boil spaghetti …”

He told the Navy, “Now is the time to step up to the plate and clean up the mess you left.”