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The U.S. Navy has completed the installation of six extraction wells, nearly 18,000 feet of underground piping and is in the ...
With a new plant coming online in September, the Navy will redeploy interim systems to address contamination hot spots.
Grumman, Northrop Grumman’s predecessor, used the park as a chemical waste dumping site before donating the grounds to the Town of Oyster Bay in the 1960s. The successor company is now ...
Elected officials, advocates and residents have long called for a more expansive study to determine if the plume borne from the operations of Grumman and the U.S. Navy operations in Bethpage is ...
Military contractor Grumman Aerospace disposed chemicals in the area from the 1940s through the 1960s, causing an underground plume of toxins dubbed the "Bethpage Plume." ...
Northrop Grumman and the Department of Environmental Conservation are working to contain and clean up the Bethpage ground water plume. As News 12 has reported, Bethpage Community Park is a former ...
Northrop Grumman is being sued by a Bethpage family, who claim an underground toxic plume gave them cancer. Bruce, Nancy and their son Christopher Cornett were all diagnosed with a form of cancer ...
A citizens group called Long Island Pure Water held its first public meeting to share with residents what it’s learned about the area under the former Grumman site in Bethpage. James Rigano, an ...
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