St. Paul City Council asks MPCA to get Ford to clean up contaminated site

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In St. Paul’s Highland Park, a polluted leftover portion of the former Twin Cities Assembly Plant remains owned by the Ford Motor Co., and state pollution control officials are still pondering with the auto company what to do about the contaminated dump site.

Dubbed “Area C,” the 22-acre land parcel sits capped at the base of the river bluff adjacent to Hidden Falls Regional Park, between Mississippi River Boulevard and the river, and is currently used as a parking lot.

The St. Paul City Council recently came to the unanimous conclusion that the time for pollution monitoring and other containment measures is over, and the state’s preferred alternative — an $8.8 million partial cleanup, mostly along its southern slope — while less costly, won’t go far enough to protect the river.

Council calls for full cleanup

Instead, the council is calling for full cleanup, despite an estimated $71 million price tag, and has raised the possibility of turning the site into an official extension of Hidden Falls Regional Park. The city is leaning on the Minnesota Pollution Control Agency to require Ford to cover the cost of fully excavating and restoring the site itself.

“I think it’s the best option,” said council member Saura Jost, who noted Mayor Kaohly Her, state rep. Dave Pinto and state Sen. Erin Murphy also are supportive of a full cleanup.

Jost, who also submitted comments to the MPCA on her own behalf, noted that major flooding could someday spread hazardous waste that is buried dozens of feet down, and the site could eventually pose a threat to slope stability.

“I also have concerns about the surrounding ecology,” said Jost, addressing the city council in late February. “Having a little more investigation and analysis … is important.”

The site was removed from the federal Superfund list of nationally recognized contaminated properties in 1990, but it still remains part of the state’s voluntary investigation and cleanup program. The land contains several monitoring wells to measure groundwater contamination, Jost said.

In an email Thursday, a spokesperson for Ford Land, Ford Motor Co.’s real estate division, said the MPCA “will determine which cleanup alternative should be implemented” and Ford will “develop a detailed plan for implementing the chosen clean-up option and will execute the plan.” They referred all other questions to the MPCA.

Final cleanup plan may come later this year

State officials believe a less intensive approach is in order. Based in part on 10 years of groundwater monitoring, the MPCA has called for removing industrial waste from Area C’s south slope and stabilizing the site.

“This plan reduces potential risks to people and the Mississippi River from existing contamination, focuses clean-up on the areas of greatest concern, and improves the site’s appearance,” reads a statement issued Wednesday by an MPCA spokesperson.

A final cleanup plan could be chosen later this year. Ford would then be expected to develop an implementation plan, and begin work in 2027.

The Friends of the Mississippi River issued a written memo to the MPCA on Tuesday outlining why they believe the state has the legal authority to require Ford to pursue a complete site restoration under the Minnesota Environmental Response and Liability Act.

“At this time, the MPCA is recommending against a full cleanup for the site,” said Colleen O’Connor Toberman, Land Use and Planning Program director for the Friends of the Mississippi River, in an interview Tuesday. “In my mind, a partial cleanup leaves the risk that Ford won’t be around to pay for future needed cleanup down the road. If Ford doesn’t pay now, the public may end up paying for it later instead.”

“Right now, they can afford to do it,” Toberman added.

Six alternatives, six price tags

The Ford Motor Co. commissioned a 134-page feasibility study for Area C, which was revised last October, and it outlines six options ranging from no cleanup in Alternative 1, and slope stabilization in Alternative 2, to the costliest approach — the $71 million full cleanup described in Alternative 6.

Arcadis, the engineering and consulting firm that assembled the report, recommended the less intensive measures outlined in Alternative 3, which involves some waste excavation, slope stabilization and long-term monitoring, for a total cost of $2.4 million.

The Minnesota Pollution Control Agency is leaning toward Alternative 4, which would cost $8.8 million and involve “excavation and removal of all reasonably accessible industrial waste,” as well as annual inspections and long-term groundwater monitoring.

Critics such as the Friends of the Mississippi River have said Alternative 4’s half-measures would fail to address the hazardous waste in the middle of the pile, focusing instead on removing surface debris along its southern edges while installing erosion controls.

The Arcadis report finds an impenetrable surface cover outlined in the next option, Alternative 5, to be unfeasible due to the site’s topography and other floodplain issues.

The city council voted 7-0 on Feb. 25 to formally ask the MPCA to require Ford to carry out the full $71 million cleanup, as spelled out in Alternative 6.

In its Feb. 25 resolution, the council deemed Area C “an ongoing threat to the groundwater, soil, air, and the local ecological system of our city and region,” and called on the state “to protect human, plant, and animal life,” as opposed to continued monitoring, testing and containment alternatives.

Decades of dumping

The MPCA held a public meeting on its recommendation on Jan. 15 at the Highland Community Center, which drew a rally of concerned residents outside the building.

Ford, which began assembling Model T vehicles from its Highland Park plant in 1925, ceased production there in 2011, and the city has since worked with a master developer, the Ryan Cos., to assemble housing, office buildings, retail spaces, playgrounds and infrastructure in what’s now known as the 122-acre Highland Bridge development.

Despite Ford’s storied history in Highland Park, Area C remains a trouble spot. Ford spent decades dumping hazardous waste, including paints, solvents, heavy metals, construction rubble and contaminated soil on the river floodplain into the 1960s, none of which was addressed when soils at Highland Bridge were cleaned to residential standards.

The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, after reconstruction of Lock and Dam No. 1 in the late 1970s to the early ’80s, added construction debris on site, creating layers of material above the hazardous waste from the plant, which further complicates a full cleanup, Toberman said. The city then dumped its own construction debris after a rebuild of Mississippi River Boulevard in the late ’80s.

The council resolution calls for the removed materials to be placed in a modern disposal facility designed to isolate hazardous waste. The city’s Hidden Falls/Crosby Farm Regional Park Master Plan calls for Area C to be added to Hidden Falls Regional Park if and when contamination is addressed.

Ford earned $6.8 billion last year before interest, taxes and one-time costs, according to industry monitors, but the auto maker still experienced a net loss of more than $8 billion, its largest shortfall in almost 20 years, after subtracting those expenses.

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Vikings restructure T.J. Hockenson’s contract to clear more cap space

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Vikings tight end T.J. Hockenson will be sticking around in Minnesota for the foreseeable future after agreeing to a restructured contract.

A source confirmed the move to the Pioneer Press. It will save the Vikings more than $5 million in cap space.

It had been widely speculated that Hockenson, 28, would have to agree to some sort of pay cut on the heels of an underwhelming campaign. He was set to carry a $21.3 million cap hit before agreeing to a new deal.

This follows a trend of acting general manager Rob Brzezinski freeing up cap space ahead of free agency. He recently negotiated signing bonus conversions with receiver Justin Jefferson, left tackle Christian Darrisaw, and cornerback Byron Murphy Jr.

It’s also been reported that the Vikings plan to release running back Aaron Jones, defensive tackle Jonathan Allen, and defensive tackle Javon Hargrave.

The combination of those moves should help the Vikings get under the cap by the start of free agency. They were previously more than $40 million over the cap

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Girls hockey: St. Croix Valley runs out of time in state title game

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MIDDLETON, Wis. – The St. Croix Valley Fusion ran out of comebacks, or maybe they just ran out of time.

The Fusion, who overcame a three-goal deficit in the semifinals, scored three times over the final 4:21 but came up one goal short in a 5-4 loss to the top-seeded Bay Area Ice Bears on Saturday in the title game of the Wisconsin girls state hockey tournament.

“It was kind of the same game plan, just get a goal, settle down and we kind of did,” said Fusion coach Matt Cranston. “They were just so tough and they didn’t give up. We did it two nights ago and we figured, well, we can do it again. And they did, almost.”

The Fusion trailed 3-0 after one period and were down 5-1 late in the third period before staging a furious rally.

Freshman Emma Larson scored on a rebound for the Fusion to make it 5-2 with 4:21 remaining and Jane Volgren scored on a power play goal from the left circle with just over three minutes left.

The Fusion pulled goalie Emma Gustafson and the extra attacker paid off when Oaklie Holldorf found the net from the left point with 47.4 seconds remaining.

After a faceoff in the Bay Area end with 18 seconds left, the Ice Bears were able to tie the puck up in the corner in the closing seconds for their third title in four seasons.

“I think the switch really flipped at the end,” Volgren said. “We all came together as a team, as we do. Just a strong bond really got us to the end.”

The Ice Bears (26-2) withstood a strong early effort by the Fusion and then answered with three consecutive goals for 3-0 lead after one period. Volgren, who had four goals in St. Croix Valley’s semifinal comeback win over Superior/Northwestern, brought the Fusion within 3-1 with a second-period goal.

The Ice Bears appeared in control with a power play goal by Faye Brunke just 32 seconds into the third period and Brunke capped a hat trick on a rebound from the left side with 8:19 remaining for a 5-1 lead.

“When Faye went out at the beginning of the third and buried that fourth goal, we were in good shape. We felt good,” Bay Area coach Mike Buchan said. “It’s a no-quit team over there. They’re skilled and they’re strong and they can skate well and they proved it. They just kept coming.”

The second-seeded Fusion (24-5) controlled play early with a 6-1 advantage in shots, but failed to capitalize on two power play opportunities and at least one shot off the pipe. Bay Area outshot the Fusion 10-1 the rest of the period.

“What’d we have, a pipe or two? I think we outplayed them that first seven or eight minutes,” Cranston said. “It could have been a different game, maybe, if one of those would have went in.”

The Ice Bears, a De Pere co-op of Green Bay area teams, flipped the momentum and gained control behind a pair of power play goals by Addison Dahl a little over a minute apart.

Volgren was called for slashing and Dahl connected from the top of the left circle 1:01 into the penalty to put the Ice Bears up 1-0 with 6:10 left in the period. The Fusion were whistled again and Dahl connected from the high slot to make it 2-0.

Brunke put the Ice Bears up 3-0 with 43 seconds left in the opening period, capping a rush with a backhander through the five hole.

Volgren, who had four consecutive goals in the semifinal comeback from a 4-1 deficit, got the Fusion on the board with 5:26 left in the second period. Gustafson, who finished with 23 saves, stopped all 11 Ice Bears shots in the period.

“Powerful thing, momentum is. We talked about that two nights ago. It went in our favor, kind of did today, too,” Cranston said. “Too bad the game wasn’t five more minutes.”

The current configuration of the Fusion is a co-op with River Falls/Baldwin-Woodville/St. Croix Central. A previous version of the River Falls co-op that also included other area schools with the current three won three consecutive state titles from 2009-11.

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Banchero and Bane combine for 55 points, Magic beat Timberwolves 119-92

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By MIKE COOK

MINNEAPOLIS (AP) — Desmond Bane scored 30 points, Paolo Banchero added 25 points and 15 rebounds, and the Orlando Magic won their third straight game by beating the Minnesota Timberwolves 119-92 on Saturday.

Jalen Suggs added 14 points and Tristan da Silva had 11 points for the Magic, who moved atop the Southeast Division.

Anthony Edwards scored 34 points, including 13 of 14 from the free-throw line, but Minnesota had it’s five-game winning streak snapped.

Julius Randle scored 14 points and grabbed a team-high nine rebounds for the Timberwolves, Naz Reid added 13 points off the bench, and Rudy Gobert added 12 points.

Minnesota shot just 35.7% in scoring its second-fewest points of the season. Starters Donte DiVincenzo and Jaden McDaniels were a combined 0 for 15.

Bane was 10 of 17 from the field and made all 10 free throws for his 11th 30-plus point game of the season. Banchero made 10 of 18 shots.

Jett Howard had five points and Bane, Wendell Carter Jr. and Suggs each added four during a 17-4 Magic run for an 81-61 lead midway through the third quarter.

Edwards had seven points in a 68-second span and Randle followed with a steal and dunk to key a surge to get Minnesota within 90-78 entering the final quarter, but Orlando scored seven of the first eight fourth-quarter points to push the lead back to 18.

Orlando, 5-2 in its past seven games, finished the first half on a 19-2 run, including 14 straight points, for a 60-50 lead.

Magic starting guard Anthony Black, averaging 15.5 points per game, played just two minutes in the first quarter before leaving with a lower back strain. He missed two games with a right quad contusion before returning Thursday.

Up next

Magic: At Milwaukee Sunday.

Timberwolves: Begin a four-game road trip on Tuesday at the Los Angeles Lakers.

___

AP NBA: https://apnews.com/hub/nba