Contamination and
the Superfund
If hazardous waste is not properly disposed of in a landfill built especially
to handle hazardous waste, it can leak into groundwater. Leaking is a
big problem because the hazardous waste contaminates both the soil around
the area and the water underground.
If soil and water become contaminated by hazardous waste, it is very
expensive to clean up. People have to actually "clean" the soil
and water to make it safe for the local communities again. And, that kind
of cleaning is very expensive.
In the past, when people didn't handle hazardous waste properly and just
dumped it (like they sometimes did in Dumptown years ago), some areas
of the country became very contaminated by this waste. Some of this contamination
continues to cause problems for the communities that live these areas.
To help clean up hazardous waste sites in the United States, Congress
created Superfund, a law that lets government find those responsible for
creating the hazardous waste and have them clean it up. Superfund is also
a name for special money the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency can
use to clean up pollution from hazardous waste if they can't find who
caused the contamination, or if those responsible for it don't have enough
money to pay for the expensive clean-up.
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