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City hosts open house on how to clean Northwest Jacksonville park once used as dump site for incinerated trash ashes

City wants input on how to clean hazardous waste in Lonnie C. Miller Park

JACKSONVILLE, Fla. – The city of Jacksonville is rolling out plans to clean up Lonnie C. Miller Park in Northwest Jacksonville.

It was once used as a dump site for the city’s incinerators and decades later, hazardous waste remains next to where children play.

The city is holding an open house Thursday night at the Legends Center (5130 Soutel Dr.) to discuss the cleanup.

In a fenced-off area in the park, a posted sign states that the area is contaminated by potentially hazardous ash.

More than 100 years ago, the city would burn its trash and dump the ashes there.

More than 100 hundred years ago, the city would burn its trash and dump the ashes there. (WJXT)

That went on through the 1960s but ended as people became more sensitive to potential environmental concerns.

The city says the contaminated soil is not harmful to people who live or work around the park, but cleaning it up entirely will help alleviate any possible health risks or concerns that might come up.

That cleanup is also a part of a broader initiative, called “Project New Ground,” an effort to make Jacksonville cleaner and more beautiful.

The cleanup of the eastern part of Lonnie C. Miller Park started in November and is scheduled to take one year to complete.

The city says the goal is to get the contaminated ash site cleaned up by the summer of 2025.

Thursday’s open house at the Legends Center starts at 5:30 p.m.