TOP STORIES A8 Plan to fight the plume ] EPA expects agreement next month on cleanup BY EMILY C. DOOLEY [email protected] Northrop Grumman and the state Department of Environmental Conservation are one step closer to agreeing to a decades-old cleanup plan for part of a Bethpage plume that has spread more than four miles. Environmental Protection Agency Regional Administrator Judith Enck sent a letter Friday to Sen. Charles Schumer, saying an agreement on the cleanup plan should be final by the end of April. In February, Schumer asked the EPA to intervene in the cleanup process, which is part of a Superfund program managed by the state. Encompassing more than 600 acres, the Bethpage site was home to aviation manufacturing facilities between 1936 and 1996 run by the Navy and what is now Northrop Grum- man. A shallow plume coming from the site was discovered in 1986 and another, deeper one was verified in 2005. Northrop Grumman had refused to sign a 2001 cleanup plan. But after the Navy revealed high levels of the degreaser and carcinogen trichloroethylene, or TCE, at the site, the DEC in November requested the defense contractor sign on or risk EPA intervention. “We agree that this is a matter of great importance, and that progress in addressing the full scope of contamination has been slow,” Enck wrote to Schumer. “It is essential that this toxic plume be addressed in a timely and effective fashion to ensure that the people of Long Island can continue to have clean drinking water.” Schumer (D-N.Y.) yesterday said he’s pleased by the progress. “Bringing EPA in tells Grum- BARRY SLOAN ] Pollution spreading for years from former plant Northrop Grumman contractors drill in Bethpage. The company and DEC are discussing how to clean up high levels of carcinogens. man how serious we are and we expect they will sign a serious agreement,” he said. “We will stay on Grumman until they do the right thing.” Northrop Grumman spokeswoman Christine Restani confirmed an agreement was in the works but referred questions to the DEC. The DEC said it is pressing for aggressive action to address the plumes and the negotiations are ongoing but declined to comment further. Also last week, the Bethpage Water District amended a lawsuit filed against Northrop Grumman in 2013 seeking damages to cover the cost of past and future water treatment involv- ing the groundwater plume. A federal judge ruled Feb. 27 that the district could update its lawsuit to include details about TCE found in 2014 by the Navy. Those tests found levels of TCE as high as 4,600 parts per billion about 2,100 feet from a Bethpage well. The drinking water standard is 5 parts per billion. “This data indicates that the containment systems on-site are inadequate to prevent migration of additional contaminants off-site,” the amended lawsuit states. “Moreover, the substantial increase in TCE levels . . . may indicate a new plume from another [Northrop Grumman] source within the site.” Yesterday, the district announced that construction of a $3 million well outside the plume boundaries was completed. The district began drilling the well off South Park Drive in Bethpage State Park in 2013. The site is two miles from the district’s other eight wells and should not require costly treatment to remove contaminants, the district said. Suffolk approves domestic violence bill BY DAVID M. SCHWARTZ NEWSDAY, WEDNESDAY, MARCH 25, 2015 newsday.com [email protected] The Suffolk County Legislature unanimously approved a bill yesterday to adopt risk-assessment forms to help predict whether a domestic batterer will attack again. “The ultimate goal here is to get victims to seek help,” said Legis. Kara Hahn (D-Setauket), who said the assessment form will be provided by police to all victims who dial 911. Anti-domestic-violence advocates, lawmakers and Suffolk County Executive Steve Bellone had urged county lawmakers to pass the bill yesterday. At an earlier news conference in Hauppauge, Hahn said, “Recognizing that violence is escalating and fully understanding the risk can be very difficult. This is someone you love, someone who’s supposed to love you.” Suffolk police will use a model developed by Portland, Oregon police to determine the risk of domestic-violence offenders to abuse again. It uses questions such as prior domestic-violence offenses and alcohol and drug arrests to give offenders a score from 1 to 13. The higher the number, the more likely they will reoffend. Suffolk ran the form through five years’ worth of domestic-violence data and found the model helped predict recidivism, police officials said. Police will use that score to prioritize responses and decide whether a victim requires extra services from the police department’s domestic violence unit. Police will also give victims forms to assess their own danger. There were 4,003 intimate partner violence incidents in Suffolk in 2013 and 3,921 in 2012, according to the New York State Division of Criminal Justice Services. There were 38 domestic-violence-related homicides from 2009 to 2013 in Suffolk, Hahn said. ONE HIGHWAY. TWO TTW W LOCAT CATTIONS. CATI CA S. ALL LONG ISL ISLAND. LAND. 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