Woodard & Curran Continues to Climb Top Environmental Firms List

Engineering and environmental firm, Woodard & Curran, moved up twelve spots to number 55Woodard%20&%20Curran on Engineering News Record’s (ENR) annual list of the Top 200 Environmental Firms in the United States.  For over 35 years, Woodard & Curran has helped clients’ address environmental needs nationwide.

ENR calculates the annual rankings based on revenue from environmental projects, which includes water and wastewater, stormwater, environmental cleanup, and more.

“Continuing to climb in the rankings is important to us, not just in the numbers, but in what it means regarding the impact we are having on some of the nation’s most complex environmental issues,” Doug McKeown, CEO of Woodard & Curran said. “It always feels good to be recognized for our hard-earned accomplishments, and this list has become a great way for us to gauge our progress as we continue to innovate and look for new solutions for our clients.”

Despite an overall contraction that, according to ENR, saw revenue for the top 200 firms as a whole decrease in revenue more than 4 percent this year, Woodard & Curran grew 16 percent. This represents the eighth consecutive year of revenue growth for Woodard & Curran.

Woodard & Curran is an integrated engineering, science, and operations company serving clients locally and nationwide. The firm employs more than 850 people across the country at offices in Connecticut, Georgia, Maine, Massachusetts, Missouri, Montana, New Jersey, New York, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, and Wyoming. Visit www.woodardcurran.com for more information.

Perma-Liner™ Opens Distribution Facility in California

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EPA Completes Construction of Water line in Chester and Washington Townships, New Jersey

Agency Action Protects Community from Polluted Groundwater

Contact Information: John J. Martin, martin.johnj@epa.gov, 212-637-3662(New York, N.Y.)

Officials from the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency marked the completion of a water line extension that will provide a safe source of drinking water to 73 homes and businesses threatened by contaminated groundwater from the Combe Fill South Landfill Superfund site in Chester and Washington Townships in N.J. As a result, those homes and local businesses will no longer need treatment systems. EPA Superfund Director Walter Mugdan and Chester Township Mayor Bill Cogger marked the milestone with a toast of clean drinking water.

“This water line will permanently supply clean drinking water to homes and businesses that had previously gotten their water from groundwater threatened by the landfill contamination,” said EPA Region 2 Superfund Director Walter Mugdan. “The completion of the water line is the culmination of a partnership between the EPA, Chester and Washington Townships and the Washington Township Municipal Utilities Authority.”

The Superfund program operates on the principle that polluters should pay for cleanups, not taxpayers. The EPA searches for parties legally responsible for the contamination of Superfund sites and holds those parties accountable for the costs of investigations and cleanups. In this instance, EPA has recovered more than $50 million in past costs from responsible parties which was made available to fund ongoing work at the site, including construction of the $9 million water line extension.

Starting in the early 1990s, the New Jersey Department of Environmental Protection began providing in-home water treatment systems to residents whose wells were potentially impacted by contamination coming from the landfill. The new water line extension provides a permanent safe water supply to the neighborhood around the landfill. The water line extension, which connects homes and businesses along Parker Road, School House Lane, and a small portion of Route 24, will be operated and maintained by the Washington Township Municipal Utilities Authority.

The 65-acre Combe Fill South Landfill is located in Morris County, NJ, and served as a municipal landfill from the 1940s until 1981. Soil and groundwater beneath the site were contaminated by volatile organic compounds from the landfill. Volatile organic compounds can have serious impacts on people’s health. In 1978, Combe Fill Corporation bought the landfill and operated the site in violation of New Jersey’s solid waste laws. Combe Fill Corporation went bankrupt in 1981 and the landfill was not properly closed.

Approximately 170 people live within half a mile of the landfill and most of them use private wells as their source of drinking water. The EPA added the site to the Superfund list of the most contaminated hazardous waste sites in 1983.

The original cleanup plan for the site included capping the landfill, installing a landfill gas collection system, pumping and treating the shallow groundwater beneath the site, and installing stormwater runoff controls. All of these cleanup measures were successfully completed and the system to treat shallow groundwater continues to operate at the site. A study of the landfill’s impact on a deeper layer of groundwater is ongoing.

Source: EPA.gov