Members of a community advisory group that acts as a conduit between the public and the ongoing environmental cleanup work at Georgia-Pacific paper mill in downtown Camas say they hope to receive a second public participation grant from the Washington State Department of Ecology.
If approved, the grant would help the group continue its mill-cleanup education and outreach efforts for an additional two years.
“There are a lot of questions that come up,” said Caroline Mercury, a retired mill employee and Downtown Camas Association board member who has helped lead the 11-member community advisory group since its inception in December 2021. “People want to know what’s going on at the site, when the cleanup is actually happening, what are these (contaminants) deep in the water and soil.”
The history of the advisory group started in early 2021, when Ecology notified Georgia-Pacific (GP) that it wanted to investigate and mitigate potential environmental contaminants on shuttered portions of the century-old mill site.
Soon, Camas residents and officials were urging Ecology staff to push for more restrictive environmental cleanup standards at the mill site. The hope was that, with more intensive cleanup standards, the heavy industrial site that occupies more than 600 acres in downtown Camas and on nearby Lady Island might someday — if GP ever decides to close its Camas operations and sell its property — be able to accommodate commercial or even mixed-used residential developments.