Managing to Make Source Control Happen at Contaminated Sediment Sites Prepared by: Joan P. Snyder Stoel Rives LLP 900 SW Fifth Avenue, Suite 2600 Portland,

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
The Clean Estuary Partnership and the RMP Comparing two stakeholder programs producing science in support of policy James M. Kelly, Chair Bay Area Clean.
Advertisements

CERCLA & Clean Water Act – Overlapping Authorities & Cross-Program Implementation Joan Snyder Stoel Rives LLP 900 SW Fifth Avenue, Suite 2600 Portland,
Water Quality Trading Claire Schary Water Quality Trading Coordinator U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Region 10, Seattle, WA Region 10, Seattle,
The Lake Allegan/Kalamazoo River Total Maximum Daily Load (TMDL) Plan Implementation by Jeff Spoelstra, Coordinator, Kalamazoo River Watershed Council.
BoRit Superfund Site Timeline
Metropolitan Council Environmental Services A Clean Water Agency Presented to the Environment Committee November 9, 2010 Information Item Master Water.
Upper Providence Township Stormwater Management MS4 Program.
Slide 1 EPA Stormwater & Water Regulations: Local Impacts & Balancing Power 2011 Congressional City Conference.
When It Rains, It Drains An Overview of the Hempfield Township’s New Storm Water Management Program.
When It Rains, It Drains An Overview: The Lower Providence Township Storm Water Management Program.
NPDES Phase II Storm Water Regulations: WHAT MUNICIPAL GOVERNMENTS NEED TO KNOW.
Imperial River: Water Quality Status and Basin Management Action Plan.
Chesapeake Bay Restoration An EPA Perspective Jeff Corbin Senior Advisor to the Administrator U.S. EPA.
Chesapeake Bay and New York State Water Quality and the Potential for Future Regulations Presented by the Upper Susquehanna Coalition.
Env 247 Overview of Stormwater Management March 1, 2011.
Incorporating Climate Change Adaptation in EPA Region 10 Programs: An example based on a newly initiated pilot in the Office of Water and Watershed’s Total.
Getting the Big Picture How to Look at Your Watershed Indiana Watershed Planning Guide,
Dredging, Disposal Management and Impacts on Lake Sediments US Army Corps of Engineers.
Point Source POLLUTION: CAUSES AND CONSEQUENCES
Fort Bragg Cantonment Area Cape Fear River Basin LIDAR data have been used to create digital contours and topographic maps. 1.A Digital Elevation Model.
Water Quality Monitoring The Role of the Clean Water Act.
Protecting Water Resources: The U.S. Legal Framework Babette J. Neuberger, JD, MPH Associate Dean for Academic Affairs University of Illinois at Chicago.
National Pollutant Discharge Elimination System(NPDES) Permit.
Impaired and TMDL Waterbody Listings Impacts on DoD Facilities Bill Melville, Regional TMDL Coordinator
Technical Track Work Group Report Out August xx, 2012.
Introduction to PA Act 167 Stormwater Management Planning Little Juniata River Watershed April 21, 2005.
 Why are we here?  Without regulations, rivers used to catch fire. Rules and Regulation.
Sustaining Long Term Regional Coordinated Monitoring Programs Todd Running, H-GAC May 9, 2006.
Module 1: Introduction to the Superfund Program. 2 Module Objectives q Explain the legislative history of Superfund q Describe the relationship between.
Modeling to Understand Stormwater Management Efforts Portland Harbor Superfund Site Dawn Sanders City of Portland Bureau of Environmental Services September.
Developing Final Phase II WIPs and Milestones Jim Edward EPA Deputy Director Chesapeake Bay Program Office DDOE Meeting with Federal Partners February.
Portland Harbor Superfund Site. Overview of Statutes CERCLA - Federal law –Provides EPA with authority for clean up –Provides for liability, compensation,
1 EPA Regulatory Authority and PPCPs Octavia Conerly Health and Ecological Criteria Division Office of Water Office of Water October 26, 2005 October 26,
Restoring VA Waters the TMDL Way Jeff Corbin Senior Advisor to the Regional Administrator U.S. EPA Region 3.
Great Bay Municipal Coalition New Hampshire Water Pollution Control Association June 13, 2013 Dean Peschel Peschel Consulting
Update on Chesapeake Bay Program Developments Briefing to the Water Resources Technical Committee January 8, 2009 Briefing to the Water Resources Technical.
Technical Track Work Group Report Out August 22, 2012.
Use of GIS to Evaluate Health Risks for Contaminated Water Diving in U.S. Waterways Kristen M. Stanley MGIS Capstone Project – Peer Review July 1, 2008.
Environmental Decision Making SC.912.L Why have environmental laws?  To regulate activities that are harmful to the environment. a. E.g., Clean.
Freshwater and Society Module 1, part C. Developed by: Updated: U?-m1c-s2 Water quality degradation
CACHE CREEK WATERSHED Watershed Overview –Physical Description –Land Uses Present –Flow Characteristics –Beneficial Uses Point and Non-Point Source Pollutants.
Rapid Bioassessment Protocols for low gradient streams) for species richness, composition and pollution tolerance, as well as a composite benthic macroinvertebrate.
KWWOA Annual Conference April 2014 Development of a Kentucky Nutrient Strategy Paulette Akers Kentucky Division of Water Frankfort, KY.
Portland Harbor Superfund Site. Overview of Statutes CERCLA - Federal law –Provides EPA with authority for clean up –Provides for liability, compensation,
Integrating Your Environmental Management System With Community Stakeholders Mr. Jimmy Parrish Defense Supply Center Richmond April 7, 2004 Presented To.
Ch. 1: “Watersheds and Wetlands” Lesson 1.5: “Factors That Affect Wetlands and Watersheds” Part 2.
Strategic Planning for Contaminated Sediment Projects: Setting the Course for Proper Project Execution Howard L. Cumberland Geosyntec Consultants October.
ORSANCO’s FY16 Technical Program. WQ Monitoring Programs Bimonthly & Clean Metals Sampling – Metals & traditional 15 mainstem, 14 tribs,
HAMPTON ROADS REGIONAL WATER RESOURCES MANAGEMENT PROGRAM Presentation John M. Carlock, AICP Deputy Executive Director, Physical Planning Hampton Roads.
PORT OF TACOMA. Request authorization to award Professional Services Agreement (PSA) No with Geomatrix; and PSA No with Hart Crowser for.
The Dalles, Industrial Certification Northwest Aluminum Company The Dalles, Oregon Douglas C. MacCourt Ater Wynne LLP US German Bilateral Working.
EPA and Agriculture: A New Era of Partnership NACD Summer Board Meeting July 21, Ellen Gilinsky Senior Policy Advisor Office of Water, US EPA.
STORM WATER SOLUTIONS FOR EXISTING URBAN AREAS: IDENTIFYING SITES TO MAXIMIZE RESULTS Jared Bartley, Cuyahoga SWCD September 8, 2011.
Nutrients and the Next Generation of Conservation Presented by: Tom Porta, P.E. Deputy Administrator Nevada Division of Environmental Protection President,
RE-Powering America’s Land: Siting Renewable Energy on Potentially Contaminated Land, Landfills and Mine Sites.
TTWG Report & Technical Topics SRRTTF Meeting Dave Dilks March 16, 2016.
NPDES Stormwater Rules Phase 1 implemented in 1990 –Large cities (
Sustainability Week BUS& 201 Business Law Shana Chung December 3, 2014.
EVALUATING WATERSHED MANAGEMENT PLANS NUTRIENT MANAGEMENT APPROACHES IN THE LAKE ERIE BASIN AND KEY LOCATIONS OUTSIDE OF THE LAKE ERIE WATERSHED Ohio Stormwater.
Anniston PCB Site Review of Risk Assessments for OU-1/OU-2
Update on Chesapeake Bay Program Developments
Local Government Engagement and Communication Strategy
Beaver River Watershed PCB Investigation
Local Government Engagement and Communication Strategy
Niagara River Area of Concern
MACo Winter Conference
Average person produces 1700 lbs of MSW per year
RESTORING CONTAMINATED SITES TO PRODUCTIVE USE
Mulberry Watershed Management Plan
Jim Edward Acting Director Chesapeake Bay Program Office May 23,2018 EPA’s Draft Final Phase III WIP Expectations.
Presentation transcript:

Managing to Make Source Control Happen at Contaminated Sediment Sites Prepared by: Joan P. Snyder Stoel Rives LLP 900 SW Fifth Avenue, Suite 2600 Portland, OR For Presentation at: Remediation of Contaminated Sediments International Conference Platform Session B5, Abstract No. 332 January 24, O r e g o n W a s h I n g t o n C a l I f o r n I a U t a h I d a h o

EPA Principles for Managing Contaminated Sediment Risks at Hazardous Waste Sites First Principle: “Control Sources Early”

Sample of Sediment Sites Reviewed by EPA Contaminated Sediments Technical Advisory Group (CSTAG): Kanawha River Site near Nitro, WV – WVSFN035516/index.htm Snow Creek/Choccolocco Creek systems in Anniston, AL (OU3 and OU4 of Anniston PCB site) – annpcbal.htm

Sample of Sediment Sites Reviewed by EPA Contaminated Sediments Technical Advisory Group (CSTAG): (cont.) Portage Creek and Kalamazoo River in Kalamazoo, MI – – Lower Duwamish Waterway in Seattle, WA – ish/lower_duwamish_hp.html – –

Sample of Sediment Sites Reviewed by EPA Contaminated Sediments Technical Advisory Group (CSTAG): (cont.) Portland Harbor, in Portland, OR – Harbor/jointsource.htm – ptldharbor

Kanawha RiverChoccolocco Creek Kalamazoo River Lower Duwamish Portland Harbor

Common Themes of CSTAG Reviews Need review and compilation of all available data and assessment of all potential contaminant sources Need to estimate at least qualitatively the relative contaminant loads from different sources and prioritize them Need to coordinate with Water Quality programs to address point sources (industrial and municipal wastewater and stormwater discharges)

Lessons Learned Not “one size fits all” –Some sites’ initial focus is on one contaminant versus many –Some sites start as a follow-on to upland cleanup while others start out as investigation of urban river system

Contaminants KanawhaAnnistonKalamazooDuwamishPortland Harbor PCBsX XX XX Dioxins X ???XX Pesticides/ Herbicides ?X TPH/PAH??XX PhthalatesX?X Other organic?X?X MercuryX??X Lead???X Other MetalsX?XX Otherbacteriaperchlorate

Lessons Learned There will be multiple sources Relative importance will vary

Contaminant Sources KanawhaAnnistonKalamazooDuwamishPortland Harbor Contaminated upland site(s) XXXXX Over-water activities ??XX Landfills X?XX? Contaminated fill dirt X? ? X Public Wastewater Treatment Plant X?X (CSO)

Contaminant Sources KanawhaAnnistonKalamazooDuwamishPortland Harbor Private Industrial Waste Discharge X??XX? Public or private stormwater X???XX Agricultural runoff ????? Upstream Sources, incl. tributaries XXXXX Other Sources Atmospheric Deposition

Lessons Learned Perception of your progress depends somewhat on your starting agenda

Perception of Progress Not StartedJust StartedWell Into Close to Completion Kanawha Anniston Kalamazoo Duwamish Portland Harbor IDENTIFICATION PRIORITIZATION SOURCE CONTROL

Lessons Learned Multiple methods of source control will ultimately be required

Types of Source Control That Have Occurred KanawhaAnnistonKalamazooDuwamishPortland Harbor Removal of contaminated upland soil XXXX Capping of contaminated upland soil XXXX Other upland cleanup XXX Improvements to landfills (e.g. capping, leachate collection) XX Issuance of TMDL for contaminants of concern X

Types of Source Control That Have Occurred KanawhaAnnistonKalamazooDuwamishPortland Harbor Stricter NPDES permits for industrial wastewater XX Stricter NPDES permits for public wastewater X Stormwater best management practices XXXX Stormwater treatment XXXX Riverbank stabilization/ capping XXX

Lessons Learned Will be a multi-agency task

Lead/Support Agencies KanawhaAnnistonKalamazooDuwamishPortland Harbor Lead EPA Cercla State Cleanup Support State Cleanup State Solid Waste/Landfills State Water & Waste Managem’nt State Health EPA RCRA EPA Water Quality USGS Army Corps Dam operators State Cleanup (RCRA) State WQ Army Corps US Fish & Wildlife Dam operators State Cleanup State WQ State Nat’l Resources State Health State Public Lands US Fish & Wildlife USGS NOAA EPA CERCLA State WQ State Health EPA RCRA Army Corps King County City of Seattle Port of Seattle NOAA EPA CERCLA US Fish & Wildlife NOAA State Health State Fish & Wildlife State Public Lands City of Portland Port of Portland

Interactions Formal Cleanup-focused Memoranda of Agreement between agencies –Duwamish, Portland Already existing enforcement-based agreements –Intergovernmental Agreements for RI/FS –MOA delegating stormwater enforcement

Interactions (cont.) Informal Work Groups –Lower Duwamish Source Control Work Group and expanded Focus Group –Portland Harbor DEQ/EPA/Trustee Partner technical team and DEQ/EPA/PRP technical team Informal coordination –E.g. interstate sources—AL/GA in Anniston –With Water Quality efforts (permits, TMDLs) Facilitated Discussions/mediation –Kalamazoo, of remediation and restoration issues

Lessons Learned Will generate interest of stakeholders –Citizen groups (5/5 sites) –Tribal governments (3/5 sites)

Interactions Interaction with Community Advisory Groups Including in Expanded Focus Group Public meetings –During public comment periods –Informal updates –Educational meetings –Sharing data –Communications regarding specific site risks, including fish consumption advisories

E.g., Portland Harbor Milestone Report

What Is Moving Source Control Forward? Early source assessment –Needed for conceptual site model –Allows prioritization and management of resources Narrowing priorities to site drivers Loading sampling “Early actions” to control identified sources

What Is Moving Source Control Forward? Joint Source Control Strategy (Portland Harbor) Work groups to communicate and get information out

What Is Delaying Source Control? Data related –Complexity of sites –Large number of sources –Delays in sampling, issues of sampling design –Lack of historical information

What Is Delaying Source Control? Not Data Related –Expecting answers to source control questions that are “yes” or “no” –Screening levels too uncertain; lack of cleanup standards or even site specific risk numbers –Uncertainty in risk assessments –Fear of setting precedents (too strict/not strict enough)

What Is Delaying Source Control? Not Data Related –Not realizing that source control should be parallel to EPA cleanup process, rather than a serial step within that process –Need to understand that effective source control must consider ALL pathways and contaminants, regardless of prior program decisions (e.g., NFAs) –Insufficient resources (funding, staff)

Metrics for Success For the most part, yet to be developed –Direct measurement Sediment Surface Water quality (may need high volume sampling) Fish tissue Semipermeable Membrane Devices Landfill leachate Sediment traps, catch basin samples Effluent/discharge sampling

Metrics for Success –Tracking progress By site By permit By river section “Milestone Report” –New approaches Basinwide stormwater permits Mass load tracking/modeling –Continued re-evaluation E.g. dam removal

The Headline We Are All Trying to Avoid Fresh Contamination Taints Superfund Foss Waterway The News Tribune - Tacoma, Wash. * Oct 15, 2006 “Recent laboratory tests of bottom-dwelling critters exposed to [Thea Foss] Waterway sediment confirm it has been recontaminated. The problem is excess phthalates, or plasticizers, which enter the waterway through Tacoma's storm drain system, said EPA, city officials and others.... Portland-based PacifiCorp and two other utilities spent $8.5 million to clean up that part of the Superfund project. The rest of the Foss cleanup - costing more than $90 million - was coordinated by city officials.”

Additional Resources -- EPA Web site on Contaminated Sediment Sites -- Anniston Community Advisory Group (CAG) -- Kalamazoo River Watershed -- Portland Harbor CAG --Duwamish River Cleanup Coalition (incl. Report: “Restoring Our River: Protecting Our Investment: Duwamish River Pollution Source Control,” Dec 17, 2004)