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and 3,000 mg/kg arsenic will also be removed. The site will be regraded, and a <br /> minimum of two feet of clean soil suitable for residential landscape vegetation <br /> will be imported to the site. As addressed in the Addendum, the plan also <br /> provides for cleaning up selected residential properties adjacent to the Fenced <br /> Area in the same manner. The arsenic concentration profile for residential use <br /> required by the FCAP will be met (see soil profile in Exhibit C), subject to <br /> institutional controls including deed restrictions (FCAP Section 6.7 and <br /> Prospective Purchaser Consent Decrees between EI-IA and Ecology, as <br /> summarized below). At the completion of the cleanup, the site will be suitable <br /> for single-family residential development. No on-site Consolidation Facility will <br /> be constructed under this proposal. <br /> Final site restoration, landscaping, and related plans will be prepared and will <br /> require the approval of Ecology and the City. <br /> At the conclusion of the work, the entire area will be cleaned up to standards that <br /> will allow single family or other residential use. Contaminated soil will remain <br /> on the properties at depths where it is unlikely that people will come into contact <br /> with it. Institutional controls will be used (property owner notification, a marker <br /> cloth at the top of the contaminated soil, deed restrictions, etc.) to help ensure <br /> that people are aware of where contaminated material may be encountered so <br /> they can take appropriate safety measures. <br /> 5.2 Problems Addressed by the Plan <br /> In addition to the basic need for environmental cleanup addressed by the Plan, <br /> as described in the previous section, there are a number of factors that <br /> independently as well as together result in the Redevelopment Area being <br /> blighted. Development of the neighborhood appears to have been targeted at <br /> families who desired to live near the industries (lumber mills and other <br /> traditional industries) that once rimmed the north end of the city. As the <br /> economic cycles affected the industries in North Everett the opportunities for the <br /> area residents to work nearby faded. Over time the neighborhood slowly <br /> transitioned from an owner-occupied residential area into a greater <br /> predominance of rental units. The following reinforces the need for the type of <br /> redevelopment and rehabilitation proposed by this Plan: <br /> Community Renewal Plan-page 9 <br />