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A detailed analysis of the primary and secondary environmental impacts associated with the construction and operation of a new steel mill. The proposed facility will occupy a 2,760 acre site on the south shore of Lake Erie between Conneaut, Ohio and West Springfield, Pennsylvania. During full scale operations the plant will employ 8,457 and produce about 7.5 million tons of steel annually. (Author).
Implementation of a project on the scale of the proposed Lakefront Steel-making Facility will result in unavoidable environmental, social, and/or economic consequences that might be considered undesirable. The evaluation of undesirable or adverse effects, particularly in the social environment, depends on each individuals' perceptions and values: an undesirable effect to one group may be desirable to others. No significant unavoidable adverse impacts are expected in the areas of Government structure, employment, fire protection, sanitary wastewater, solid waste and energy. The following paragraphs discuss possible undesirable consequences of the construction and operation of the proposed facility in the areas of population, housing, and quality of life consisting of cost of living, income distribution, community character and cohesion, and local government.
This chapter addresses the associated impacts which are inherent in the construction, operation, and maintenance of the proposed Lakefront Steelmaking Facility at Conneaut, OH. The action with which this EIS is concerned is the application by the United States Steel Corporation for a Department of the Army permit to construct a water intake and an effluent discharge system in Lake Erie; dredge the area immediately adjacent to the unloading dock; install a raw materials handling conveyor which will span the harbor between the unloading dock and the existing shoreline; and the installation of a culvert in Turkey Creek. The potential direct environmental impacts associated with authorizing these structures and the dredging largely will be borne by the receiving waters and their biota. Indirect impacts of authorizing the construction would result from operation of the proposed facility and would include effects on air quality, ambient noise levels, aesthetics, sociological conditions, water quality, economics, and others. To describe fully the total array of potential environmental effects, this section details the primary and secondary impacts of construction, operation, and maintenance of the entire facility. (Author).