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Navy Receives $60 Million to Retest Parts of Hunters Point Shipyard for Contamination

The U.S. Navy recently received more than $60 million in federal funding to help pay for chemical and radiological cleanup at the former Hunters Point Naval Shipyard in San Francisco.

The process of cleaning up the roughly 500-acre parcel has been mired in delays because of fraudulent soil testing overseen by Tetra Tech EC. Two contractors of the Pasadena-based engineering services company pleaded guilty last year to falsifying records in 2012 and swapping soil samples.

After public pressure this summer, the Navy, which still owns the land, agreed to re-evaluate the area known as Parcel G, where some of the work had been done.

“These funds will ensure that every area touched by Tetra Tech EC will be retested and the health and safety of the Bayview-Hunters Point Community will be protected,” congresswoman Nancy Pelosi said in an announcement on Monday, referring to money made available in a recently passed federal spending bill.

The Navy is going through a draft proposal process for how it plans to conduct the retesting of the 40-acre Parcel G land. Final plans are expected later this fall.

The former shipyard served as the site of a nuclear defense laboratory and a military maintenance shipping dock from the 1940s to the late 1960s. Historical records show that the area was polluted with heavy metals and radioactive waste, which has never been completely cleaned up.

The Navy ceased operations at the shipyard in 1974. After briefly leasing most of the land to a private ship repair company, it closed down the facility in 1991, transferring operation of it to the City of San Francisco for redevelopment.

Parcel A, the first piece of land transferred, is a 75-acre lot on a hilltop overlooking the shipyard. Since then,  a number of town houses and condominiums have been built there, and many more are planned.

Last month, during a rescanning of Parcel A, state regulators found a token-size piece of naval equipment containing radium near the newly built homes.

Kimberly Ostrowski, director of the western Navy Base Realignment and Closure, told San Francisco supervisors at a hearing this month that the object was removed and wasn’t dangerous to the public.

“The deck marker measurements as it was found are less than radiation from a dental X-ray or a transcontinental flight,” she said.

The Navy has long tried to persuade residents that Parcel A is safe. But at a recent informal gathering in someone’s garage, homeowners expressed major concerns.

“Is the foundation of my home thick enough to protect me and my family from any radiation that might be coming from the ground?” one resident asked.

The small meeting of about a dozen residents was led by retired nuclear policy expert Daniel Hirsch, a former UC Santa Cruz lecturer. He wrote two papers recently that suggest the Navy did not adequately test Parcel A, as well as most of the rest of the shipyard.

Hirsch’s argument is based on a historical radiological assessment (HRA) published by the Navy in 2004. Of the 882 historical and current sites at the shipyard, 91 were identified as radiologically impacted to some degree, according to the report.

“This does not confirm the presence of radioactive contamination, but does indicate that there is the possibility for residual contamination,” the report stated.

Hirsch said because of the historical uses of the shipyard and the past nuclear activity there, he doesn’t think it’s possible that only 91 of the sites could be considered potentially contaminated.

“Eighty heavily contaminated ships from a nuclear test zone were brought back to Hunters Point and sandblasted to get the radioactivity off of them, sending that radioactivity widely in the air and settling down throughout the whole property,” Hirsch said. “They burned 600,000 gallons of radioactive diesel fuel from the test zone in boilers at Hunters Point, so that stuff will settle out. There are numerous other ways in which that material would migrate.”

The Navy, however, challenged Hirsch’s conclusions.

“The Navy has full confidence in the HRA for Hunters Point as being an accurate and reliable evaluation of impacted radiological sites that have been or are slated for cleanup to ensure the property is suitable for transfer to the City of San Francisco and protective of public health.”

“We weren’t expecting this to be something we had to deal with,” said Linda Parker Pennington, who recently bought a house at the shipyard. “If we had talked to other people who had been dealing with this issue for decades and bringing it up, then we might have been more concerned.”

There will be an information booth about the cleanup at a health fair Saturday (Oct. 27) at the Southeast Community Facility Commission, 1800 Oakdale Ave., according to the Navy’s website.

Copyright 2018 KQED