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Resolution 5525
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Resolution 5525
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1/31/2017 10:16:36 AM
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Resolutions
Resolution Number
5525
Date
9/8/2004
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%. <br /> 4.1 Changes in Approved Plan <br /> This plan may be modified from time to time, pursuant to the Act governing the <br /> Plan and subject to approval by the City of Everett. <br /> 4.2 Severability <br /> If any portions of the Community Renewal Plan shall be held to be invalid or <br /> unenforceable, such invalidity shall not affect the remaining portions of this <br /> Community Renewal Plan. <br /> 5. Background and Goals <br /> 5.1 History <br /> The Everett Smelter Site previously hosted a smelter plant, which at the turn of <br /> the century, was one of the largest industrial facilities in Everett. In 1894, the <br /> Puget Sound Reduction Company began operating the smelter, refining ores <br /> primarily from the Monte Cristo mining district. Some of the ore from the Monte <br /> Cristo mining district contained over 25 percent total arsenic. To recover arsenic <br /> from the ore (arsenic has historically been used in such things as pesticides and <br /> wood preservatives), an arsenic processing plant was constructed on the <br /> southern end of the Everett Smelter Site. In 1903, a corporation that <br /> subsequently became ASARCO Incorporated ("Asarco") bought and continued <br /> operating the smelter. Asarco subsequently dismantled the smelter in 1914 and <br /> 1915. Asarco sold the smelter and its surrounding land-holdings through a series <br /> of transactions between 1914 and 1936 to different buyers. About 18 acres were <br /> purchased and subsequently developed into residential neighborhoods. <br /> During an environmental investigation in 1990, an outcrop of slag was <br /> discovered on the hillside below East Marine View Drive. As part of the <br /> investigation, slag, soil, and ground water samples were collected and analyzed <br /> for the presence of heavy metals. Ecology was notified that a release of a <br /> hazardous substance had occurred. Ecology investigated and subsequently <br /> designated the area as the Everett Smelter Site, a state cleanup site under the <br /> Model Toxics Control Act (MTCA). Over the next few years numerous <br /> investigations and analyses were conducted on the site and surrounding areas. <br /> Laboratory analysis demonstrated releases of arsenic, cadmium, and lead to the <br /> soils found in the residential area on the site. <br /> Community Renewal Plan-page 7 <br />
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