National Oil and Hazardous Substances Pollution Contingency Plan; National Priorities List: Partial Deletion of the Naval Industrial Reserve Ordnance Plant Superfund Site, 33134-33139 [2018-15240]
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Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 137 / Tuesday, July 17, 2018 / Rules and Regulations
requirements, Sulfur oxides, Volatile
organic compounds.
ORGANIC COMPOUNDS by revising
the entry for ‘‘Section 1200–3–18–.24,
Gasoline Dispensing Facilities’’ to read
as follows:
PART 52—APPROVAL AND
PROMULGATION OF
IMPLEMENTATION PLANS
Dated: July 2, 2018.
Onis ‘‘Trey’’ Glenn, III,
Regional Administrator, Region 4.
1. The authority citation for part 52
continues to read as follows:
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§ 52.2220
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Authority: 42.U.S.C. 7401 et seq.
40 CFR part 52 is amended as follows:
Subpart RR—Tennessee
Identification of plan.
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2. Section 52.2220, is amended under
CHAPTER 1200–3–18 VOLATILE
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TABLE 1—EPA-APPROVED TENNESSEE REGULATIONS
State citation
State effective
date
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CHAPTER 1200–3–18
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Section 1200–3–18–.24 ...............
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[FR Doc. 2018–15148 Filed 7–16–18; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6560–50–P
ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION
AGENCY
40 CFR Part 300
[EPA–HQ–SFUND–1989–0007; FRL–9980–
71—Region 5]
National Oil and Hazardous
Substances Pollution Contingency
Plan; National Priorities List: Partial
Deletion of the Naval Industrial
Reserve Ordnance Plant Superfund
Site
Environmental Protection
Agency (EPA).
ACTION: Direct final rule.
AGENCY:
The Environmental Protection
Agency (EPA) Region 5 is publishing a
direct final Notice of Deletion of
Operable Unit 3 (OU3) of the Naval
Industrial Reserve Ordnance Plant
(NIROP) Superfund Site (Site), located
in Fridley, Minnesota, from the National
Priorities List (NPL). The NPL,
promulgated pursuant to section 105 of
the Comprehensive Environmental
Response, Compensation, and Liability
Act (CERCLA) of 1980, as amended, is
an appendix of the National Oil and
Hazardous Substances Pollution
Contingency Plan (NCP). This direct
final partial deletion is being published
by EPA with the concurrence of the
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SUMMARY:
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8/31/2017
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7/17/2018, [Insert citation
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State of Minnesota, through the
Minnesota Pollution Control Agency
(MPCA), because EPA has determined
that all appropriate response actions
under CERCLA at OU3, other than
operation, maintenance, and five-year
reviews, have been completed.
However, this partial deletion does not
preclude future actions under
Superfund.
DATES: This direct final partial deletion
is effective September 17, 2018 unless
EPA receives adverse comments by
August 16, 2018. If adverse comments
are received, EPA will publish a timely
withdrawal of the direct final partial
deletion in the Federal Register
informing the public that the partial
deletion will not take effect.
ADDRESSES: Submit your comments,
identified by Docket ID No. EPA–HQ–
SFUND–1989–0007, by one of the
following methods: https://
www.regulations.gov. Follow the online
instructions for submitting comments.
Once submitted, comments cannot be
edited or removed from Regulations.gov.
The EPA may publish any comment
received to its public docket. Do not
submit electronically any information
you consider to be Confidential
Business Information (CBI) or other
information whose disclosure is
restricted by statute. Multimedia
submissions (audio, video, etc.) must be
accompanied by a written comment.
The written comment is considered the
official comment and should include
discussion of all points you wish to
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make. The EPA will generally not
consider comments or comment
contents located outside of the primary
submission (i.e., on the web, cloud, or
other file sharing system). For
additional submission methods, the full
EPA public comment policy,
information about CBI or multimedia
submissions, and general guidance on
making effective comments, please visit
https://www2.epa.gov/dockets/
commenting-epa-dockets.
Email: cano.randolph@epa.gov.
Mail: Randolph Cano, NPL Deletion
Coordinator, U.S. Environmental
Protection Agency Region 5 (SR–6J), 77
West Jackson Boulevard, Chicago, IL
60604, (312) 886–6036.
Hand deliver: Superfund Records
Center, U.S. Environmental Protection
Agency Region 5, 77 West Jackson
Boulevard, 7th Floor South, Chicago, IL
60604, (312)886–0900. Such deliveries
are only accepted during the Docket’s
normal hours of operation, and special
arrangements should be made for
deliveries of boxed information. The
normal business hours are Monday
through Friday, 8 a.m. to 4 p.m.,
excluding Federal holidays.
Instructions: Direct your comments to
Docket ID no. EPA–HQ–SFUND–1989–
0007. The https://www.regulations.gov
website is an ‘‘anonymous access’’
system, which means EPA will not
know your identity or contact
information unless you provide it in the
body of your comment. If you send an
email comment directly to EPA without
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going through https://
www.regulations.gov, your email
address will be automatically captured
and included as part of the comment
that is placed in the public docket and
made available on the internet. If you
submit an electronic comment, EPA
recommends that you include your
name and other contact information in
the body of your comment and with any
disk or CD–ROM you submit. If EPA
cannot read your comment due to
technical difficulties and cannot contact
you for clarification, EPA may not be
able to consider your comment.
Electronic files should avoid the use of
special characters, any form of
encryption, and be free of any defects or
viruses.
Docket: All documents in the docket
are listed in the https://
www.regulations.gov index. Although
listed in the index, some information is
not publicly available, e.g., CBI or other
information whose disclosure is
restricted by statue. Certain other
material, such as copyrighted material,
will be publicly available only in hard
copy. Publicly available docket
materials are available either
electronically in https://
www.regulations.gov or in hard copy at:
U.S. Environmental Protection
Agency, Region 5, Superfund Records
Center, 77 West Jackson Boulevard, 7th
Floor South, Chicago, IL 60604, Phone:
(312) 886–0900, Hours: Monday through
Friday, 8 a.m. to 4 p.m., excluding
Federal holidays.
Mississippi Library, 410 Mississippi
St. NE, Fridley, MN 55432, Phone: (763)
324–1560, Hours: Monday and
Wednesday, 12:00 p.m. to 8:00 p.m.,
Tuesday and Thursday, 10:00 a.m. to
6:00 p.m., Friday, 12:00 p.m. to 6:00
p.m. and Saturday 10:00 a.m. to 5:00
p.m.
The Navy has an online repository for
the NIROP Site at the link below. Please
click on the Administrative Records link
to see all the documents. https://
www.navfac.navy.mil/products_and_
services/ev/products_and_services/env_
restoration/administrative_
records.html?p_instln_id=FRIDLEY_
NIROP.
The Minnesota Pollution Control
Agency has an information repository
for the NIROP Site at their offices: 520
Lafayette Road, St. Paul, MN 55155. Call
(651) 296–6300 or toll-free at (800) 657–
3864 to schedule an appointment.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Randolph Cano, NPL Deletion
Coordinator, U.S. Environmental
Protection Agency Region 5 (SR–6J), 77
West Jackson Boulevard, Chicago, IL
60604, (312)886–6036, or via email at
cano.randolph@epa.gov.
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SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Table of Contents
I. Introduction
II. NPL Deletion Criteria
III. Partial Deletion Procedures
IV. Basis for Site Partial Deletion
V. Partial Deletion Action
I. Introduction
EPA Region 5 is publishing this direct
final Notice of Partial Deletion for the
Naval Industrial Reserve Ordnance
Plant (NIROP) Superfund Site (Site)
from the National Priorities List (NPL).
This partial deletion pertains to OU3,
which includes all the unsaturated soils
underlying the former Plating Shop
Area. The NPL constitutes Appendix B
of 40 CFR part 300, which is the
National Oil and Hazardous Substances
Pollution Contingency Plan (NCP),
which EPA promulgated pursuant to
section 105 of the Comprehensive
Environmental Response,
Compensation, and Liability Act
(CERCLA) of 1980, as amended. EPA
maintains the NPL as the list of sites
that appear to present a significant risk
to public health, welfare, or the
environment. Sites on the NPL may be
the subject of remedial actions financed
by the Hazardous Substance Superfund
(Fund). This partial deletion of the
NIROP Site is proposed in accordance
with 40 CFR 300.425(e) and is
consistent with the Notice of Policy
Change: Partial Deletion of Sites Listed
on the National Priorities List. 60 FR
55466 (Nov. 1, 1995). As described in
300.425(e)(3) of the NCP, a portion of a
site deleted from the NPL remains
eligible for Fund-financed remedial
action if future conditions warrant such
actions.
Section II of this document explains
the criteria for deleting sites from the
NPL. Section III discusses procedures
that EPA is using for this action. Section
IV discusses OU3 of the NIROP Site and
demonstrates how OU3 meets the
deletion criteria. Section V discusses
EPA’s action to partially delete OU3 of
the Site from the NPL unless adverse
comments are received during the
public comment period.
II. NPL Deletion Criteria
The NCP establishes the criteria that
EPA uses to delete sites from the NPL.
In accordance with 40 CFR 300.425(e),
sites may be deleted from the NPL
where no further response is
appropriate. In making such a
determination pursuant to 40 CFR
300.425(e), EPA will consider, in
consultation with the State, whether any
of the following criteria have been met:
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i. Responsible parties or other persons
have implemented all appropriate
response actions required;
ii. all appropriate Fund-financed
response under CERCLA has been
implemented, and no further response
action by responsible parties is
appropriate; or
iii. the remedial investigation has
shown that the release poses no
significant threat to public health or the
environment and, therefore, the taking
of remedial measures is not appropriate.
Pursuant to CERCLA section 121(c)
and the NCP, EPA conducts five-year
reviews (FYRs) to ensure the continued
protectiveness of remedial actions
where hazardous substances, pollutants,
or contaminants remain at a site above
levels that allow for unlimited use and
unrestricted exposure. EPA conducts
such FYRs even if a site is deleted from
the NPL. EPA may initiate further action
to ensure continued protectiveness at a
deleted site if new information becomes
available that indicates it is appropriate.
Whenever there is a significant release
from a site deleted from the NPL, the
deleted site may be restored to the NPL
without application of the hazard
ranking system.
III. Partial Deletion Procedures
The following procedures apply to the
deletion of OU3 of the NIROP Site:
(1) EPA has consulted with the State
of Minnesota prior to developing this
direct final Notice of Partial Deletion
and the Notification of Intent for Partial
Deletion published in the ‘‘Proposed
Rules’’ section of the Federal Register.
(2) EPA has provided the State thirty
(30) working days for review of this
action and the parallel Notification of
Intent for Partial Deletion prior to their
publication today, and the State,
through the Minnesota Pollution
Control Agency (MPCA), has concurred
on the partial deletion of the Site from
the NPL.
(3) Concurrent with the publication of
this direct final Notice of Partial
Deletion, a notice of the availability of
the parallel Notification of Intent for
Partial Deletion is being published in a
major local newspaper, the Sun Focus,
located in Fridley, Minnesota. The
newspaper notice announces the 30-day
public comment period concerning the
Notification of Intent for Partial Deletion
of the Site from the NPL.
(4) EPA placed copies of documents
supporting the partial deletion in the
deletion docket and made these items
available for public inspection and
copying at the Site information
repositories identified in the Addresses
Section of this rule.
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(5) If adverse comments are received
within the 30-day public comment
period on this partial deletion action,
EPA will publish a timely notice of
withdrawal of this direct final Notice of
Partial Deletion before its effective date
and will prepare a response to
comments and continue with the
deletion process on the basis of the
Notice of Intent for Partial Deletion and
the comments already received.
Deletion of a portion of a site from the
NPL does not itself create, alter, or
revoke any individual’s rights or
obligations. Deletion of a portion of a
site from the NPL does not in any way
alter EPA’s right to take enforcement
actions, as appropriate. The NPL is
designed primarily for informational
purposes and to assist EPA
management. Section 300.425(e)(3) of
the NCP states that the deletion of a site
from the NPL does not preclude
eligibility for further response actions,
should future conditions warrant such
actions.
IV. Basis for Site Partial Deletion
The following information provides
EPA’s rationale for deleting OU3 of the
NIROP Site from the NPL. EPA believes
it is appropriate to delete OU3 of the
NIROP Site because all appropriate
response actions under CERCLA, other
than operation, maintenance, and FYRs,
have been completed at OU3 and it is
ready for redevelopment as a
commercial and/or industrial property.
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Site Background and History
The NIROP Site (CERCLIS ID
MN3170022914) is located in the
northern portion of the Minneapolis/St.
Paul Metropolitan Area in an industrial/
commercial area at 4800 E. River Road
within the limits of Fridley, Anoka
County, Minnesota. The NIROP Site is
not adjacent to any residential areas and
is not located in an environmentally
sensitive area, nor near any known
environmentally sensitive areas.
The Site is approximately 82.6 acres,
most of which are covered with
buildings or pavement. The U.S. Navy
and/or its contractors produced
advanced weapons systems at the
facility beginning in 1940. In 2004, the
U.S. Navy sold the property to FMC
(now BAE). BAE then sold the property
to ELT Minneapolis, LLC. ELT
Minneapolis owned the former NIROP
property and leased the space to United
Defense LP until 2013. In 2013, ELT
sold the property to Fridley Land, LLC,
the current owner. Fridley Land LLC is
in the process of redeveloping the
property in phases for commercial and/
or industrial use.
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The formerly government-owned
portion of the facility constitutes what
is now the NIROP Site. See the site map
in NIROP Map Delineating Operable
Units, Docket Document ID No. EPA–
HQ–SFUND–1989–0007–0075 in the
Deletion Docket for OU3. (Note:
portions of the main facility building
depicted in the Site Map have since
been demolished for redevelopment.)
The Site Map also shows that the
southern portion of the original facility
is not part of the NIROP Site.
The Navy and/or its contractors
disposed paint sludges and chlorinated
solvents generated from ordnance
manufacturing processes in pits and
trenches in the undeveloped area of the
NIROP Site immediately north of the
main facility building in the early
1970s. This area is called the North 40
area. MPCA received information
concerning the historical waste disposal
practices at NIROP and about the
contaminant sources in the North 40
area and beneath the NIROP building in
1980.
Trichloroethylene (TCE) was
discovered in on-site groundwater wells
and in the City of Minneapolis’s
drinking water treatment plant intake
pipe, located in the Mississippi River
less than 1 mile downstream from the
Site, in 1981. The Navy conducted
investigations in 1983 which identified
pits and trenches in the North 40 area
of the NIROP Site where drummed
wastes were deposited. The Navy
excavated approximately 1,200 cubic
yards of contaminated soil and 43 (55gallon) drums and disposed them offsite from November 1983 to March
1984.
EPA proposed the NIROP Site to the
NPL on July 14, 1989 (54 FR 29820).
EPA finalized the NIROP Site on the
NPL on November 21, 1989 (54 FR
48184).
EPA, MPCA and the Navy signed a
Federal Facilities Agreement (FFA) in
March 1991. Per the FFA, one of the
purposes of that agreement was to
’’Identify alternatives for Remedial
Action for Operable Units’’ appropriate
for the Site prior to the implementation
of Final Remedial Actions for the Site.
EPA divided the NIROP Site into
three operable units (OUs) to make it
easier to address the contaminant issues
at the Site. OU3, the subject of this
partial deletion, includes all the
unsaturated soils underlying the former
Plating Shop Area of the Site. The
extent of OU3 is detailed in the site map
in NIROP Map Delineating Operable
Units, Docket Document ID No. EPA–
HQ–SFUND–1989–0007–0075 in the
Deletion Docket for OU3.
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The current scope of OU3 is provided
in EPA’s August 12, 2013 Memorandum
to File that restructured the OUs at the
Site. OU3 initially included: (1) All
saturated and unsaturated soil
underneath the main NIROP
manufacturing building, excluding the
extreme southern portion of the
building, and (2) all saturated soil under
and outside the main NIROP
manufacturing building, within the legal
boundaries of the Site.
EPA’s 2013 Memorandum limited the
scope of OU3 to unsaturated soil under
the former Plating Shop Area. The
saturated soils that were initially part of
OU3 are now included with OU1. The
remaining unsaturated soil under the
main NIROP building outside the former
Plating Shop Area that were part of OU3
are being addressed as part of OU2.
OU1, which includes the
contaminated groundwater within and
originating from the NIROP Site, and
now saturated soils, will remain on the
NPL and is not being considered for
deletion as part of this action. EPA
deleted OU2, which includes all the
unsaturated soils within the legal
boundaries of the NIROP Site excluding
the unsaturated soils under the former
Plating Shop Area, from the NPL
effective August 29, 2014 (79 FR 36658,
June 30, 2014).
Remedial Investigation and Feasibility
Study (RI/FS)
The groundwater in the
unconsolidated aquifer beneath the Site
is contaminated with volatile organic
compounds (VOCs), including: TCE,
1,1,1-trichloroethane (TCA), 1,2dichloroethylene (DCE),
tetrachloroethylene (PERC), 1,1dichloroethane, toluene, xylene, and
ethylbenzene. Some or all of the
contaminants identified are hazardous
substances as defined in section 104(14)
of CERCLA, 42 U.S.C. 9601(14), and 40
CFR 302.4. TCE was found more
frequently and at higher concentrations
than any other VOC, and is considered
to be the best indicator chemical for the
Site.
In April 1995, the Navy was
renovating the East Plating Shop (now
called the former Plating Shop Area or
OU3) inside the main manufacturing
building, to accommodate an electrical
assembly facility. During the renovation,
when all of the tanks were removed and
prior to the floor repairs being made, the
Navy collected soil and groundwater
samples to determine whether past
plating activities had impacted soil and
groundwater beneath the building.
The Navy detected TCE, TCA, PERC
and DCE at elevated levels in soil and
groundwater. The Navy also found
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elevated metals concentrations,
including chromium, in the vicinity of
a former sump. (Note: With the ongoing
redevelopment at the Site, OU3 is no
longer inside the main manufacturing
building. The portion of the building
that housed OU3 has since been
demolished.)
The Navy detected the highest
concentrations of TCE and PERC in the
1995 sampling event in surface (0 to 4
feet below ground surface [bgs]),
shallow subsurface (4 to 12 feet bgs),
and deep subsurface (>12 feet bgs) soil
samples collected from the East Plating
Shop. This indicated the possible
presence of a ‘‘hot spot’’ of TCE and
PERC in this area and the likelihood
that the East Plating Shop was the
source area for these VOCs and
chromium.
The 2002 Baseline Human Health
Risk Assessment (HHRA) identified an
unacceptable potential risk/hazard in
OU3 for exposure to soil in the East
Plating Shop area under the majorinfrequent construction worker
exposure scenario. The major-infrequent
construction worker exposure scenario
assumed construction workers would
have a short-term exposure to the
maximum concentration of soil
contaminants detected from 0–12 feet
bgs in the East Plating Shop area during
major modifications to the building slab
and foundations. The HHRA did not
identify any unacceptable risks or
hazards to exposure to OU3 soil under
a commercial/industrial scenario.
The cancer risk calculated for the
major-infrequent construction worker in
the 2002 HHRA was 2.1 × 10¥6. This
risk is within EPA’s acceptable risk
range of 1 × 10¥4 to 1 × 10¥6, but
exceeds MPCA’s acceptable subchronic
incremental cancer risk of 1 × 10¥6.
The noncancer risks calculated for the
major-infrequent construction worker in
OU3 in the 2002 HHRA was a hazard
quotient (HQ) of 1.35 for chromium, and
a total hazard index (HI) of 2.9 for all
chemicals. These levels exceed EPA’s
acceptable noncancer HQ of 1 for
individual contaminants and a HI of 1
for multiple chemicals, and MCPA’s
acceptable subchronic HQ and HI levels
of 1 for individual and multiple
chemicals.
Chromium is most commonly present
in its less-toxic trivalent form because
environmental conditions typically
favor the reduction of the more-toxic
hexavalent chromium to its less-toxic
trivalent state. The 2002 HHRA,
however, conservatively assumed that
100 percent of the chromium detected
in the East Plating Shop area was in the
hexavalent form, due to the absence of
site-specific speciated data and
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considering historic Site use. Based on
this assumption of 100 percent
hexavalent chromium, the potential
risks to OU3 receptors from exposure to
chromium in the 2002 HHRA were
likely overestimated.
Several years after the OU3 remedy
was selected and implemented, in 2015,
the Navy conducted additional soil
sampling in OU3 for total and
hexavalent chromium analysis. The
analytical results show that at most, the
more toxic hexavalent chromium
constitutes only 7 percent of the total
OU3 chromium measured. The 2015
total and hexavalent chromium
concentrations in soil were both below
the MPCA soil reference values for
industrial use. The Navy used these
speciated chromium results to complete
a more accurate, focused risk
assessment for OU3 chromium in 2016.
In 2016, the Navy also excavated soils
beneath the East Plating Shop to remove
a potential source of TCE to the
groundwater. The excavated soil was in
the same area as the elevated chromium
concentrations evaluated in the 2002
HHRA. This soil removal aided in
reducing any potential health risks
associated with chromium.
The Navy completed the Focused
Human Health Risk Assessment
(FHHRA) for the East Plating Shop area
in 2016. The Navy did not include in
the data set the soil samples collected in
2015 in the areas subsequently
excavated as part of the 2016 East
Plating Shop excavation because they
were no longer present or available for
contact by human receptors.
The FHHRA determined that, for the
major-infrequent construction worker
exposure scenario, the potential noncancer HI for all contaminants of
potential concern (COPCs)/target organs
combined is 0.16. This HI is below
EPA’s and MPCA’s target HI of 1 and
does not exceed MPCA’s target HQ level
of 0.2 for individual COCs. Therefore,
the 2016 FHHRA concluded that there
are no unacceptable risks or hazards for
major-infrequent construction workers
who may be exposed to chemicals in
mixed OU3 soil.
Selected Remedy
EPA, MPCA and the Navy issued a
Record of Decision (ROD) for OU1 on
September 28, 1990, and a ROD for OU2
and OU3 on September 17, 2003. EPA
issued a Memorandum to File on
September 5, 2013 clarifying the OU
definitions at the site. The changes to
the structure of the OUs in the 2013
Memorandum to File did not alter any
of the selected remedies for the Site.
EPA, MPCA and the Navy issued an
Explanation of Significant Differences
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33137
(ESD) documenting a requirement for
groundwater institutional controls (ICs)
as part of the OU1 remedy on September
26, 2014. EPA, MPCA and the Navy
issued an ESD documenting a change in
some of the IC requirements for OU3 on
July 19, 2017. These documents are
available the Docket under Docket
Document IDs EPA–HQ–SFUND–1989–
0007–0062 (1990 OU1 ROD), EPA–HQ–
SFUND–1989–0007–0063 (2003 OU2
and OU3 ROD), EPA–HQ–SFUND–
1989–0007–0068 (2013 Memorandum to
File), EPA–HQ–SFUND–1989–0007–
0069 (2014 OU1 ESD) and EPA–HQ–
SFUND–1989–0007–0071 (2017 OU3
ESD).
The original remedial action
objectives (RAOs) for OU3 in the 2003
OU2 and OU3 ROD were: (1) To prevent
unacceptable risks due to residential or
other unrestricted exposures to
contaminated soils at the Site, and (2) to
prevent unacceptable risks to industrial
or construction workers due to
exposures to contaminated soils at the
Site. The remedial action specified for
OU3 soils in the 2003 ROD were
engineering controls (ECs) and ICs. The
original selected remedy for OU3 was:
(1) To restrict the use of the Property to
industrial or restricted commercial use,
until and unless EPA and MPCA
determine that concentrations of
hazardous substances in the soils have
been reduced to levels that allow for a
less restrictive use; (2) to prohibit the
disturbance of soils beneath the
Designated Restricted Area known as
the concrete pit foundations where
metal-finishing operations previously
occurred at the former Plating Shop
within the Main Manufacturing
Building without the prior written
approval of the EPA and MPCA; and (3)
to ensure that the concrete pit floor
(approximately 8 to 12 feet below grade
floor) where metal finishing operations
previously occurred at the former
Plating Shop within the Main
Manufacturing Building is not removed
without the prior written approval of
EPA and MPCA. That floor will serve as
an EC.
On July 19, 2017, EPA, MPCA and the
Navy issued an ESD to remove the
requirement for some of the ICs and ECs
in the OU3 remedy. The remedy
components described in the 2003 OU2
and OU3 ROD were initially required to
ensure the long-term protectiveness of
the OU3 soil because the OU3 soil
contamination remained at the Site
above levels that allow for unlimited
use and unrestricted exposure.
The 2017 ESD modified the selected
remedy for OU3 by removing the second
and third remedy components described
above from the OU3 remedy.
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Specifically, there was no longer a need
to prohibit the disturbance of soils
beneath the former Plating Shop area,
nor to ensure that the concrete pit floor
at the former Plating Shop remains in
place.
EPA, MPCA and the Navy included
these two OU3 remedy components in
the 2003 ROD based on the conservative
assumption in the 2002 HHRA that all
of the chromium in OU3 soil was in the
more-toxic hexavalent form. Based on
the 2015 sampling data, which included
speciated chromium results, and the
2016 FHHRA, which found no
unacceptable risks or hazards for the
major-infrequent construction worker
scenario at OU3, the floor in the Plating
Shop is no longer needed as an EC and
OU3 ICs prohibiting the soils beneath
the Plating Shop from being disturbed
are no longer necessary.
The IC restricting OU3 to industrial or
restricted commercial use in the 2003
OU2 and OU3 ROD [i.e., OU3 remedy
component (1) listed above], remains
part of the selected remedy for OU3.
Implemented ICs at the Site are shown
in Figure 2 of the 2017 OU3 ESD in the
Docket (Docket Document ID No. EPA–
HQ–SFUND–1989–0007–0071).
Response Actions
EPA concurred with the Navy’s March
2004 Land Use Control Remedial Design
(LUCRD) for OU3 in August 2004. The
LUCRD specifies how the OU3 remedy
will be implemented, maintained, and
enforced if any breach of the remedy
should occur. The LUCRD details the
Navy’s continuing responsibilities with
respect to OU3, including: Ensuring that
annual on-site physical inspections of
OU3 are performed to confirm
continued compliance with all Land
Use Control (LUC) Performance
Objectives; ensuring that annual LUC
Compliance Certifications are provided
to EPA and MPCA that explain any
deficiency, if found; conducting FYRs of
the remedy as required by CERCLA and
the NCP; notifying EPA and MPCA prior
to any planned property conveyance;
providing EPA and MPCA the
opportunity to review the text of
intended deed provisions; and notifying
EPA and MPCA if Site activities might
interfere with LUC effectiveness.
The LUCs were incorporated into a
Quitclaim Deed that was executed by
the property owner, the United States
and MPCA on June 17, 2004. The
Quitclaim Deed acts as an
environmental covenant describing the
property restrictions. The deed
restrictions run with the land such that
any subsequent property owner is
bound by the same restrictions. The
LUCs are to remain in place until EPA
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and MPCA determine that the
concentrations of hazardous substances
in the OU3 soils have been reduced to
levels that allow for a less restrictive
use.
In 2017, EPA, MPCA and the Navy
issued an ESD for OU3 removing the
requirement for two of the three OU3
LUCs required by the 2003 OU2 and
OU3 ROD. The 2017 ESD removed the
requirement for the LUCs that required
the concrete pit floor in the former
Plating Shop to remain in place and for
the soils in the former Plating Shop area
to remain undisturbed.
Cleanup Levels
There was no cleanup associated with
the original remedy for OU3. In 2016,
however, soils beneath the East Plating
Shop were excavated and replaced with
clean soil to address a potential source
of TCE to the groundwater as part of
OU1. The excavated soil was in the
same area as the elevated chromium
concentrations evaluated in the 2002
HHRA. The 2016 TCE soil removal also
aided in reducing any potential health
risk associated with chromium. This
further justified the removal of the LUCs
for the former Plating Shop floor and for
the soil below the floor described in the
2017 OU3 ESD.
Operation and Maintenance
The Navy is the lead agency for the
Site and is responsible for conducting
routine inspections to ensure that the
LUCs are maintained and enforced. The
Navy is responsible for reporting the
results of the inspections and any
breach of the LUCs to the MPCA and
EPA.
Five-Year Review
The Navy conducted the last FYR at
the Site in October 2013. The 2013 FYR
concluded that the remedy at NIROP for
OU3 is protective of human health and
the environment. The 2013 FYR did not
identify any issues or recommendations
for OU3. The FYR calls for the Navy to
continue long-term stewardship to
ensure that the LUC restricting land use
at the Site to industrial or restricted
commercial use is maintained. The next
FYR for the Site is scheduled for
October 2018.
Redevelopment
Redevelopment is currently underway
to redevelop the NIROP Site into a
commercial office/warehouse complex.
This redevelopment is consistent with
the existing Land Use Designation for
the Site. The three parties to the FFA
agree that delisting OU3 from the NPL
will facilitate the redevelopment effort
and allow OU3 to become eligible for
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Fmt 4700
Sfmt 4700
State and Federal Brownfields funding.
Superfund NPL site property is not
eligible for Federal Brownfields
funding.
A developer has enrolled the NIROP
Site and adjacent land into MPCA’s
Voluntary Investigation and Cleanup
(VIC) program. In conjunction with the
redevelopment of the NIROP Site, any
additional investigations will be
conducted under the oversight and
direction of MPCA’s VIC program.
Under the VIC program, MPCA also
requested that all buildings at the
NIROP Site have vapor mitigation units
installed them and the builder has
complied.
Community Involvement
Public participation activities have
been satisfied as required in CERCLA
section 113(k), 42 U.S.C. 9613(k), and
CERCLA section 117, 42 U.S.C. 9617.
EPA published a document announcing
this proposed Direct Final Partial
Deletion and announcing the 30-day
public comment period in the Sun
Focus concurrent with publishing this
partial deletion in the Federal Register.
Documents in the deletion docket,
which EPA relied on for recommending
the partial deletion of the Site from the
NPL, are available to the public in the
information repositories and at
www.regulations.gov. Documents in the
docket include maps which identify the
specific parcels of land that are
included in this proposed Direct Final
Partial Deletion (i.e., OU3).
Determination That the Criteria for
Partial Deletion Have Been Met
The NCP (40 CFR 300.425(e)) states
that portions of a site may be deleted
from the NPL when no further response
action is appropriate in that area or
media. All cleanup actions specified for
OU3 of the NIROP Site in the 2003 OU2
and OU3 ROD and the 2017 OU3 ESD
have been implemented at the Site.
EPA, in consultation with the State of
Minnesota, has determined that no
further action is warranted to protect
human health and the environment at
OU3 and that OU3 of the NIROP Site
meets the criteria for Partial Deletion
from the NPL.
V. Partial Deletion Action
EPA, with concurrence of the State of
Minnesota through the MPCA, has
determined that all appropriate
response actions under CERCLA at OU3,
other than operation, maintenance, and
five-year reviews, have been completed.
Therefore, EPA is deleting OU3 of the
NIROP Site from the NPL.
Because EPA considers this action to
be noncontroversial and routine, EPA is
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taking it without prior publication. This
action will be effective September 17,
2018 unless EPA receives adverse
comments by August 16, 2018. If
adverse comments are received within
the 30-day public comment period, EPA
will publish a timely withdrawal of this
direct final notice of partial deletion
before the effective date of the partial
deletion and it will not take effect. EPA
will prepare a response to comments
and continue with the deletion process
on the basis of the notification of intent
to partially delete and the comments
already received. There will be no
additional opportunity to comment.
Federal Communications
Commission.
ACTION: Final rule; announcement of
effective date.
The amendments regarding
§§ 54.313(f)(1)(i), 54.313(f)(3) and
54.313(l) published at 81 FR 69696,
October 7, 2016, are effective July 17,
2018.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Alexander Minard, Wireline
Competition Bureau at (202) 418–7400
or TTY (202) 418–0484. For additional
information concerning the Paperwork
Reduction Act information collection
requirements contact Nicole Ongele at
(202) 418–2991 or via email:
Nicole.Ongele@fcc.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The
Commission submitted revised
information collection requirements for
review and approval by OMB, as
required by the Paperwork Reduction
Act (PRA) of 1995, on May 30, 2018,
which were approved by OMB on July
2, 2018. The information collection
requirements are contained in the
Commission’s Connect America Fund—
Alaska Plan Order, FCC 16–115,
published at 81 FR 69696, October 7,
2016. The OMB Control Number is
3060–0986. The Commission publishes
this document as an announcement of
the effective date of the rules published
October 7, 2016. If you have any
comments on the burden estimates
listed below, or how the Commission
can improve the collections and reduce
any burdens caused thereby, please
contact Nicole Ongele, Federal
Communications Commission, Room
1–A620, 445 12th Street SW,
Washington, DC 20554. Please include
the OMB Control Number, 3060–0986,
in your correspondence. The
Commission will also accept your
comments via email at PRA@fcc.gov.
To request materials in accessible
formats for people with disabilities
(Braille, large print, electronic files,
audio format), send an email to fcc504@
fcc.gov or call the Consumer and
Governmental Affairs Bureau at (202)
418–0530 (voice), (202) 418–0432
(TTY).
In this document, the Federal
Communications Commission
(Commission) announces that the Office
of Management and Budget (OMB) has
approved, for a period of three years, an
information collection associated with
the rules for the Connect America Fund
contained in the Commission’s Connect
America Fund—Alaska Plan Order, FCC
16–115. This document is consistent
with the Connect America Fund—
Alaska Plan Order, which stated that
the Commission would publish a
document in the Federal Register
announcing the effective date of the new
information collection requirements.
Synopsis
As required by the Paperwork
Reduction Act of 1995 (44 U.S.C. 3507),
the Commission is notifying the public
that it received OMB approval on July
2, 2018, for the information collection
requirements contained in 47 CFR
54.313(f)(1)(i), 54.313(f)(3) and
54.313(l), published at 81 FR 69696,
October 7, 2016. Under 5 CFR part 1320,
an agency may not conduct or sponsor
a collection of information unless it
displays a current, valid OMB Control
Number.
No person shall be subject to any
penalty for failing to comply with a
List of Subjects in 40 CFR Part 300
Environmental protection, Air
pollution control, Chemicals, Hazardous
waste, Hazardous substances,
Intergovernmental relations, Penalties,
Reporting and recordkeeping
requirements, Superfund, Water
pollution control, Water supply.
Authority: 33 U.S.C. 1321(d); 42 U.S.C.
9601–9657; E.O. 13626, 77 FR 56749, 3 CFR,
2013 Comp., p. 306; E.O. 12777, 56 FR 54757,
3 CFR, 1991 Comp., p. 351; E.O. 12580, 52
FR 2923, 3 CFR, 1987 Comp., p. 193.
Dated: June 25, 2018.
Cathy Stepp,
Regional Administrator, Region 5.
[FR Doc. 2018–15240 Filed 7–16–18; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6560–50–P
FEDERAL COMMUNICATIONS
COMMISSION
47 CFR Part 54
[WC Docket No. 10–90, 16–271; FCC 16–
115]
Connect America Fund, Connect
America Fund—Alaska Plan
AGENCY:
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SUMMARY:
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DATES:
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33139
collection of information subject to the
Paperwork Reduction Act that does not
display a current, valid OMB Control
Number. The OMB Control Number is
3060–0986.
The foregoing notice is required by
the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995,
Public Law 104–13, October 1, 1995,
and 44 U.S.C. 3507.
The total annual reporting burdens
and costs for the respondents are as
follows:
OMB Control Number: 3060–0986.
OMB Approval Date: July 2, 2018.
OMB Expiration Date: July 31, 2021.
Title: High-Cost Universal Service
Support.
Form Number: FCC Form 481, FCC
Form 505, FCC Form 507, FCC Form
508, FCC Form 509 and FCC Form 525.
Type of Review: Revision of a
currently approved collection.
Respondents: Business or other forprofit, not-for-profit institutions and
state, local or tribal government.
Number of Respondents and
Responses: 1,877 respondents; 14,335
responses.
Estimated Time per Response: 0.5–15
hours.
Frequency of Response: On occasion,
quarterly and annual reporting
requirements, recordkeeping
requirement and third party disclosure
requirement.
Obligation to Respond: Required to
obtain or retain benefits. Statutory
authority for this information collection
is contained in 47 U.S.C. 151–154, 155,
201–206, 214, 218–220, 251, 252, 254,
256, 303(r), 332, 403, 405, 410, and
1302.
Total Annual Burden: 63,486 hours.
Total Annual Cost: No Cost.
Privacy Act Impact Assessment: No
impact(s).
Nature and Extent of Confidentiality:
The Commission notes that USAC must
preserve the confidentiality of all data
obtained from respondents; must not
use the data except for purposes of
administering the universal service
programs; and must not disclose data in
company-specific form unless directed
to do so by the Commission. Privatelyheld rate-of-return carriers may file the
financial information they disclose in
FCC Form 481 pursuant to a protective
order.
Needs and Uses: On November 18,
2011, the Commission adopted an order
reforming its high-cost universal service
support mechanisms. Connect America
Fund; A National Broadband Plan for
Our Future; Establish Just and
Reasonable Rates for Local Exchange
Carriers; High-Cost Universal Service
Support; Developing a Unified
Intercarrier Compensation Regime;
E:\FR\FM\17JYR1.SGM
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 83, Number 137 (Tuesday, July 17, 2018)]
[Rules and Regulations]
[Pages 33134-33139]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2018-15240]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY
40 CFR Part 300
[EPA-HQ-SFUND-1989-0007; FRL-9980-71--Region 5]
National Oil and Hazardous Substances Pollution Contingency Plan;
National Priorities List: Partial Deletion of the Naval Industrial
Reserve Ordnance Plant Superfund Site
AGENCY: Environmental Protection Agency (EPA).
ACTION: Direct final rule.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: The Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) Region 5 is
publishing a direct final Notice of Deletion of Operable Unit 3 (OU3)
of the Naval Industrial Reserve Ordnance Plant (NIROP) Superfund Site
(Site), located in Fridley, Minnesota, from the National Priorities
List (NPL). The NPL, promulgated pursuant to section 105 of the
Comprehensive Environmental Response, Compensation, and Liability Act
(CERCLA) of 1980, as amended, is an appendix of the National Oil and
Hazardous Substances Pollution Contingency Plan (NCP). This direct
final partial deletion is being published by EPA with the concurrence
of the State of Minnesota, through the Minnesota Pollution Control
Agency (MPCA), because EPA has determined that all appropriate response
actions under CERCLA at OU3, other than operation, maintenance, and
five-year reviews, have been completed. However, this partial deletion
does not preclude future actions under Superfund.
DATES: This direct final partial deletion is effective September 17,
2018 unless EPA receives adverse comments by August 16, 2018. If
adverse comments are received, EPA will publish a timely withdrawal of
the direct final partial deletion in the Federal Register informing the
public that the partial deletion will not take effect.
ADDRESSES: Submit your comments, identified by Docket ID No. EPA-HQ-
SFUND-1989-0007, by one of the following methods: https://www.regulations.gov. Follow the online instructions for submitting
comments. Once submitted, comments cannot be edited or removed from
Regulations.gov. The EPA may publish any comment received to its public
docket. Do not submit electronically any information you consider to be
Confidential Business Information (CBI) or other information whose
disclosure is restricted by statute. Multimedia submissions (audio,
video, etc.) must be accompanied by a written comment. The written
comment is considered the official comment and should include
discussion of all points you wish to make. The EPA will generally not
consider comments or comment contents located outside of the primary
submission (i.e., on the web, cloud, or other file sharing system). For
additional submission methods, the full EPA public comment policy,
information about CBI or multimedia submissions, and general guidance
on making effective comments, please visit https://www2.epa.gov/dockets/commenting-epa-dockets.
Email: [email protected].
Mail: Randolph Cano, NPL Deletion Coordinator, U.S. Environmental
Protection Agency Region 5 (SR-6J), 77 West Jackson Boulevard, Chicago,
IL 60604, (312) 886-6036.
Hand deliver: Superfund Records Center, U.S. Environmental
Protection Agency Region 5, 77 West Jackson Boulevard, 7th Floor South,
Chicago, IL 60604, (312)886-0900. Such deliveries are only accepted
during the Docket's normal hours of operation, and special arrangements
should be made for deliveries of boxed information. The normal business
hours are Monday through Friday, 8 a.m. to 4 p.m., excluding Federal
holidays.
Instructions: Direct your comments to Docket ID no. EPA-HQ-SFUND-
1989-0007. The https://www.regulations.gov website is an ``anonymous
access'' system, which means EPA will not know your identity or contact
information unless you provide it in the body of your comment. If you
send an email comment directly to EPA without
[[Page 33135]]
going through https://www.regulations.gov, your email address will be
automatically captured and included as part of the comment that is
placed in the public docket and made available on the internet. If you
submit an electronic comment, EPA recommends that you include your name
and other contact information in the body of your comment and with any
disk or CD-ROM you submit. If EPA cannot read your comment due to
technical difficulties and cannot contact you for clarification, EPA
may not be able to consider your comment. Electronic files should avoid
the use of special characters, any form of encryption, and be free of
any defects or viruses.
Docket: All documents in the docket are listed in the https://www.regulations.gov index. Although listed in the index, some
information is not publicly available, e.g., CBI or other information
whose disclosure is restricted by statue. Certain other material, such
as copyrighted material, will be publicly available only in hard copy.
Publicly available docket materials are available either electronically
in https://www.regulations.gov or in hard copy at:
U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Region 5, Superfund Records
Center, 77 West Jackson Boulevard, 7th Floor South, Chicago, IL 60604,
Phone: (312) 886-0900, Hours: Monday through Friday, 8 a.m. to 4 p.m.,
excluding Federal holidays.
Mississippi Library, 410 Mississippi St. NE, Fridley, MN 55432,
Phone: (763) 324-1560, Hours: Monday and Wednesday, 12:00 p.m. to 8:00
p.m., Tuesday and Thursday, 10:00 a.m. to 6:00 p.m., Friday, 12:00 p.m.
to 6:00 p.m. and Saturday 10:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.
The Navy has an online repository for the NIROP Site at the link
below. Please click on the Administrative Records link to see all the
documents. https://www.navfac.navy.mil/products_and_services/ev/products_and_services/env_restoration/administrative_records.html?p_instln_id=FRIDLEY_NIROP.
The Minnesota Pollution Control Agency has an information
repository for the NIROP Site at their offices: 520 Lafayette Road, St.
Paul, MN 55155. Call (651) 296-6300 or toll-free at (800) 657-3864 to
schedule an appointment.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Randolph Cano, NPL Deletion
Coordinator, U.S. Environmental Protection Agency Region 5 (SR-6J), 77
West Jackson Boulevard, Chicago, IL 60604, (312)886-6036, or via email
at [email protected].
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Table of Contents
I. Introduction
II. NPL Deletion Criteria
III. Partial Deletion Procedures
IV. Basis for Site Partial Deletion
V. Partial Deletion Action
I. Introduction
EPA Region 5 is publishing this direct final Notice of Partial
Deletion for the Naval Industrial Reserve Ordnance Plant (NIROP)
Superfund Site (Site) from the National Priorities List (NPL). This
partial deletion pertains to OU3, which includes all the unsaturated
soils underlying the former Plating Shop Area. The NPL constitutes
Appendix B of 40 CFR part 300, which is the National Oil and Hazardous
Substances Pollution Contingency Plan (NCP), which EPA promulgated
pursuant to section 105 of the Comprehensive Environmental Response,
Compensation, and Liability Act (CERCLA) of 1980, as amended. EPA
maintains the NPL as the list of sites that appear to present a
significant risk to public health, welfare, or the environment. Sites
on the NPL may be the subject of remedial actions financed by the
Hazardous Substance Superfund (Fund). This partial deletion of the
NIROP Site is proposed in accordance with 40 CFR 300.425(e) and is
consistent with the Notice of Policy Change: Partial Deletion of Sites
Listed on the National Priorities List. 60 FR 55466 (Nov. 1, 1995). As
described in 300.425(e)(3) of the NCP, a portion of a site deleted from
the NPL remains eligible for Fund-financed remedial action if future
conditions warrant such actions.
Section II of this document explains the criteria for deleting
sites from the NPL. Section III discusses procedures that EPA is using
for this action. Section IV discusses OU3 of the NIROP Site and
demonstrates how OU3 meets the deletion criteria. Section V discusses
EPA's action to partially delete OU3 of the Site from the NPL unless
adverse comments are received during the public comment period.
II. NPL Deletion Criteria
The NCP establishes the criteria that EPA uses to delete sites from
the NPL. In accordance with 40 CFR 300.425(e), sites may be deleted
from the NPL where no further response is appropriate. In making such a
determination pursuant to 40 CFR 300.425(e), EPA will consider, in
consultation with the State, whether any of the following criteria have
been met:
i. Responsible parties or other persons have implemented all
appropriate response actions required;
ii. all appropriate Fund-financed response under CERCLA has been
implemented, and no further response action by responsible parties is
appropriate; or
iii. the remedial investigation has shown that the release poses no
significant threat to public health or the environment and, therefore,
the taking of remedial measures is not appropriate.
Pursuant to CERCLA section 121(c) and the NCP, EPA conducts five-
year reviews (FYRs) to ensure the continued protectiveness of remedial
actions where hazardous substances, pollutants, or contaminants remain
at a site above levels that allow for unlimited use and unrestricted
exposure. EPA conducts such FYRs even if a site is deleted from the
NPL. EPA may initiate further action to ensure continued protectiveness
at a deleted site if new information becomes available that indicates
it is appropriate. Whenever there is a significant release from a site
deleted from the NPL, the deleted site may be restored to the NPL
without application of the hazard ranking system.
III. Partial Deletion Procedures
The following procedures apply to the deletion of OU3 of the NIROP
Site:
(1) EPA has consulted with the State of Minnesota prior to
developing this direct final Notice of Partial Deletion and the
Notification of Intent for Partial Deletion published in the ``Proposed
Rules'' section of the Federal Register.
(2) EPA has provided the State thirty (30) working days for review
of this action and the parallel Notification of Intent for Partial
Deletion prior to their publication today, and the State, through the
Minnesota Pollution Control Agency (MPCA), has concurred on the partial
deletion of the Site from the NPL.
(3) Concurrent with the publication of this direct final Notice of
Partial Deletion, a notice of the availability of the parallel
Notification of Intent for Partial Deletion is being published in a
major local newspaper, the Sun Focus, located in Fridley, Minnesota.
The newspaper notice announces the 30-day public comment period
concerning the Notification of Intent for Partial Deletion of the Site
from the NPL.
(4) EPA placed copies of documents supporting the partial deletion
in the deletion docket and made these items available for public
inspection and copying at the Site information repositories identified
in the Addresses Section of this rule.
[[Page 33136]]
(5) If adverse comments are received within the 30-day public
comment period on this partial deletion action, EPA will publish a
timely notice of withdrawal of this direct final Notice of Partial
Deletion before its effective date and will prepare a response to
comments and continue with the deletion process on the basis of the
Notice of Intent for Partial Deletion and the comments already
received.
Deletion of a portion of a site from the NPL does not itself
create, alter, or revoke any individual's rights or obligations.
Deletion of a portion of a site from the NPL does not in any way alter
EPA's right to take enforcement actions, as appropriate. The NPL is
designed primarily for informational purposes and to assist EPA
management. Section 300.425(e)(3) of the NCP states that the deletion
of a site from the NPL does not preclude eligibility for further
response actions, should future conditions warrant such actions.
IV. Basis for Site Partial Deletion
The following information provides EPA's rationale for deleting OU3
of the NIROP Site from the NPL. EPA believes it is appropriate to
delete OU3 of the NIROP Site because all appropriate response actions
under CERCLA, other than operation, maintenance, and FYRs, have been
completed at OU3 and it is ready for redevelopment as a commercial and/
or industrial property.
Site Background and History
The NIROP Site (CERCLIS ID MN3170022914) is located in the northern
portion of the Minneapolis/St. Paul Metropolitan Area in an industrial/
commercial area at 4800 E. River Road within the limits of Fridley,
Anoka County, Minnesota. The NIROP Site is not adjacent to any
residential areas and is not located in an environmentally sensitive
area, nor near any known environmentally sensitive areas.
The Site is approximately 82.6 acres, most of which are covered
with buildings or pavement. The U.S. Navy and/or its contractors
produced advanced weapons systems at the facility beginning in 1940. In
2004, the U.S. Navy sold the property to FMC (now BAE). BAE then sold
the property to ELT Minneapolis, LLC. ELT Minneapolis owned the former
NIROP property and leased the space to United Defense LP until 2013. In
2013, ELT sold the property to Fridley Land, LLC, the current owner.
Fridley Land LLC is in the process of redeveloping the property in
phases for commercial and/or industrial use.
The formerly government-owned portion of the facility constitutes
what is now the NIROP Site. See the site map in NIROP Map Delineating
Operable Units, Docket Document ID No. EPA-HQ-SFUND-1989-0007-0075 in
the Deletion Docket for OU3. (Note: portions of the main facility
building depicted in the Site Map have since been demolished for
redevelopment.) The Site Map also shows that the southern portion of
the original facility is not part of the NIROP Site.
The Navy and/or its contractors disposed paint sludges and
chlorinated solvents generated from ordnance manufacturing processes in
pits and trenches in the undeveloped area of the NIROP Site immediately
north of the main facility building in the early 1970s. This area is
called the North 40 area. MPCA received information concerning the
historical waste disposal practices at NIROP and about the contaminant
sources in the North 40 area and beneath the NIROP building in 1980.
Trichloroethylene (TCE) was discovered in on-site groundwater wells
and in the City of Minneapolis's drinking water treatment plant intake
pipe, located in the Mississippi River less than 1 mile downstream from
the Site, in 1981. The Navy conducted investigations in 1983 which
identified pits and trenches in the North 40 area of the NIROP Site
where drummed wastes were deposited. The Navy excavated approximately
1,200 cubic yards of contaminated soil and 43 (55-gallon) drums and
disposed them off-site from November 1983 to March 1984.
EPA proposed the NIROP Site to the NPL on July 14, 1989 (54 FR
29820). EPA finalized the NIROP Site on the NPL on November 21, 1989
(54 FR 48184).
EPA, MPCA and the Navy signed a Federal Facilities Agreement (FFA)
in March 1991. Per the FFA, one of the purposes of that agreement was
to ''Identify alternatives for Remedial Action for Operable Units''
appropriate for the Site prior to the implementation of Final Remedial
Actions for the Site.
EPA divided the NIROP Site into three operable units (OUs) to make
it easier to address the contaminant issues at the Site. OU3, the
subject of this partial deletion, includes all the unsaturated soils
underlying the former Plating Shop Area of the Site. The extent of OU3
is detailed in the site map in NIROP Map Delineating Operable Units,
Docket Document ID No. EPA-HQ-SFUND-1989-0007-0075 in the Deletion
Docket for OU3.
The current scope of OU3 is provided in EPA's August 12, 2013
Memorandum to File that restructured the OUs at the Site. OU3 initially
included: (1) All saturated and unsaturated soil underneath the main
NIROP manufacturing building, excluding the extreme southern portion of
the building, and (2) all saturated soil under and outside the main
NIROP manufacturing building, within the legal boundaries of the Site.
EPA's 2013 Memorandum limited the scope of OU3 to unsaturated soil
under the former Plating Shop Area. The saturated soils that were
initially part of OU3 are now included with OU1. The remaining
unsaturated soil under the main NIROP building outside the former
Plating Shop Area that were part of OU3 are being addressed as part of
OU2.
OU1, which includes the contaminated groundwater within and
originating from the NIROP Site, and now saturated soils, will remain
on the NPL and is not being considered for deletion as part of this
action. EPA deleted OU2, which includes all the unsaturated soils
within the legal boundaries of the NIROP Site excluding the unsaturated
soils under the former Plating Shop Area, from the NPL effective August
29, 2014 (79 FR 36658, June 30, 2014).
Remedial Investigation and Feasibility Study (RI/FS)
The groundwater in the unconsolidated aquifer beneath the Site is
contaminated with volatile organic compounds (VOCs), including: TCE,
1,1,1-trichloroethane (TCA), 1,2-dichloroethylene (DCE),
tetrachloroethylene (PERC), 1,1-dichloroethane, toluene, xylene, and
ethylbenzene. Some or all of the contaminants identified are hazardous
substances as defined in section 104(14) of CERCLA, 42 U.S.C. 9601(14),
and 40 CFR 302.4. TCE was found more frequently and at higher
concentrations than any other VOC, and is considered to be the best
indicator chemical for the Site.
In April 1995, the Navy was renovating the East Plating Shop (now
called the former Plating Shop Area or OU3) inside the main
manufacturing building, to accommodate an electrical assembly facility.
During the renovation, when all of the tanks were removed and prior to
the floor repairs being made, the Navy collected soil and groundwater
samples to determine whether past plating activities had impacted soil
and groundwater beneath the building.
The Navy detected TCE, TCA, PERC and DCE at elevated levels in soil
and groundwater. The Navy also found
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elevated metals concentrations, including chromium, in the vicinity of
a former sump. (Note: With the ongoing redevelopment at the Site, OU3
is no longer inside the main manufacturing building. The portion of the
building that housed OU3 has since been demolished.)
The Navy detected the highest concentrations of TCE and PERC in the
1995 sampling event in surface (0 to 4 feet below ground surface
[bgs]), shallow subsurface (4 to 12 feet bgs), and deep subsurface (>12
feet bgs) soil samples collected from the East Plating Shop. This
indicated the possible presence of a ``hot spot'' of TCE and PERC in
this area and the likelihood that the East Plating Shop was the source
area for these VOCs and chromium.
The 2002 Baseline Human Health Risk Assessment (HHRA) identified an
unacceptable potential risk/hazard in OU3 for exposure to soil in the
East Plating Shop area under the major-infrequent construction worker
exposure scenario. The major-infrequent construction worker exposure
scenario assumed construction workers would have a short-term exposure
to the maximum concentration of soil contaminants detected from 0-12
feet bgs in the East Plating Shop area during major modifications to
the building slab and foundations. The HHRA did not identify any
unacceptable risks or hazards to exposure to OU3 soil under a
commercial/industrial scenario.
The cancer risk calculated for the major-infrequent construction
worker in the 2002 HHRA was 2.1 x 10-6. This risk is within
EPA's acceptable risk range of 1 x 10-4 to 1 x
10-6, but exceeds MPCA's acceptable subchronic incremental
cancer risk of 1 x 10-6.
The noncancer risks calculated for the major-infrequent
construction worker in OU3 in the 2002 HHRA was a hazard quotient (HQ)
of 1.35 for chromium, and a total hazard index (HI) of 2.9 for all
chemicals. These levels exceed EPA's acceptable noncancer HQ of 1 for
individual contaminants and a HI of 1 for multiple chemicals, and
MCPA's acceptable subchronic HQ and HI levels of 1 for individual and
multiple chemicals.
Chromium is most commonly present in its less-toxic trivalent form
because environmental conditions typically favor the reduction of the
more-toxic hexavalent chromium to its less-toxic trivalent state. The
2002 HHRA, however, conservatively assumed that 100 percent of the
chromium detected in the East Plating Shop area was in the hexavalent
form, due to the absence of site-specific speciated data and
considering historic Site use. Based on this assumption of 100 percent
hexavalent chromium, the potential risks to OU3 receptors from exposure
to chromium in the 2002 HHRA were likely overestimated.
Several years after the OU3 remedy was selected and implemented, in
2015, the Navy conducted additional soil sampling in OU3 for total and
hexavalent chromium analysis. The analytical results show that at most,
the more toxic hexavalent chromium constitutes only 7 percent of the
total OU3 chromium measured. The 2015 total and hexavalent chromium
concentrations in soil were both below the MPCA soil reference values
for industrial use. The Navy used these speciated chromium results to
complete a more accurate, focused risk assessment for OU3 chromium in
2016.
In 2016, the Navy also excavated soils beneath the East Plating
Shop to remove a potential source of TCE to the groundwater. The
excavated soil was in the same area as the elevated chromium
concentrations evaluated in the 2002 HHRA. This soil removal aided in
reducing any potential health risks associated with chromium.
The Navy completed the Focused Human Health Risk Assessment (FHHRA)
for the East Plating Shop area in 2016. The Navy did not include in the
data set the soil samples collected in 2015 in the areas subsequently
excavated as part of the 2016 East Plating Shop excavation because they
were no longer present or available for contact by human receptors.
The FHHRA determined that, for the major-infrequent construction
worker exposure scenario, the potential non-cancer HI for all
contaminants of potential concern (COPCs)/target organs combined is
0.16. This HI is below EPA's and MPCA's target HI of 1 and does not
exceed MPCA's target HQ level of 0.2 for individual COCs. Therefore,
the 2016 FHHRA concluded that there are no unacceptable risks or
hazards for major-infrequent construction workers who may be exposed to
chemicals in mixed OU3 soil.
Selected Remedy
EPA, MPCA and the Navy issued a Record of Decision (ROD) for OU1 on
September 28, 1990, and a ROD for OU2 and OU3 on September 17, 2003.
EPA issued a Memorandum to File on September 5, 2013 clarifying the OU
definitions at the site. The changes to the structure of the OUs in the
2013 Memorandum to File did not alter any of the selected remedies for
the Site. EPA, MPCA and the Navy issued an Explanation of Significant
Differences (ESD) documenting a requirement for groundwater
institutional controls (ICs) as part of the OU1 remedy on September 26,
2014. EPA, MPCA and the Navy issued an ESD documenting a change in some
of the IC requirements for OU3 on July 19, 2017. These documents are
available the Docket under Docket Document IDs EPA-HQ-SFUND-1989-0007-
0062 (1990 OU1 ROD), EPA-HQ-SFUND-1989-0007-0063 (2003 OU2 and OU3
ROD), EPA-HQ-SFUND-1989-0007-0068 (2013 Memorandum to File), EPA-HQ-
SFUND-1989-0007-0069 (2014 OU1 ESD) and EPA-HQ-SFUND-1989-0007-0071
(2017 OU3 ESD).
The original remedial action objectives (RAOs) for OU3 in the 2003
OU2 and OU3 ROD were: (1) To prevent unacceptable risks due to
residential or other unrestricted exposures to contaminated soils at
the Site, and (2) to prevent unacceptable risks to industrial or
construction workers due to exposures to contaminated soils at the
Site. The remedial action specified for OU3 soils in the 2003 ROD were
engineering controls (ECs) and ICs. The original selected remedy for
OU3 was: (1) To restrict the use of the Property to industrial or
restricted commercial use, until and unless EPA and MPCA determine that
concentrations of hazardous substances in the soils have been reduced
to levels that allow for a less restrictive use; (2) to prohibit the
disturbance of soils beneath the Designated Restricted Area known as
the concrete pit foundations where metal-finishing operations
previously occurred at the former Plating Shop within the Main
Manufacturing Building without the prior written approval of the EPA
and MPCA; and (3) to ensure that the concrete pit floor (approximately
8 to 12 feet below grade floor) where metal finishing operations
previously occurred at the former Plating Shop within the Main
Manufacturing Building is not removed without the prior written
approval of EPA and MPCA. That floor will serve as an EC.
On July 19, 2017, EPA, MPCA and the Navy issued an ESD to remove
the requirement for some of the ICs and ECs in the OU3 remedy. The
remedy components described in the 2003 OU2 and OU3 ROD were initially
required to ensure the long-term protectiveness of the OU3 soil because
the OU3 soil contamination remained at the Site above levels that allow
for unlimited use and unrestricted exposure.
The 2017 ESD modified the selected remedy for OU3 by removing the
second and third remedy components described above from the OU3 remedy.
[[Page 33138]]
Specifically, there was no longer a need to prohibit the disturbance of
soils beneath the former Plating Shop area, nor to ensure that the
concrete pit floor at the former Plating Shop remains in place.
EPA, MPCA and the Navy included these two OU3 remedy components in
the 2003 ROD based on the conservative assumption in the 2002 HHRA that
all of the chromium in OU3 soil was in the more-toxic hexavalent form.
Based on the 2015 sampling data, which included speciated chromium
results, and the 2016 FHHRA, which found no unacceptable risks or
hazards for the major-infrequent construction worker scenario at OU3,
the floor in the Plating Shop is no longer needed as an EC and OU3 ICs
prohibiting the soils beneath the Plating Shop from being disturbed are
no longer necessary.
The IC restricting OU3 to industrial or restricted commercial use
in the 2003 OU2 and OU3 ROD [i.e., OU3 remedy component (1) listed
above], remains part of the selected remedy for OU3. Implemented ICs at
the Site are shown in Figure 2 of the 2017 OU3 ESD in the Docket
(Docket Document ID No. EPA-HQ-SFUND-1989-0007-0071).
Response Actions
EPA concurred with the Navy's March 2004 Land Use Control Remedial
Design (LUCRD) for OU3 in August 2004. The LUCRD specifies how the OU3
remedy will be implemented, maintained, and enforced if any breach of
the remedy should occur. The LUCRD details the Navy's continuing
responsibilities with respect to OU3, including: Ensuring that annual
on-site physical inspections of OU3 are performed to confirm continued
compliance with all Land Use Control (LUC) Performance Objectives;
ensuring that annual LUC Compliance Certifications are provided to EPA
and MPCA that explain any deficiency, if found; conducting FYRs of the
remedy as required by CERCLA and the NCP; notifying EPA and MPCA prior
to any planned property conveyance; providing EPA and MPCA the
opportunity to review the text of intended deed provisions; and
notifying EPA and MPCA if Site activities might interfere with LUC
effectiveness.
The LUCs were incorporated into a Quitclaim Deed that was executed
by the property owner, the United States and MPCA on June 17, 2004. The
Quitclaim Deed acts as an environmental covenant describing the
property restrictions. The deed restrictions run with the land such
that any subsequent property owner is bound by the same restrictions.
The LUCs are to remain in place until EPA and MPCA determine that the
concentrations of hazardous substances in the OU3 soils have been
reduced to levels that allow for a less restrictive use.
In 2017, EPA, MPCA and the Navy issued an ESD for OU3 removing the
requirement for two of the three OU3 LUCs required by the 2003 OU2 and
OU3 ROD. The 2017 ESD removed the requirement for the LUCs that
required the concrete pit floor in the former Plating Shop to remain in
place and for the soils in the former Plating Shop area to remain
undisturbed.
Cleanup Levels
There was no cleanup associated with the original remedy for OU3.
In 2016, however, soils beneath the East Plating Shop were excavated
and replaced with clean soil to address a potential source of TCE to
the groundwater as part of OU1. The excavated soil was in the same area
as the elevated chromium concentrations evaluated in the 2002 HHRA. The
2016 TCE soil removal also aided in reducing any potential health risk
associated with chromium. This further justified the removal of the
LUCs for the former Plating Shop floor and for the soil below the floor
described in the 2017 OU3 ESD.
Operation and Maintenance
The Navy is the lead agency for the Site and is responsible for
conducting routine inspections to ensure that the LUCs are maintained
and enforced. The Navy is responsible for reporting the results of the
inspections and any breach of the LUCs to the MPCA and EPA.
Five-Year Review
The Navy conducted the last FYR at the Site in October 2013. The
2013 FYR concluded that the remedy at NIROP for OU3 is protective of
human health and the environment. The 2013 FYR did not identify any
issues or recommendations for OU3. The FYR calls for the Navy to
continue long-term stewardship to ensure that the LUC restricting land
use at the Site to industrial or restricted commercial use is
maintained. The next FYR for the Site is scheduled for October 2018.
Redevelopment
Redevelopment is currently underway to redevelop the NIROP Site
into a commercial office/warehouse complex. This redevelopment is
consistent with the existing Land Use Designation for the Site. The
three parties to the FFA agree that delisting OU3 from the NPL will
facilitate the redevelopment effort and allow OU3 to become eligible
for State and Federal Brownfields funding. Superfund NPL site property
is not eligible for Federal Brownfields funding.
A developer has enrolled the NIROP Site and adjacent land into
MPCA's Voluntary Investigation and Cleanup (VIC) program. In
conjunction with the redevelopment of the NIROP Site, any additional
investigations will be conducted under the oversight and direction of
MPCA's VIC program. Under the VIC program, MPCA also requested that all
buildings at the NIROP Site have vapor mitigation units installed them
and the builder has complied.
Community Involvement
Public participation activities have been satisfied as required in
CERCLA section 113(k), 42 U.S.C. 9613(k), and CERCLA section 117, 42
U.S.C. 9617. EPA published a document announcing this proposed Direct
Final Partial Deletion and announcing the 30-day public comment period
in the Sun Focus concurrent with publishing this partial deletion in
the Federal Register. Documents in the deletion docket, which EPA
relied on for recommending the partial deletion of the Site from the
NPL, are available to the public in the information repositories and at
www.regulations.gov. Documents in the docket include maps which
identify the specific parcels of land that are included in this
proposed Direct Final Partial Deletion (i.e., OU3).
Determination That the Criteria for Partial Deletion Have Been Met
The NCP (40 CFR 300.425(e)) states that portions of a site may be
deleted from the NPL when no further response action is appropriate in
that area or media. All cleanup actions specified for OU3 of the NIROP
Site in the 2003 OU2 and OU3 ROD and the 2017 OU3 ESD have been
implemented at the Site. EPA, in consultation with the State of
Minnesota, has determined that no further action is warranted to
protect human health and the environment at OU3 and that OU3 of the
NIROP Site meets the criteria for Partial Deletion from the NPL.
V. Partial Deletion Action
EPA, with concurrence of the State of Minnesota through the MPCA,
has determined that all appropriate response actions under CERCLA at
OU3, other than operation, maintenance, and five-year reviews, have
been completed. Therefore, EPA is deleting OU3 of the NIROP Site from
the NPL.
Because EPA considers this action to be noncontroversial and
routine, EPA is
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taking it without prior publication. This action will be effective
September 17, 2018 unless EPA receives adverse comments by August 16,
2018. If adverse comments are received within the 30-day public comment
period, EPA will publish a timely withdrawal of this direct final
notice of partial deletion before the effective date of the partial
deletion and it will not take effect. EPA will prepare a response to
comments and continue with the deletion process on the basis of the
notification of intent to partially delete and the comments already
received. There will be no additional opportunity to comment.
List of Subjects in 40 CFR Part 300
Environmental protection, Air pollution control, Chemicals,
Hazardous waste, Hazardous substances, Intergovernmental relations,
Penalties, Reporting and recordkeeping requirements, Superfund, Water
pollution control, Water supply.
Authority: 33 U.S.C. 1321(d); 42 U.S.C. 9601-9657; E.O. 13626,
77 FR 56749, 3 CFR, 2013 Comp., p. 306; E.O. 12777, 56 FR 54757, 3
CFR, 1991 Comp., p. 351; E.O. 12580, 52 FR 2923, 3 CFR, 1987 Comp.,
p. 193.
Dated: June 25, 2018.
Cathy Stepp,
Regional Administrator, Region 5.
[FR Doc. 2018-15240 Filed 7-16-18; 8:45 am]
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