EDITORIAL
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Drive by the Ascon site in Southeast Huntington Beach, and the first
thing that comes to mind is that it is unbelievable that such prime
property is undeveloped.
But a deeper look, literally, uncovers the reason: For years, Ascon
was used as a dump for drilling mud, fuel oil, chromic acid, sulfuric
acid, aluminum slag and styrene (a form of plastic).
More recently, solid materials like asphalt, concrete, soil and wood
were dumped there. The mix is a costly stew of toxic chemicals that
likely will take more than $30 million to clean up.
The encouraging news is that by August, there may be a plan to get rid
of the waste lurking in the ground there. Early estimates place the cost
for the cleanup at $31.5 million, with the cost of handling the ground
water pollution still unknown.
It is a daunting number. But there are several recent developments
that give reason to hope that this time the cleanup will happen.
First, the Planning Commission last month approved a redevelopment
plan for the southeast part of town, which could pump money and city
interest into fixing up the area. Now, the City Council needs to take a
critical look at the idea, as redevelopment is invariably an extremely
emotional issue for residents who live in the redevelopment area. But
used wisely, such plans can cause dramatic improvements.
Second, there is a series of deep pockets lining up from which money
can be taken to pay for the cleanup. Nine major oil and chemical
companies involved in talks about what to do with the site.
Finally, there is the lure of the payoff: the tens of million of
dollars (or more) that could be made by developing some 500 homes on the
38-acre property. While this prize has hung there for years, combined
with the above developments, it becomes ever sweeter for a developer.
The cleanup won’t come easily, of course, and it won’t come quickly.
It could take years of planning, and even optimistic city guesses are
five years, possibly 10. But it needs to happen, for a host of reasons
ranging from the benefit of property taxes for the city to the benefit of
new homes in a tight real estate market, not to mention the benefit of
having that area (which is just across the street from Edison High
School) clean.
It seems worth millions, doesn’t it?
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