On December 15, 2022

Food Center moves forward on environmental contamination clean-up

By Katy Savage

Digging into soil found no evidence of underground storage tanks at the Vermont Farmers Food Center — a relief to the organization’s leaders as they try to remedy an environmental contamination.

“That was best case scenario, that’s what we were hoping for,” said VFFC Executive Director Heidi Lynch, explaining the process to remove the tanks would be costly and time consuming.

“We now have all the information we need and will be moving forward.”

The dig was done Dec. 7 and was part of a clean-up required by the state after the state ordered the Farmers Hall building at the food center to close in January. Environmental testing at that time found high levels of trichloroethylene, a carcinogenic, in the air.

Additional testing over the summer involving a sonar device detected two masses that were once believed to be underground fuel tanks leftover from General Electric, the previous owners of the property.

Elisabeth Kulas, a consultant working with the food center, said the dig revealed one of the masses was actually an industrial scale that was likely used by GE. The other mass was a 10-foot hole filled back in with 1-inch stones.

“Was there something there that was removed and just backfilled with stone? We don’t know,” Kulas said. “What we know is it wasn’t a tank.”

The environmental studies were done as a necessary step the food center seeks to expand and make the food center and make it a food hub and incubator space.

Vermont Farmers’ Market, a tenant of the Food Center, has been displaced for two winters in the process. The Farmers’ Market is currently at the Franklin Conference Center until next spring.

“This whole environmental assessment was just one of the preliminary steps part of our greater campus renovation projects,” Lynch said.

TCE, a chemical used in industrial degreasers, was also found beneath the soil of the main building. Lynch said the next step is for the Vermont Farmers Food Center to submit a correction action plan to the state.

“There’s a step between where we are now and that plan, which is to evaluate what the various options are,” Lynch said.

Lynch said they’ll start to implement the plan in the summer of 2023 with the hope of reopening shortly thereafter.

Do you want to submit feedback to the editor?

Send Us An Email!

Related Posts

Weather impacts Killington mid-week skiing

May 8, 2025
Killington Resort planned on keeping its lifts running during the week until May 11 (then weekends only), but rain and warm temps over the last several days have taken a serious toll on its snowpack. Therefore, Killington Resort will be closed Thursday, May 8, and Friday, May 9, to preserve what they have left and…

How Killington became The Beast: Part 9

May 7, 2025
Snow, summer, and snowshed: 1960 saw fast progress How Killington became The Beast: Part 9 By Karen D. Lorentz Editor’s Note: This is the ninth segment of an 11-part series on the factors that enabled Killington to become The Beast of the East. Quotations are from author interviews in the 1980s for the book “Killington,…

Woodstock Foundation honors the winners of new Rockefeller Legacy Scholarship

May 7, 2025
Three Woodstock Union High School students were honored on April 30 for their visionary ideas about shaping Vermont’s future as the first recipients of the Laurance and Mary Rockefeller Legacy Scholarship, a new annual essay competition created to honor the Rockefellers’ lasting impact on the community. The scholarship program was launched in 2025 by The…

Jimmy LeSage Memorial Scholarship awarded to Brycen Gandin of Mendon

May 7, 2025
The first-ever Jimmy LeSage Memorial Scholarship, a $2,500 award created to honor the life and legacy of wellness pioneer Jimmy LeSage, has been awarded to Brycen Gandin, a graduating senior at Rutland Senior High School. Brycen, a resident of Mendon, can use the scholarship toward the college of his choice this coming academic year. Brycen was…