The dangers beneath us/buried gas, oil tanks are leaking by the thousands, threatening LI's aquifers, as NY eases cleanup rules

By Dan Fagin, Staff writer
Copyright 1998 Newsday
August 23, 1998



Almost 10,000 gasoline and oil spills, some of them more than a decade old, are contaminating the underground aquifers that supply drinking water to Long Island and southeast Queens even as state environmental officials aren't enforcing laws that call for complete cleanups.

Leaking tanks buried beneath lawns, industrial sites and especially service stations are the most widespread toxic threat to the region's water supply. Drinking water is generally safe by the time it reaches consumers because of testing and treatment by water companies, but petroleum chemicals are tainting about 1 in 10 water-supply wells - usually at very low levels - and seeping into basements or beneath the yards of hundreds of unsuspecting communities from Shelter Island to Long Island City.

In those communities, people are facing hazardous vapors, foul smells, falling property values and an anxiety-filled future over the health effects of living near a toxic spill. But the proliferation of tank leaks also is a long-term threat to the entire region. As the number of unfinished spill cleanups - most of which involve leaks under 100 gallons - continues to build, petroleum chemicals are spreading into underground aquifers and are increasingly being pumped back out of the ground by drinking-water wells.

The risk of drinking contaminated water is highest in areas served by shallow private wells, almost all of which are in Eastern Suffolk, because those private wells aren't regularly tested and filtered for toxic chemicals. But experts say that even deeper public wells are becoming more vulnerable because the inventory of unfinished spill cleanups is growing, and because an increasing number of those spills involve the gasoline additive MTBE, which can travel for a mile or more in groundwater without losing its toxicity.

Water companies routinely test public wells for toxicity as frequently as once a week, but the testing and filters aren't foolproof, and water rates can soar if tainted wells have to be abandoned or deepened to reach cleaner parts of the aquifer.

The problem is decades old, but the scope has gotten dramatically worse in recent years as scarce funds and imperfect technology limit the number of cleanups and new spills occur every day.

Faced with this growing threat, the state's response effectively has been to give up on fully cleaning many of the polluted sites, saying there isn't enough money to do anything but basic triage in many cases. In doing so, the state Department of Environmental Conservation has been choosing not to follow the strict cleanup standards specified in state law and instead has shifted to a case-by-case approach favored by industry, letting spillers abandon many costly cleanups even when excessive concentrations of cancer-causing chemicals are still present in groundwater, according to interviews and a Newsday review of state spill records.

And now the Pataki administration, in a process that documents show is heavily influenced by the petroleum industry, is moving to adopt a different set of cleanup rules that is even less strict than the current case-by-case aproach.

Even when water wells aren't affected, the fuel spills are deeply alarming to the neighborhoods in which they occur.

"This is a nightmare for all of us," said Ira Brophy of Valley Stream, where an unseen 2,000-foot-long plume of gasoline courses beneath a quiet cul-de-sac. Brophy and 16 of his neighbors have been battling the state and Mobil Oil Corp. since learning last year that a gasoline leak from a nearby service station was apparently responsible for the odors he and nearby residents have been smelling for years, and for the gasoline vapors in their basements.

"There's no end in sight, and we have the sense that no one's in charge," said Brophy. Added his neighbor, Abraham Alcabes: "This stuff has been pouring down on us for years, and no one did a damn thing about it."

The officials who run the state's cleanup program are used to such criticism but say the public - and the state's own laws and regulations - don't fully recognize how expensive and difficult it is to clean up an underground spill once it has reached the aquifer, or water table. "We just don't have the manpower or the resources to deal with every spill," said Karen Gomez, who supervises the state's spill cleanup efforts on Long Island.

It costs hundreds of thousands of dollars to clean up a gasoline spill that seeps through soil and hits the water table, and even a simple cleanup of a leaking backyard oil tank often costs $ 7,000 or more. Tank owners usually pay for cleanups, but if they can't or won't cooperate, the state has to tap its chronically depleted spill fund (funded by a wholesale tax on petroleum) and then try to recoup costs by suing the spillers.

In Long Island and Queens, where more than 5,000 fuel spills are reported to the state every year, the state spends about $ 5 million a year on cleanups, and tank owners spend an estimated $ 50 million. But that hasn't been enough to make a dent in the huge backlog of unfinished cleanups, now just shy of 10,000 in the three-county area.

Many spills are so difficult to clean up that even after pumping and treating hundreds of millions of gallons of tainted groundwater at a spill site, toxic chemicals such as benzene and MTBE are still present at levels above the minimum standards the state uses to define clean groundwater and soil, regulators say.

"What New York State has learned is that it is impossible to achieve those standards in almost all cases," said Jim DeZolt, the chief of the DEC's bureau of spill prevention and response. "As a practical matter, it became clear that the strict language of the law is a condition that can't be achieved in the field."

The state's case-by-case approach to spill cleanups isn't ideal but still protects the public, officials argue, because it steers funds to the spills that pose the most direct threat to water wells. But they acknowledge that a more aggressive approach would prevent more wells from being contaminated, and say they would rather not have to rely on testing and filtering by water companies to remove chemicals from wells.

"We've had to come up with a process that recognizes that the ideal condition is just not achievable . . . but is also still protective of the public , and we've done that," said DeZolt.

To find out how well that process is working, Newsday commissioned a unique analysis of reports that state investigators filed for each of the 41,901 spills in Long Island and Queens that as of April 1 were listed in the state's database, which goes back more than 10 years. The analysis was done by Toxics Targeting Inc. of Ithaca, an environmental data collection company familiar with the spill program.

The key findings of that analysis, and of Newsday's six-month examination of the state's spill program, include:

- Nearly one in four spills in Nassau, Suffolk and Queens - 9,266 of 41,901 spills - have not been cleaned up sufficiently to meet the state's minimum standards for groundwater or for soil. And while the state says its case-by-case policy is designed to focus scarce cleanup dollars on the most severe spills, an even higher 30 percent of spills over 100 gallons - 714 of 2,404 spills - don't meet the state's minimum standards.

- The backlog of unfinished cleanups is growing. Years after they were discovered, many of the spills that pose the greatest risk to drinking water - spills over 100 gallons that don't meet cleanup standards - are still expanding into underground aquifers. The average such spill in the three-county area is more than three years old, and 128 spills over 100 gallons that don't meet standards are still listed by the state as "open" cases more than five years after they were discovered. Twenty-eight of those spills were discovered more than 10 years ago.

- The state's response to its growing inventory of unfinished cleanups has been to lower its minimum cleanup standards without any specific authorization in state regulations or law, and to increasingly rely on consultants hired by the polluters to determine how much of a spill should be cleaned up. Starting in 1992, the standards for chemical concentrations have been considered guidelines, not requirements. As a result, a growing number of those sites are simply being written off. In Nassau, Suffolk and Queens, 1,965 spill sites that don't meet cleanup standards have been classified by the state as "inactive" or "closed," including 109 sites in which more than 100 gallons were spilled.

- Enforcement has been spotty at best. Regulators rarely seek fines against tank owners even when they conclude a spill wasn't an accident. For the 2,506 spills classified as deliberate in Nassau, Suffolk and Queens, state investigators recommended that DEC attorneys seek penalties in just 32 cases. The percentage of cases in which tank-owners actually end up paying a fine is even lower, and criminal convictions are almost unheard of. "We're engineers and geologists, not cops," explained Randall Austin, who runs the spill program in the DEC's New York City regional office. "You've got to catch somebody red-handed."

- The reported statistics on spills almost certainly underestimate the extent of the problem. The state's computer database excludes many older spills, and officials acknowledge others may have been wrongly classified as meeting standards especially if they involve MTBE, because regulators have been slow to recognize that the gasoline additive moves farther and faster in groundwater than other petroleum chemicals. More significantly, many fuel spills are never discovered, or are found only after water wells have been affected.

The Suffolk County Department of Health Services, for example, last year tested only about 3,000 of the more than 50,000 private water wells in the county, and found petroleum chemicals in several hundred of them.

In public wells in Nassau and Suffolk, officials said the detection rate for petroleum is about 1 in 10, although Nassau doesn't have complete figures yet because some water districts have been testing for MTBE only for a few months. The Suffolk County Water Authority, for example, last year found petroleum chemicals in about 8 percent of its 500-odd wells, almost always at levels within state safety standards for drinking water, according to county health officials.

But when Suffolk finds petroleum chemicals in a well and traces it back to a leaking tank, more than half of the time the leak's existence is a surprise to the state DEC, said Joseph Baier, director of environmental quality for the county health department. And when the Nassau County health department five years ago dug up almost 100 residential oil tanks in Levittown as part of a special study, it found that 25 percent of them were leaking - almost always without the owners knowledge, said Joseph Haas, an engineering geologist at the Long Island office of the state DEC. "The bottom line," said Haas, "is we really don't know how many of them are out there."

Underground leaks can be devilishly difficult to discover, whether they're coming from a backyard heating oil tank or a large gasoline tank buried beneath a service station. While some tank owners learn they have a problem after noticing their fuel use has inexplicably risen, many leaks are discovered only if vapors penetrate nearby basements or reach water wells.

There are probably several hundred thousand buried fuel tanks in Nassau, Suffolk and Queens, ranging from massive 5-million-gallon gasoline storage tanks in Long Island City to the tens of thousands of 275-gallon backyard oil tanks that dot Nassau and Suffolk and supply most of the region's home heating energy.

While those small heating oil tanks can be a problem, especially near the South Shore where the high water table can corrode tank walls, the far bigger threat to drinking water comes from buried gasoline tanks, usually at service stations. That's not only because gasoline tanks are larger than oil tanks - a typical service station tank holds about 8,000 gallons - but because gasoline is far more likely than oil to pass through the soil and reach groundwater, and contains more of the volatile organic compounds such as benzene, toluene and MTBE. Ingesting those compounds at very high levels, or at lower levels over a long period of time, can cause ailments ranging from cancer and genetic damage to dizziness, nausea and watery eyes.

Tank leaks are a special danger on Long Island and in southeastern Queens because those areas are entirely dependent on aquifers for drinking water, and because pollutants quickly penetrate the region's sandy soil and reach the shallow water table. Most of New York City gets its drinking water from upstate reservoirs, but about 520,000 people in southeast Queens rely at least in part on 46 water wells. Nassau and Suffolk, meanwhile, rely completely on the 1,050 public wells that serve about 95 percent of the Long Island population, and on the tens of thousands of backyard wells that supply the remaining five percent, mostly in Eastern Suffolk.

Fuel leaks have become so common that their total numbers overwhelm other groundwater threats that have gotten much more attention, such as radioactive tritium discharged from Brookhaven National Laboratory and pesticides in East End wells. That's because gasoline, though obviously a hazardous substance, is something that people are used to dealing with every day, experts suggest.

"There are so many of these smaller . . . spills , they affect a lot of people, and they get a lot less attention," said Henry Bokuniewicz, director of the Long Island Groundwater Research Institute at the State University at Stony Brook. "My instinct tells me that you would derive greater public benefit by putting resources into cleaning them up, and that Brookhaven Lab is getting attention and resources that are probably disproportionate to the nature of the problem because of all the public attention."

On Ash Lane in Valley Stream, residents are convinced. The neighborhood of spacious homes and dogwood-lined streets is an apt example of just how disruptive a gasoline plume can be.

At the end of the cul-de-sac, just past Ira and Betty Brophy's house, is a dense patch of cedars, oaks and maples that screens the neighborhood from Green Acres Mall and Sunrise Highway, 300 feet to the north. But that barrier couldn't protect Ash Lane from a 2,000-foot-long stream of gasoline seeping into the area from a Mobil station on Sunrise Highway.

Brophy first caught a strong whiff of gasoline on Ash Lane in 1995 as he was climbing into the silver Acura he had just leased. Puzzled that there were no leaks from the car, he noticed that the odor seemed to be coming from a nearby manhole cover to a storm sewer. In late 1996, another neighbor started smelling gasoline in a basement playroom, and a third smelled it in the spring of 1997.

But the three residents didn't know their problems were connected until last August, when the state conservation department sent out letters to the neighborhood saying that tests conducted by a consulting firm Mobil had hired found a contamination plume from the station has seeped into the area.

Ever since, the leak has been an inescapable force in the lives of the residents of Ash Lane and several nearby streets.

At least two home sales in the neighborhood have fallen through because of the spill - "How do you sell a house that has a monitoring well at the base of the driveway?" asked one resident - and committees of neighbors have spent long hours lobbying for a cleanup and combing through public records to look for information they say the state and Mobil have been slow to provide. They also hired a lawyer, Barry Fine of Huntington, who earlier this month sued Mobil for $ 70 million on behalf of 17 local families.

"We have the sense that we don't really know who's in charge," said Brophy, who said residents are fearful that the six recent cancer cases in the neighborhood could somehow be related to the spill.

Air tests conducted by the Nassau Health Department show that in more than a dozen homes on Ash Lane and adjacent Woodland Road, airborne components of gasoline - mostly low levels of benzene, toluene or MTBE - have entered basements or ground floors, either through sump pumps or sewer pipes. There are no specific health standards for petroleum chemicals in household air, but county officials told residents there was no immediate danger.

Far beyond Ash Lane and Woodland Road, meanwhile, the groundwater shows the effects of the gasoline leak. The area relies on public water wells, none of which have been affected so far, but tests conducted by Mobil's consultant show elevated levels of MTBE 30 feet below the surface as far away as East Elderberry Lane, which is about 2,000 feet from the Mobil Station on Sunrise Highway. That means the plume is beneath about 100 Valley Stream homes - and it's still expanding southward.

Mobil and state regulators say they've made the Valley Stream spill a priority, but that the size and complexity of the plume means it takes time to figure out exactly where to locate collection wells to pump out the contaminated water so it can be treated and then pumped back into the ground.

"You don't just punch holes in the ground without assessment information. If the well goes in the wrong place, it does not address the problem," said Ida Walker, a Mobil spokeswoman, who said the company first learned the plume had expanded beyond the station property and was moving south in 1996.

Mobil installed a cleanup system at its station in June of this year, and in the fall it plans to build another groundwater treatment system on public land 200 feet farther south, near the trees behind the Brophys house. That system "is going to be on for a very long time," Walker said, but may not be sufficient to take care of the problem.

Big companies like Mobil aren't the only ones facing huge financial liabilities for spills. Plenty of ordinary residents of Long Island and Queens have woken up in the morning to discover that they are polluters, and that unless their insurance covers such spills, they're going to have to pay.

"It's horrible to feel like you're responsible for polluting the river," said Dana Goldman of Riverhead. When the oil tank at her home leaked into the Peconic River in 1995, a contractor hired by the state to clean it up set up booms on the river and dug up most of her backyard. Ultimately, she said, her sister, who owns the property, may have to reimburse the state for the cost of the cleanup unless she can pin the blame on their former heating-oil company.

And in Seaford, single mother Maureen Kane is facing the prospect of financing a five-year cleanup of oil that leaked from her backyard tank - a cleanup her insurance company won't cover. "I don't know what I'm going to do," she said.

Since the 1970s, governments have been struggling with the question of how to deal with tank leaks. The state's spill fund was established in 1978, and two years later Suffolk County became one of the first local governments to adopt a comprehensive program to test older commercial tanks to see if they are leaking. Nassau and New York City later passed similar laws, but they haven't stopped the leaks because enforcement has been inconsistent, many residential tanks are exempt, and even the newer commercial tanks aren't leak-proof.

Nationwide attempts to mandate tank replacement have run into many of the same problems. This year, for example, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency is in the embarrassing position of acknowledging that its long-awaited Dec. 22, 1998, deadline for upgrading or replacing substandard large fuel tanks - a deadline the EPA set 10 years ago - is being ignored, and that the agency won't be able to do much about it.

As leak prevention efforts have fallen short and the state's backlog of unfinished spill cleanups has steadily increased, state officials have been changing the rules that determine when a cleanup can end.

Exactly when the state switched from enforcing fixed cleanup standards to a case-by-case approach isn't easy to pin down. The switchover appears to have been a gradual process that began when the "spill guidance manual" used by state investigators was revised in 1992 to allow sites to be declared "inactive" even if they don't meet minimum cleanup standards.

For the state, the case-by-case approach has two big advantages over the older, stricter approach to cleanups: it requires less money and less staffing, both of which have been in short supply.

While the state DEC's workload has steadily increased in recent years, staffing has stayed slightly below 1991 levels. "We do get swamped, and things drag out for years," said Austin, the New York City spill supervisor.

Budget pressures, meanwhile, have gotten much worse because of the precarious condition of the state's spill fund, which the conservation department taps when tank owners won't take the lead on financing their own cleanups.

The fund, financed with a four-cent-per-barrel tax on petroleum imported into the state, is flirting with insolvency. Last year, the state spent $ 30.2 million on cleanups but collected just $ 21.1 million in taxes, reimbursements and federal aid, causing the fund's balance to dwindle to less than $ 3 million. Just three years ago, there was $ 15 million in available cash in the spill fund.

To try to replenish the fund, the Legislature last year increased from three to 12 the number of lawyers in the attorney general's office who handle spill reimbursement cases. But the hoped-for surge in reimbursement collections from spillers hasn't materialized yet because the cases take so long to resolve. And state officials say collecting a few million dollars more every year from spillers may not sufficiently bolster a fund that faces more demands than ever but gets most of its money from a tax that hasn't been increased in 20 years.

Conservation department officials acknowledge that the shortage of public money is an important reason for their case-by-case approach to cleaning up spills. "Do we clean up every spill to pre-release conditions? Absolutely not. There is not enough money to do that," said Ray Cowen, the DEC's Long Island regional director. "We can still protect the public by taking a more common-sense approach to these cleanups."

But local critics and some outside experts argue that the state's policy of writing off some spills that don't meet its own standards ignores the region's unique dependance on groundwater.

"Each site does have to be considered individually. But generally speaking, any spill that has the ability to reach that sole source aquifer, in my personal opinion, should be cleaned up to groundwater standards," said John Heffelfinger of the EPA's office of underground storage tanks.

While the EPA encourages states to adopt a risk-based, case-by-case approach to cleaning up tanks, applying that approach correctly on Long Island "is going to lead to a stringent cleanup for basically all the spill sites" said Dana Tulis, the director of the office.

But critics say it hasn't worked out that way, perhaps because spillers wind up taking the lead in running cleanups in about nine out of 10 cases, not only by writing checks but also by choosing and overseeing the consulting firm that does the work. The other 10 percent of the time, the conservation department taps its spill fund to pay for cleanups - often hiring many of the same consulting firms to do the work - and then seeks reimbursement from spillers.

Critics say the process gives far too much power to tank-owners and their consultants. Most of the time, the consultant, not the state, decides how to go about cleaning up a spill and then does the cleanup. While state officials can require changes, they often don't.

Last year on Long Island, for example, the state insisted on major changes in fewer than 30 of the 600-odd cleanup plans prepared by spillers consultants, according to Gomez, the state's chief spill regulator in Nassau and Suffolk. "Occasionally we'll tell them they're way off, but a lot of times it's more that they have the right idea but just need a little more information to back it up."

It's a process that leaves neighboring residents on the sidelines and in the dark, because the state often does not inform neighbors that a spill is nearby.

"The state relies on the responsible party for all their information, and are the last ones to inform homeowners that there's a plume of contamination in their area," said lawyer Neal Capria, whose first spill case was representing 553 South Setauket residents in Long Island's largest-ever petroleum spill, the 1.5 million-gallon 1987 gasoline leak from a Northville Industries storage terminal.

Consultants frequently try to convince the state that a cleanup has gone far enough and that further efforts aren't worth the time or expense if drinking water wells aren't affected. "It's a subjective process. We're asking our people to use their professional judgment that it's okay to stop," said DeZolt, who supervises the spill program statewide.

Lobbying from the petroleum industry, state officials say, wasn't behind their adoption of a case-by-case approach. But the switchover did coincide with the nationwide push by the nation's major gasoline producers and retailers to persuade states to adopt flexible, "risk-based" cleanup rules.

"Why would you want to subject a site to an overly strict cleanup standard, based on an absolute worst-case scenario, if you know that the situation at the site doesn't warrant that?" asked Kyle Isakower, a senior analyst at the Washington-based American Petroleum Institute, the oil industry's chief trade group.

New York, too, has been part of the industry's push. In 1994 and 1995, the DEC headquarters staff in Albany launched a process aimed at codifying "risk-based" cleanup standards in regulations or even state law.

Five years later, they're still trying.

After studying the issue for three years, the conservation department unveiled its proposal in January, 1997. The proposed rules would have given spill investigators even more flexibility in closing off cleanups without complying with fixed standards. "It allows you to leave a little more petroleum behind," said Gomez.

Right now, for example, DEC officials usually give tank owners permission to stop cleaning up a spill only after a cleanup has gone on for a few months or years and there's evidence that levels of MTBE or benzene in groundwater aren't dropping as quickly as they did when the cleanup effort began. Under the rules the state proposed last year, however, tank owners in many cases could stop after doing a study that found minimal risk to water wells, instead of waiting to see the results of the early stages of a cleanup effort.

But the Pataki administration quickly withdrew the proposal after environmental groups complained they weren't consulted. Instead, it passed the issue to an outside advisory committee appointed by the DEC.

The point of the outside panel was to provide the public input that was missing from the interim rules the state had just dropped. But state records show the panel's members overwhelmingly represent business interests, especially those of the petroleum industry.

The 17-member steering committee coordinating the effort, for example, has just two non-business members, only one of whom regularly attends meetings. And of the more than 150 people who have volunteered to serve on the subcommittees that are drafting the specifics of the proposal, there is just one representative of an environmental group, one public health official and no water providers. More than 50 percent are consultants or attorneys and another 23 percent represent businesses or the petroleum industry. Most of the rest are from government agencies.

"It's been really difficult because out of all the people who are participating in this process, I'm the only one whose bottom line is the environment, as opposed to controlling costs," said Val Washington, executive director of Albany-based Environmental Advocates, the sole member representing an environmental group.

State officials say they've tried to broaden the membership, but say it's been hard to find environmentalists and other people from outside the industry willing to make the necessary time commitment. "We've been a little frustrated that the group isn't as representative as we might have liked," said Tom Plesnarski, DEC's liaison to the advisory group.

The group's final recommendations, as it turns out, closely resemble the plan the state withdrew early last year, including the heavy reliance on studies that try to project the possible impact on water wells. Those recommendations are to be formally submitted to the conservation department in a few weeks. But state officials say it may be a year or more before the Pataki administration decides whether to formally adopt the plan, either through regulation or by asking the Legislature to amend state law.

In the meantime, state spill investigators are continuing to allow tank owners to abandon some cleanups that don't meet state standards.

Some lawyers and legislative officials say the state's case-by-case approach is illegal because it conflicts with provisions of state law that classify all groundwater as potential drinking water, and because it was never explicitly authorized in law or regulation. Instead, it was included in a series of 1992 revisions to the manual used by the state's spill investigators.

"Under state law, all groundwater is treated as potential public water supply, so they're violating the statute and violating their own guidance memoranda," said Rick Morse, staff director of Legislative Commission on Toxic Substances and Hazardous Wastes, a joint Assembly-Senate committee.

The conservation department's expert on the topic acknowledged the law is murky. "The definition of cleanup and removal is extraordinarily loosely written, and it varies depending on which section of the law you're referring to," said Ben Conlan, a DEC attorney.

He agreed the state's groundwater standards apply to all contamination plumes whether or not they threaten drinking-water wells, and no matter how costly they are to clean up. And he also conceded that spillers are legally liable for "all cleanup and removal costs" under state law.

But that strict language applies to legal liability, not the cleanup, he said. "If you're looking for an express requirement for cleanup to pre-release conditions, I've yet to find one," said Conlan.

As a result, the state has been careful in the language it uses to describe cleanups that have been abandoned without meeting standards. Instead of being "closed" those cases are now often deemed "inactive" - a legal distinction that doesn't mean much in reality because state officials say they can't remember an inactive case ever being reopened in the three-county area since the DEC began to frequently use the term five years ago.

"There's a lot of subjectivity," said DeZolt, who runs the state's spill program. "Sure it's confusing and frustrating to the public, because it's frustrating for us, too. We have to figure this stuff out every day." NEXT: MTBE, the newest threat to drinking water Mapping Toxic Sites Around LI In Your Town

Today's LI Life includes customized maps showing major petroleum spills in each of Long Island's towns. The maps, prepared for Newsday by Toxics Targeting Inc. of Ithaca, show the locations of hundreds of large oil and gasoline spills that are too contaminated to meet the state's definition of clean soil or groundwater, according to state records.

To see all of the maps, Internet users can go to http://www.newsday.com and follow the links. Internet users can also see the precise location of individual spills on a detailed street grid at http://www.toxicstargeting.com and can obtain additional spill information, for a fee, from Toxics Targeting.  **** Spills of the Island As of April 1, there were 41,901 gasoline and oil spills in Nassau, Suffolk and Queens in the state Department of Environmental Conservation's computer database. Here's how they break down by location, cause, and whether they've been cleaned up enough to meet state soil and groundwater standards: .

Queens Nassau Suffolk. Meet cleanup standards 3,286 14,976 14,373. Don't meet standards 4,184 2,387 2,695. . . Cause.

Queens Nassau Suffolk. Equipment Failure 2,366 5,554 4,355. Unknown 1,461 2,263 2,848. Tank Test Failure 880 1,879 1,347. Other 380 1,807 1,814. Tank Failure 463 1,347 1,179. Human Error 611 1,125 1,025. Deliberate 259 934 1,313. Tank Overfill 601 810 782. Traffic Accident 180 746 808. Abandoned Drum 100 326 852. Housekeeping* 145 466 569. Vandalism 19 65 122. None Given 5 41 54. .  *-Fuel storage sites where there have been numerous small spills during fuel transfers.. . SOURCE: Toxics Targeting Inc., from data compiled by the state Department of Environmental Conservation.

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