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Brad Henry chooses Principal to head Tar Creek Buy-Out

KTEN.com is reporting

Kim Pace will replace the Rev. Charles Clevenger, who announced this week that he is resigning from the Lead-Impacted Communities Relocation Assistance
Trust.

Henry says Pace will bring a unique perspective to the trust, having
taught school and lived in Picher and having gone through the relocation process
herself.

U.S. Senator Jim Inhofe (R-OK), recently announced the EPA is now planning to buy out homes in the Tar Creek community:

The new plan would apparently end the need for asking for more money each year to allow the EPA to continue buying out homes in the area. Last year money was held up because of debates over passing spending bills in Congress.

10. March 2008Tar Creek 0 Comments »

Tar Creek Buy Out

Recently, the Federal Government announced 18-month moratorium on federal loan payments for Picher and Cardin in the Tar Creek community.

According to U.S. Senator Jim Inhofe (R-OK), the EPA is now planning to buy out homes in the Tar Creek community:

The new plan would apparently end the need for asking for more money each year to allow the EPA to continue buying out homes in the area. Last year money was held up because of debates over passing spending bills in Congress.

The Tulsa World reports:

Oklahoma’s existing trust [will be used] to complete the voluntary buyout for residents of the Tar Creek Superfund site and estimated the costs of that three-year goal at $42 million.

That put the total price tag for what has been termed the final cleanup plan for Tar Creek at about $167 million, which is on top of the nearly $150 million already spent at the site in Ottawa County.

The Joplin Globe quotes Inhofe:

This announcement marks landmark progress for the people living in the area of the Tar Creek Superfund site. The EPA’s latest remediation plan not only addresses necessary clean up of soil and water contamination from chat piles and wastes at the site, it also announces the completion of relocation assistance for the residents living in the Tar Creek communities.

25. February 2008Sen. Inhofe, Tar Creek 1 Comment »

Feds give Tar Creek a Break

The Tulsa World is reporting:

U.S. Sen. Jim Inhofe on Tuesday announced an 18-month moratorium on federal loan payments for two Tar Creek communities whose ability to make the payments is being hampered by the ongoing buyout.

The Oklahoma Republican said the moratorium should relieve pressure on Picher and Cardin to make the monthly payments on the water infrastructure loans.

Inhofe said the moratorium was approved by the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s Rural Development Office.

According to information provided by the senator’s office, Picher’s loan is for $800,000…Cardin’s USDA loan is for $300,000. more)

Brad Henry is pleased:

Many families who had lived in danger now have a chance on a new life in a safer place, thanks to this unprecedented federal-state project…We’ve made dramatic progress in a very short time, but we will not rest until our work is completed.

13. February 2008Brad Henry, Sen. Inhofe, Tar Creek 0 Comments »

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