Commission approves Zarco 66 land farm CUP to remediate contaminated soil from Paola station

5601746 · July 30, 2025

Get AI-powered insights, summaries, and transcripts

Subscribe
AI-Generated Content: All content on this page was generated by AI to highlight key points from the meeting. For complete details and context, we recommend watching the full video. so we can fix them.

Summary

The board granted a conditional use permit for Zarco 66 to remediate petroleum-contaminated soil removed from a Paola gas station by spreading and treating it on agricultural land, with state oversight expected for the cleanup timeline.

The Miami County Board of County Commissioners unanimously approved a conditional use permit allowing Zarco 66 to operate a "land farm" on a field at 300 And Third Street to remediate soil excavated from a contaminated gas station site in Paola.

Kenny Cook, Miami County Planning Director, told the commission the operation will involve removing contaminated soil from the city site, hauling it to the agricultural field, spreading and disk-tilling it periodically to assist in the natural attenuation or evaporation of petroleum contaminants. He said state regulators anticipate the treatment process will take four to eight months.

Cook said the Planning Commission recommended approval 7–0 after staff review under the county's CUP criteria. The approved permit includes erosion-control measures and requires the site be returned to agricultural grade when remediation is complete.

Commissioner Dideker moved for approval and Commissioner Vickrey seconded; the motion passed unanimously.

Why it matters: The CUP allows an approved remediation technique to be used off-site for cleanup of a small urban contamination. County staff and the applicant indicated state oversight governs the remediation schedule and standards.