Home / Environment / Northport Waterfront Transformed: $10.9M Cleanup Tackles Toxic Legacy
Northport Waterfront Transformed: $10.9M Cleanup Tackles Toxic Legacy
14 Nov
Summary
- $10.9 million project to clean up Northport waterfront
- 28,500 tons of metals-contaminated sand, soil, and slag removed
- Cleanup honors late supervisor John Roland's dedication

In a major environmental restoration effort, the Washington state Department of Ecology has recently concluded a $10.9 million project to clean up the Northport waterfront. The six-year undertaking focused on removing 28,500 tons of metals-contaminated sand, soil, and slag from an 11-acre area that includes a boat launch, access trail, and a seasonal beach known as Black Sand Beach.
The cleanup was primarily overseen by John Roland, a supervisor with the Department of Ecology's toxic cleanup program, who unfortunately passed away from brain cancer in 2021. To honor Roland's dedication to the Northport community, a local metal artist, David Fitzgerald, created a sturgeon sculpture out of stainless steel that was presented during Roland's memorial.




