Daily Environmental Monitoring Summary
Wednesday, February 20, 2002
The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) and other federal, state and local agencies have collected extensive environmental monitoring data from the World Trade Center site and nearby areas in Manhattan, Brooklyn and New Jersey. Since September 11, EPA has taken samples of the air, dust, water, river sediments and drinking water and analyzed them for the presence of pollutants that might pose a health risk to response workers at the World Trade Center site and the public. The samples are evaluated against a variety of benchmarks, standards and guidelines established to protect public health under various conditions. EPA is collecting data from more than 20 fixed air monitors in and around ground zero and additional monitors in the Bronx, Brooklyn, Queens and Staten Island. The Agency is also using portable sampling equipment to collect data from a range of locations.
Results as of 5:00 p.m. on 2/20
Air: Fixed Monitors in New York:
Asbestos - EPA analyzed 48 samples taken in and around ground zero
on February 13 and February 14. EPA also sampled for asbestos at two additional
lower Manhattan locations on February 10 and February 11. All samples
showed results less than 70 structures per square millimeter, which is
the Asbestos Hazard Emergency Response Act (AHERA) standard for allowing
children to re-enter school buildings after asbestos removal activities.
This brings the total number of air samples collected and analyzed for lower Manhattan to 6,101, with 17 samples above the standard (11 of these were collected prior to September 30; the other six were collected on October 9, November 27, December 27, January 14, February 5 and February 11).
This number of exceedances is lower than reported on prior daily summaries. Earlier sampling results included an additional, unnecessary adjustment for the volume of air sampled. Using a more appropriate method, those results have been recalculated and the true levels of asbestos measured are generally lower. Consequently, the standard was actually exceeded less often than previously stated.
Air: Fixed Monitors outside Lower Manhattan:
Asbestos - Samples were collected from additional asbestos monitors
at Intermediate School 143 (511 W. 182nd St., Manhattan), Public School
154 (333 East 135th St., Bronx) and P.S. 44 (80 Maple Parkway, Staten
Island) on February 10 and February 11. Samples were also collected at
P.S. 274 (800 Bushwick Ave, Brooklyn) and P.S. 199 (3290 48th St., Queens)
on February 11. None showed exceedances of the AHERA re-entry standard.
Staten Island Landfill:
Air (Asbestos) - Fifty-six air samples collected from February 12
through February 14 were analyzed for asbestos. All samples were below
the school re-entry standard.
Ambient Air Samples:
Particulate Monitoring - EPA used portable monitors to collect samples
on February 19 at Location "L" (northeast side of Stuyvesant
High School); Location "N" (south side of Pier 25); and Location
"R" (northwest side of Stuyvesant High School). All readings
were below the OSHA time-weighted permissible exposure limit for particulates.
VOCs - Sampling for volatile organic compounds (VOCs) was conducted on February 19 in the direct area of the debris pile at ground zero. To protect workers at the work site, EPA takes grab samples of VOCs where smoke plumes have been sighted. The results are snapshots of the levels at a moment in time. OSHA's protective standards set a permissible exposure limit (PEL) averaged over an 8-hour day.
All samples taken from February 19 at EPA's Wash Tent (West & Murray Streets), Austin Tobin Plaza, the South Tower debris pile, and the North Tower debris pile showed no detectable levels of VOC's.
Latest Available Daily Environmental Monitoring Summary
-
US Department of Labor's Occupational
Safety and Health Administration
New York City Department of Health
US Department of Health and Human Services
New York State Emergency Management Office
EPA information about the events of September 11
![[logo] US EPA](http://www.epa.gov/epafiles/images/logo_epaseal.gif)