Rochester Gas & Electric

5866 Monarch Drive
Farmington

Overview

ROCHESTER GAS & ELECTRIC (Spill #2302715) is a program facility involved in a spill incident in FARMINGTON recorded by the Division of Environmental Remediation of NYS Department of Environmental Conservation (DEC). The contributing factor is Equipment Failure. The inclident source is Commercial/Industrial. The spill occurred on July 5, 2023. The received date is July 5, 2023. The case was closed on July 6, 2023.

Spill Information

Spill Number 2302715
Program Facility Name ROCHESTER GAS & ELECTRIC
Address 5866 Monarch Drive
Farmington
County Ontario
Spiller Name JOSE FIGUEROA
Spiller Company RGE
Spiller Address 5866 Monarch Drive
Farmington
NY
999
Contact Name JOSE FIGUEROA
Telephone (585) 820-2124
SWIS Code 3528
DEC Region 8
Spill Date 2023-07-05
Received Date 2023-07-05
Close Date 2023-07-06
Contributing Factor Equipment Failure
Source Commercial/Industrial
DEC Lead JRMARCHI
Reported By Other
Happened After Hours False
Material Name hydraulic oil
Material Family Petroleum
Quantity 2
Units Gallons
Recovered 0
Material Classification C4
Meet Standards False
Penalty False
Federal UST Trust Eligible False
Remedial Phase 0
Site ID 653576
Program Type ER
Facility ID 599352
Caller Remark line break cleanup en route
DEC Remark 07/05/2023 JM SPOK TO JOSE FIGUEROA, KBH. HYDRAULIC OIL LEAKED FROM TRUCK. KBH IS RESPONDING AND WILL UPDATE DEPT. JM RECEIVED PICTURES FROM JOSE FIGUEROA, KBH. SPILL WAS ONLY ON PAVEMENT. NO DRAINS. SPEEDY DRI AND ABSORBENT PADS USED. ENVIRO CLEAN SPRAYED ON THE STAIN ON PAVEMENT. 1 BAG OF WASTE GENERATED. CLEANUP COMPLETE. NO FURTHER ACTION NECESSARY BY SPILLS AT THIS TIME.
Create Date 2023-07-05
Record Update Date 2023-07-06 09:50:12.340000000

Location Information

Street Address 5866 MONARCH DRIVE
City FARMINGTON

Facilities in the same city

Address: 454 Sheldon Road, Farmington
Spill Date: 2016-11-15
Contributing Factor: Equipment Failure
Material Name: hydraulic oil
Address: 1283 Ny Route 332, Farmington, 14425
Spill Date: 2012-09-05
Contributing Factor: Unknown
Material Name: gasoline
Address: 1283 Route 332, Udc Sump, Farmington, 14425
Spill Date: 2019-06-23
Contributing Factor: Deliberate
Material Name: gasoline
Address: 1799 Spartan Drive Lot 237, @ Canandaigua-Farmington Tl Rd, Farmington, 14425
Spill Date: 2012-07-31
Contributing Factor: Unknown
Material Name: unknown petroleum
Address: 423 Terri Drive, Farmington
Spill Date: 2015-01-28
Contributing Factor: Equipment Failure
Material Name: kerosene
Address: 1114 Fairdale Glen, Farmington, 14425
Spill Date: 2018-03-15
Contributing Factor: Equipment Failure
Material Name: wastewater
Address: 4922 Maxwell Road, Farmington
Spill Date: 2017-05-03
Contributing Factor: Equipment Failure
Material Name: transformer oil
Address: 114 Hunts Park Road, Farmington, 14425
Spill Date: 2014-01-01
Contributing Factor: Equipment Failure
Material Name: kerosene
Address: 5844 Farmington Townline Road, Farmington, 14425
Spill Date: 2016-05-28
Contributing Factor: Equipment Failure
Material Name: hydraulic oil
Address: 869 Weigert Road, Farmington, 14425
Spill Date: 2019-11-16
Contributing Factor: Human Error
Material Name: #2 fuel oil
Find all facilities in the same city

Similar Entities

Facilities with similar names

Address: 125 Griffin St, Richburg
Spill Date: 2020-08-24
Contributing Factor: Storm
Material Name: transformer oil
Address: 266 Bayfront Lane South, Irondequoit, 14622
Spill Date: 2016-04-18
Contributing Factor: Equipment Failure
Material Name: transformer oil
Address: 7584 Ridge Road, Sodus, 14551
Spill Date: 2011-09-26
Contributing Factor: Equipment Failure
Material Name: hydraulic oil
Address: 22 Ogden Parma Townline Rd, Spencerport
Spill Date: 2017-02-14
Contributing Factor: Equipment Failure
Material Name: transformer oil
Address: 5 Buffalo Road, Station 9, Rochester
Spill Date: 2010-12-09
Contributing Factor: Unknown
Material Name: gasoline
Address: 26 Sherer Street, Rochester, 14611
Spill Date: 2011-04-22
Contributing Factor: Vandalism
Material Name: PCB oil
Address: 698 East Brooke Lane, Brighton
Spill Date: 2015-05-04
Contributing Factor: Equipment Failure
Material Name: transformer oil
Address: 2 Crossgates, Gates
Spill Date: 2022-07-11
Contributing Factor: Unknown
Material Name: mercury
Address: 4146 Closser Road, Allen
Spill Date: 2022-11-28
Contributing Factor: Equipment Failure
Material Name: hydraulic oil
Address: 852 Manitou Road, Greece
Spill Date: 2001-07-23
Contributing Factor: Equipment Failure
Material Name: mineral/white spirits

Comment

Please leave your review and comments here.


Dataset Information

This dataset includes about 500,000 chemical and petroleum spill incidents that are recorded in the Environmental Remediation Databases of NYS Department of Environmental Conservation (DEC). Petroleum and hazardous chemical spills that can impact the waters of the state must be reported by the spiller. Each recored is registered with spill number, facility program name, spill location, spill date, received date, contributing factor, waterbody, source, spilled material and quantity, etc.

Subject Environment
Jurisdiction State of New York
Data Provider NYS Department of Environmental Conservation (DEC), Division of Environmental Remediation
Source data.ny.gov

Dataset Details

Under State law, petroleum and hazardous chemical spills that can impact the waters of the state must be reported by the spiller (and, in some cases, by anyone who has knowledge of the spills). This dataset contains records of spills of petroleum and other hazardous materials. Every year, DEC receives approximately 15,000 reports of confirmed or suspected releases to the environment. Approximately ninety percent of those releases involve petroleum products. The rest involve various hazardous materials, unknown materials, or other substances such as untreated sewage and cooking grease. Accidental releases of petroleum and/or other hazardous materials occur throughout New York State. Even small releases have the potential to endanger public health and contaminate groundwater, surface water, and soils.

Environmental damage from such releases depends on the material spilled, the quantity spilled and the extent of contamination. Many of these reports are releases of small quantities, typically a few gallons that are contained and cleaned up quickly with little or no damage to the environment. In other instances, material releases may seep through the soil and eventually into the groundwater, which can make water supplies unsafe to drink. Vapors from spilled materials may also collect in houses and businesses, creating potential indoor air health concerns or fire/explosion hazards. Uncontained spills, especially those that impact surface water, can kill or injure plants, fish, and wildlife, and cause damage to their habitats. Federal and State laws require prompt reporting of petroleum and other hazardous material releases to allow quick response. DEC responds to reports through the Spill Response Program. Both immediate response and continued cleanup vary depending on the type of material spilled and the resulting impacts to the environment. Federal and State law require the spiller, or responsible party, to notify government agencies and to contain, clean up, and dispose of any spilled/contaminated material in order to correct any environmental damage. This cleanup is typically undertaken by a qualified contractor hired by the responsible party. Any delay in containing or recovering a release allows contaminants to spread and may result in more extensive damage and more expensive cleanups. If the responsible party is unable or unwilling to do the necessary work, DEC will use its staff and contractors to complete the cleanup and seek to recover its costs from the responsible party. DEC can provide additional resources to local agencies during emergencies and will remain involved if continued cleanup of the environment is required. Continued cleanup is the responsibility of the spiller and is required if contamination and environmental damage remain after the initial containment and recovery. Continued cleanup may include determining the extent of contamination, selecting a cleanup technology, and completing remedial actions. DEC oversees the process to ensure the actions are protective of public safety, health and the environment pursuant to Article 12 Section 176 of the Navigation Law and regulations developed under Article 37 Section 105 of the ECL (i.e., 6NYCRR Parts 596-599).

This dataset includes records of spills of petroleum and other hazardous materials. Examples of what may be included in a spill record includes: Administrative information (DEC region and unique seven-digit spill number), Program facility name, Spill date/time, Location, Spill source and cause, Material(s) and material type spilled, Quantity spilled and recovered, Units measured, Surface water bodies affected, Close date (cleanup activity finished and all paperwork completed).

To give New Yorkers the access they deserve to government data and information, Governor Andrew M. Cuomo launched the Open NY initiative in March 2013 and signed Executive Order 95. It directs state agencies to identify, catalog, and publish their data on the state's open data website administered by the Office of Information Technology Services (ITS). Open NY increases transparency, improves government performance, empowers New Yorkers to participate in government, and encourages research and economic opportunities statewide.