Camas residents, officials and even a former mayor are weighing in on what they say could be a critical step in the future of the city’s historic downtown area.
“Almost 40 years ago, the Camas City Council and I worked together and took bold action to change our city’s vision of itself and tried to ensure long-term fiscal viability, focusing on an excellent quality of life for future generations of Camasonians,” former Camas mayor and lifelong Camas resident Nan Henriksen recently told the Camas City Council. “Now, you have a similar opportunity to alter our city’s vision and destiny.”
The opportunity, Henriksen said, is to ensure any required cleanup at the nearly 135-year-old Camas paper mill, located at 401 N.E. Adams St., in downtown Camas, will be done to standards that would allow for something other than heavy industrial uses if Georgia-Pacific (GP) ever decides to close the mill and sell its property.
The Washington State Department of Ecology has issued a draft of an agreed order for future hazardous material cleanup at the Camas paper mill, and will hold an online public hearing on the draft order at 6 p.m. Tuesday, April 20.
“Even though the mill is currently zoned Heavy Industrial, I would be surprised if the city’s future vision for that property is for more heavy industrial (uses),” Henriksen told the city council. “If we have a vision for aesthetically pleasing and vibrant mixed-use with waterfront access (in downtown Camas), we must ensure now that a required cleanup of the mill site is adequate and safe for mixed-use and not just good enough for more heavy industrial usage.”