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Nassau property questions should start with the Dewey Loeffel CAG
Nassau residents can use the Dewey Loeffel Community Advisory Group and EPA site profile before making water or property assumptions.
Published June 24, 2026 · Last verified June 24, 2026
For Nassau homeowners or buyers, the practical concern is not to guess from rumor or a map pin. There is an official local table for this: the Dewey Loeffel Community Advisory Group.
The CAG brings together concerned citizens, municipal officials, and other interested parties to discuss and provide input to EPA and other regulatory agencies about landfill investigation and remediation. Its meetings are open to the public.
EPA materials identify the Dewey Loeffel Landfill Superfund site in Nassau, with Mead Road listed as the site location.
The calm next step is to read the EPA profile, then use the CAG page for meeting and local update paths. Keep Dewey Loeffel, Mead Road, Rensselaer County, and the Town of Nassau in the same file. It is a practical flag, not a verdict on the town, and it helps a buyer or resident ask better questions without letting rumor do the work.
That balance matters. Nassau has ordinary homes, roads, farms, and civic life around this issue, so the official record should guide the water or property question without swallowing the whole place.