National Oil and Hazardous Substances Pollution Contingency Plan; National Priorities List: Partial Deletion of the New Brighton/Arden Hills/Twin Cities Army Ammunition Plant (TCAAP) Superfund Site, 35324-35334 [2019-15633]
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§ 26.1302
Definitions.
The definitions in § 26.1102 apply to
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[FR Doc. 2019–15665 Filed 7–22–19; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6560–50–P
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40 CFR Part 300
[EPA–HQ–SFUND–1983–0002 FRL–9996–
98–Region 5]
[Reserved]
§ 26.1125 Prior submission of proposed
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■
ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION
AGENCY
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National Oil and Hazardous
Substances Pollution Contingency
Plan; National Priorities List: Partial
Deletion of the New Brighton/Arden
Hills/Twin Cities Army Ammunition
Plant (TCAAP) 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 Partial Deletion of
all soil and five aquatic sites in
Operable Unit 2 (OU2) of the New
Brighton/Arden Hills/TCAAP
Superfund Site in 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,
because all appropriate response actions
for soil and these five aquatic sites
under CERCLA, other than
maintenance, monitoring and five-year
reviews, have been completed.
However, this partial deletion does not
preclude future actions under
Superfund.
SUMMARY:
This direct final partial deletion
is effective September 23, 2019 unless
EPA receives adverse comments by
August 22, 2019. 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–1983–0002 by one of the
following methods:
https://www.regulations.gov. Follow
the on-line 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
DATES:
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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: cano.randolph@epa.gov.
Mail: Randolph Cano, NPL Deletion
Coordinator, U.S. Environmental
Protection Agency Region 5 (ST–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, Phone: (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–1983–
0002. EPA’s policy is that all comments
received will be included in the public
docket without change and may be
made available online at https://
www.regulations.gov, including any
personal information provided, unless
the comment includes information
claimed to be Confidential Business
Information (CBI) or other information
whose disclosure is restricted by statute.
Do not submit information that you
consider to be CBI or otherwise
protected through https://
www.regulations.gov or email. 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 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
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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 statute. Certain other
material, such as copyrighted material,
will be publicly available only in hard
copy. Publicly available docket
materials are available either
electronically at https://
www.regulations.gov or electronically 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.
Minnesota National Guard, 4761
Hamline Avenue North, Arden Hills,
MN 55112, Contact: Mary Lee, Arden
Hills Army Training Site, Phone: (651)
282–4420. Hours: Monday through
Friday, 8 a.m. to 3:30 p.m., excluding
State holidays.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Randolph Cano, NPL Deletion
Coordinator, U.S. Environmental
Protection Agency Region 5 (ST–6J), 77
West Jackson Boulevard, Chicago, IL
60604, Phone: (312) 886–6036, or via
email at cano.randolph@epa.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Table of Contents
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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
New Brighton/Arden Hills/Twin Cities
Army Ammunition Plant Site (NB/AH/
TCAAP Site), from the NPL. This partial
deletion pertains to all soil (shallow and
deep) located within the boundary of
OU2 of the NB/AH/TCAAP Site and to
the surface water and sediment (not
groundwater) of the five aquatic sites
located within the OU2 boundary: Rice
Creek, Sunfish Lake, Marsden Lake
North, Marsden Lake South and Pond G
(see Figures 2–2 and 11–1 in the
Docket). The remaining areas at the NB/
AH/TCAAP Site, including OU1, OU3,
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groundwater in OU2 and a sixth aquatic
site, Round Lake located southwest of
the OU2 boundary, will remain on the
NPL and are not being considered for
deletion as part of this action.
The NPL constitutes Appendix B of
the NCP, which EPA promulgated
pursuant to CERCLA. 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 NB/AH/
TCAAP 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 40
CFR 300.425(e)(3) of the NCP, a portion
of a site deleted from the NPL remains
eligible for Fund-financed remedial
actions 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 the shallow and deep soil
and the five aquatic sites located within
OU2 of the NB/AH/TCAAP Site and
demonstrates how they meet the
deletion criteria. Section V discusses
EPA’s action to partially delete the soil
and five aquatic sites located within the
OU2 boundary of the NB/AH/TCAAP
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, or portions thereof, 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 to ensure the continued
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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 five-year reviews even if a site or
a portion of 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. Deletion Procedures
The following procedures apply to the
deletion of the soil portion of OU2 and
to the five aquatic sites located within
the OU2 boundary of the NB/AH/
TCAAP Site:
(1) EPA consulted with the State of
Minnesota prior to developing this
direct final Notice of Partial Deletion
and the Notice of Intent for Partial
Deletion co-published today in the
‘‘Proposed Rules’’ section of the Federal
Register.
(2) EPA has provided the State 30
working days for review of this notice
and the parallel Notice of Intent for
Partial Deletion prior to their
publication today, and the State,
through the MPCA, has concurred on
the partial deletion of the NB/AH/
TCAAP Site from the NPL.
(3) Concurrent with the publication of
this direct final Notice of Partial
Deletion, an announcement of the
availability of the parallel Notice of
Intent for Partial Deletion is being
published in three major local
newspapers, the Minneapolis Star
Tribune, The Mounds View/New
Brighton Sun Focus and the Shoreview
Press. The newspaper notices announce
the 30-day public comment period
concerning the Notice of Intent for
Partial Deletion of the NB/AH/TCAAP
Site from the NPL.
(4) The 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 NB/AH/
TCAAP Site information repositories
identified above.
(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
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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.
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IV. Basis for Partial Site Deletion
The following information provides
EPA’s rationale for deleting the soil
portion of OU2 and the five aquatic sites
located within the OU2 boundary (Rice
Creek, Sunfish Lake, Marsden Lake
North, Marsden Lake South and Pond G)
of the NB/AH/TCAAP Site from the
NPL:
Site Background and History
The NB/AH/TCAAP Site (CERCLIS
ID: MN7213820908) consists of a 25square mile area located in Ramsey
County, Minnesota. The NB/AH/TCAAP
Site includes the 4-square mile area of
the original TCAAP facility (about 2,370
acres) operated by the U.S Army
(Army), located east of U.S. Interstate
Highway 35W and north of Ramsey
County Highway 96 at the time of NPL
listing in 1983 (OU2) and portions of
seven nearby communities with Siterelated groundwater contamination
(OU1 and OU3). These communities
include: New Brighton, Arden Hills, St.
Anthony, Shoreview, Mounds View,
Columbia Heights and Minneapolis. See
Figure 2–1 in in the Docket.
The TCAAP facility manufactured,
stored and tested small-caliber
ammunition and related materials for
the United States military and handled
and stored strategic and critical
materials for other government agencies
from 1941 to 2005. Between 1941 and
1981, the facility disposed of waste
materials including volatile organic
compounds (VOCs), heavy metals,
corrosive materials and explosives at
several locations on the TCAAP
property. Alliant Techsystems Inc.
(Alliant) was the Army’s installation
services contractor for TCAAP and also
operated manufacturing facilities at the
TCAAP property.
The U.S. Army Toxic Hazardous
Materials Agency issued a report on
waste disposal activities at TCAAP in
1978. In 1981, MPCA and the Minnesota
Department of Health (MDH) began
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sampling water supply wells in the
TCAAP area. The sampling found that
municipal and private drinking water
wells near the TCAAP facility and wells
at TCAAP were contaminated with
VOCs.
Due to the contamination, the City of
New Brighton shut down six municipal
wells, deepened two municipal wells
and constructed three new municipal
wells from 1982 to 1984. One of the City
of St. Anthony’s municipal wells was
also contaminated and this well was
closed.
In 1983 EPA installed carbon
treatment filters on two of the City of
New Brighton wells that were reopened
to meet summertime peak demand. EPA
also provided New Brighton with an
additional deep well and carbon
treatment for two of St. Anthony’s
municipal wells in the late 1980s.
In 1983, MPCA connected several
private well users adjacent to the
TCAAP facility to New Brighton’s and
Arden Hills’ water mains. In 1984,
MPCA constructed a temporary water
connection from the City of St. Anthony
to the City of Roseville to alleviate a
water shortage due to the shutdown of
one of St. Anthony’s wells.
EPA proposed the NB/AH/TCAAP
Site to the NPL on December 30, 1982
(47 FR 58476). EPA finalized the NB/
AH/TCAAP Site on the NPL on
September 8, 1983 (48 FR 40658).
The Army began a Phase I
investigation at the TCAAP facility in
1981. The Army installed and sampled
a significant number of monitoring
wells at TCAAP to identify the overall
contribution of the facility to the
groundwater contamination identified
by MPCA and MDH.
Site records and investigations
conducted at TCAAP subsequent to the
Army’s 1978 waste disposal report
identified 14 source areas of
contamination at TCAAP. These areas
were used for the burial or open-burning
of waste or were industrial sources of
contamination. The Army designated
the source areas as Sites A, B, C, D, E,
F, G, H, I, J, K, 129–3, 129–5 and 129–
15. See Figure 3 in the Docket.
The Army entered into a Federal
Facilities Agreement (FFA) with EPA
and the State of Minnesota in 1987. The
FFA establishes the framework,
schedule and requirements for the Army
to conduct a remedial investigation (RI)
and feasibility study (FS) at the TCAAP
facility and to implement the selected
cleanup actions.
The Army implemented several
interim remedial actions (IRAs) at the
TCAAP facility (i.e., OU2 of the NB/AH/
TCAAP Site) under the Army’s
Installation Restoration Program (IRP).
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The Army conducted the IRAs in the
1980s and 1990s before an overall
remedy was selected for OU2 in the
OU2 Record of Decision (ROD) in 1997.
These actions included unilateral
actions by the Army, actions with EPA
and State concurrence, and other
actions initiated by the Army/Alliant.
The IRAs were coordinated with the
State and Federal regulatory agencies.
The Army implemented unilateral
removal actions at TCAAP using its own
delegated removal authorities under
CERCLA Section 104. These actions
included installing in-situ soil vapor
extraction (SVE) systems at Sites D and
G to remediate VOC-contaminated soils
in 1986 and installing groundwater
pump-and-treat systems at Sites A and
K to treat VOC-contaminated
groundwater in 1988.
Army IRAs at TCAAP undertaken
with EPA and State concurrence
included: (1) Installing a Boundary
Groundwater Recovery System (BGRS)
in 1987 to prevent additional
groundwater contaminants from flowing
off of the TCAAP property pursuant to
a 1987 ROD; (2) expanding the BGRS
into the TCAAP Groundwater Recovery
System (TGRS) with source control
wells installed downgradient of Sites D,
G and I; (3) thermally treating 1,400
cubic yards of soil contaminated with
polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs) at Site
D in 1989 pursuant to a 1989 ROD on
Removal Action for PCB-Contaminated
Soils Near Site D; (4) remediating heavy
metal soil contamination through soil
washing/leaching technologies at Site F
from 1993–1997 under the Resource
Conservation and Recovery Act (RCRA);
and (5) modifying the Site A
groundwater remediation system
installed in 1983 to include eight
boundary extraction wells in 1994.
Other IRAs the Army implemented at
TCAAP included: Cleaning of the
sanitary sewer system lines (Site J) from
1984 to 1986 and closing Site J in
accordance with the EPA and MPCAapproved Final Site J Closure Report
issued in 1994; and excavation by
Alliant of the PCB-contaminated soils
around Building 502 in 1985 and
disposing of the soils at a permitted offsite facility in 1996.
Several property ownership transfers
and reassignments of control have
occurred at the TCAAP property since
the NB/AH/TCCAP Site was listed on
the NPL. See Figure 4 in the Docket.
Since 1983, control of over 1,500 acres
of TCAAP has been reassigned to the
National Guard Bureau which licenses
the use of the property to the Minnesota
Army National Guard for the operation
of the Arden Hills Army Training Site
(AHATS) and to the U.S. Army Reserve.
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The National Guard Bureau and Army
Reserve property is still federally-owned
and is controlled by the Army, but it is
no longer controlled by TCAAP, which
reports to a different division.
Prior to 2010, the Army also
transferred more than 270 acres of
TCAAP that did not require land or
groundwater use restrictions to Ramsey
County and the City of Arden. This
property consists of: Parcels
093023320001 and 093023240003
owned by Ramsey County (the
unlabeled OU2 area in the northwest
corner of OU2 on Figure 4 in the
Docket); Parcel 153023340001 located at
1425 Paul Kirkwold Drive owned by
Ramsey County; and Parcel ID
153023430001 located at 1245 Highway
96W owned by the City of Arden Hills
(shown as the unlabeled OU2 areas
along the southern boundary of OU2 on
Figure 4).
In 2013, the Army transferred another
397 acres of TCAAP to Ramsey County
and leased another 30 acres of TCAAP
to the County. In 2017, the Army
transferred the ownership of the 30
acres Ramsey County was leasing from
the Army to Ramsey County.
Forty-seven of the 427 acres of
property the Army transferred and
leased to Ramsey County in 2013 did
not require land or groundwater use
restrictions (see the Operation and
Maintenance section of this notice). The
other 380 acres were restricted by land
use controls (LUCs) for soil and
groundwater.
Ramsey County conducted an
additional soil investigation at the 380
acres of restricted property they owned
or were leasing in 2014. Ramsey County
remediated the areas of remaining soil
contamination, including the soil
contamination at Sites I and K located
within the 380-acre area.
Following the additional cleanup,
MPCA and EPA approved the soil in the
380-acre area to be suitable for
unlimited use/unrestricted exposure
(UU/UE). The Army removed the soil
LUCs on the 380 acres in Revision 4 of
the OU2 Land Use Control Remedial
Design (LUCRD) dated August 2016.
This property, however, is still subject
to the groundwater LUCs (see Figure 5,
Area with Groundwater LUCs, in the
Docket).
The Army determined that the
remaining 160 acres of the TCAAP
property are surplus to the needs of the
Federal government. This property is in
the process of being transferred out of
Federal ownership. These 160 acres are
controlled by the Base Realignment and
Closure (BRAC) Division of the Army,
the organization to which TCAAP
currently reports.
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Ramsey County identified 108 acres of
the remaining 160-acre TCAAP property
(Parcels A through D) for use as part of
the Rice Creek Regional Trail Corridor
(RCRTC) (see Attachment B, Site
Boundary—Rice Creek Regional Trail
Parcels A–D in the Docket). Ramsey
County completed an additional soil
investigation and cleanup on the 108
acres to levels that are suitable for
recreational use. The Army removed the
soil LUCs on the 108-acre property in
Revision 5 of the OU2 Land Use Control
Remedial Design (LUCRD) dated March
2018.
The Army will transfer title to Parcels
A, B, and D of the 108-acre property to
Ramsey County. Parcel C will remain
under Federal ownership, but the
government intends to grant Ramsey
County a perpetual easement to Parcel
C for its use as part of the RCRTC.
This partial deletion pertains to all
soil (shallow and deep) located within
the OU2 boundary of the NB/AH/
TCAAP Site (see Figure 2–2 in the
Docket). This partial deletion also
pertains to surface water and sediment
(not groundwater) in the five aquatic
sites located within the OU2 boundary
of the NB/AH TCAAP Site: Rice Creek,
Sunfish Lake, Marsden Lake North,
Marsden Lake South and Pond G (see
Figure 11–1 in the Docket).
The remaining areas at the NB/AH/
TCAAP Site, including OU1, OU3,
groundwater in OU2 and a sixth aquatic
site, Round Lake located southwest of
the OU2 boundary, will remain on the
NPL and are not being considered for
deletion as part of this action.
Remedial Investigation (RI) and
Feasibility Study (FS)
The Army conducted a RI at the
TCAPP portion of the NB/AH/TCAAP
Site (OU2) from 1988 to 1991. The
purpose of the RI was to characterize the
nature and extent of soil, sediment,
surface water and groundwater
contamination within the OU2
boundary. The FS developed and
evaluated cleanup alternatives to
address the unacceptable risks
identified at OU2.
The Army completed the OU2 RI and
conducted an OU2 Terrestrial Ecological
Risk Assessment in 1991. The Army
conducted a Tier II Ecological Risk
Assessment for the OU2 aquatic sites in
2004. Due to EPA and MPCA concerns,
the Army conducted additional
sampling at Marsden Lake and Pond G
in 2008. The Army issued a separate FS
for the five aquatic sites located within
the OU2 site boundary in 2011. The
Army is addressing Round Lake, which
is still considered part of OU2 but is
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located outside of the OU2 site
boundary, southwest of OU2, separately.
EPA completed a Human Health Risk
Assessment (HHRA) addressing OU1,
OU2 and OU3 of the NB/AH/TCAAP
Site in 1991. In 1992, the Army
collected additional data as part of the
FS development process to further
characterize the nature and extent of
OU2. The Army completed the OU2 FS
in 1997. The OU2 FS included an
updated list of additional contaminants
of concern (COCs) and cleanup levels.
The Agency for Toxic Substances and
Disease Registry (ATSDR) completed a
Public Health Assessment of the NB/AH
portion of the NB/AH/TCAAP Site (OU1
and OU3) in 1994. Based on the
assessment, ATSDR considered the NB/
AH portion of the NB/AH/TCAAP Site
to be a ‘‘public health hazard’’ because
people were exposed to past
groundwater contaminants from TCAAP
at concentrations that could result in
adverse health effects.
The Army’s RI identified all known or
suspected sources of contamination at
OU2 of the NB/AH/TCAAP Site. The RI
separated the OU2 contamination into
four categories: Shallow soil sites, with
soil contamination less than 12 ft-bgs
(Sites A, C, E, H, 129–3 and 129–5);
deep soil sites, with soil contamination
greater than 12 ft-bgs, down to depths
between 50 and 170 feet (Sites D and G);
shallow (Unit 1) groundwater
contamination (Sites A, I and K); and
deep (Units 3 and 4) groundwater
contamination (groundwater underlying
the southwestern portion of OU2,
originating primarily from Sites D, G
and I). Although Sites D and G were
considered deep soil sites, shallow soil
contaminants were also present at Site
D, and Site G also contains a dump.
The Army addressed Sites F (RCRA)
and J (sewer line cleaning) separately
and did not include these areas in the
OU2 RI. Also, the Army did not find any
contamination in Site B other than part
of a dump (Site B–3) that would require
additional investigation.
The RI and additional FS sampling
indicated that the shallow soil sites
(Sites A, C, E, H, 129–3 and 129–5) were
contaminated by heavy metals, VOCs,
polynuclear aromatic hydrocarbons
(PAHs) and PCBs. The contamination
was generally present in the upper five
to 10 feet of soil. Contaminated soil
volumes ranged from as little as 15
cubic yards (CY) at Site 129–5 to as
much as 2,600 CY at Site C.
Unpermitted landfills or dumps also
existed within the boundaries of
shallow soil Sites A, E and H. The
estimated material in these dumps
ranged from 4,400 CY at Site A to
12,200 CY at Site E. The RI identified
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two additional dumps in OU2. Dump
Site B–3 was estimated to contain
12,400 CY of material. The other dump
is Site 129–15 and is estimated to be
53,000 CY.
The RI did not investigate the material
at Site B–3 or Site 129–15. The RI
indicated that additional
characterization would be required
before response actions could be
selected for these areas. There was no
clear indication, however, that either
dump was contaminating the
groundwater.
The Army updated EPA’s 1991 HHRA
in the 1997 OU2 FS to incorporate the
results of the additional sampling. The
updated risk assessment in the FS
indicated that the surface soil and
debris at Sites A, C, H and 129–3 posed
an unacceptable cancer and/or
noncancer risk to on-site workers under
a current industrial exposure scenario.
Subsurface soil and debris at Sites A, C,
H and 129–3 and at Sites D, E, G and
129–5 also posed an unacceptable
cancer and/or noncancer risk to future
construction workers in these areas. The
risks were primarily due to the
incidental ingestion of and dermal
contact with surface and/or subsurface
soil and debris.
According to the updated HHRA,
surface soil and debris at Sites A, C, E,
H and 129–3 posed an unacceptable
cancer and/or noncancer risk to
potential future residents living in these
areas under a future residential
exposure scenario. These risks were
primarily due to the incidental ingestion
of and dermal contact with surface soil
and debris and to the ingestion of homegrown fruits and vegetables.
The Army developed remedial action
objectives (RAOs) for the OU2 cleanup
in the FS based on the current and most
probable future land use for the
property, which was industrial. The FS
then developed numerical remediation
goals for the cleanup based on
applicable or relevant and appropriate
requirements (ARARs), health-based
risk values, background concentrations
of metals, contaminant migration
potential and technological limitations.
The health-based risk values
developed for surface soil were based on
the lower of either an excess lifetime
cancer risk equal to one in a million or
a noncancer hazard of one, adjusted for
exposure to multiple contaminants. The
industrial values were calculated based
on the primary routes of exposure
which were ingestion and dermal
contact. The cleanup levels for the deep
soil Sites D and G were based primarily
on leaching-based goals that are
protective of the underlying
groundwater for use as residential
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drinking water. For Site 129–15, a onetime commercial, industrial or utility
construction scenario was utilized. The
construction scenario assumed that
construction workers would be exposed
to excavated soils for 40 days (i.e., a
two-month construction period) a year
for two years. See the Cleanup Levels
section below for additional
information. The FS developed general
response actions for the OU2 cleanup
based on the technical applicability and
the contaminant characteristics of each
individual site within OU2. After initial
screening, the FS retained a set of final
cleanup alternatives for full evaluation.
The alternatives evaluated for the
shallow soil Sites A, C, E, H, 129–3 and
129–5 were: No action, in-situ fixation/
capping, soil washing/soil leaching and
excavation/stabilization with off-site
disposal. The alternatives evaluated for
the deep soil Sites D and G were: No
action, continue shallow SVE, or
expand the SVE systems vertically.
The only alternative the FS evaluated
for the unpermitted landfills in Sites A,
E and H was excavation and off-site
disposal. The FS indicated that the
landfills in Site B and Site 129–15
would require further characterization.
Selected Remedy
EPA, MPCA and the Army selected an
industrial cleanup remedy for the OU2
shallow soil sites, dumps and deep soil
sites in a 1997 OU2 ROD. The agencies
also selected remedies for the five
aquatic sites located within the OU2
boundary in OU2 ROD Amendment #4
(Rice Creek, Sunfish Lake, Marsden
Lake North, Marsden Lake South and
Pond G).
The selected remedy for the shallow
soil Sites A, C, E, H, 129–3 and 129–5
and for the dumps within Sites A, E and
H in the 1997 OU2 ROD included the
following remedial components (see the
1997 ROD for information about the
groundwater components of the OU2
remedy):
(1) Identification/characterization of
contaminated soil boundaries, surface
and subsurface debris and dump
contents;
(2) Excavation and sorting of
hazardous and nonhazardous dump
materials, debris and ordnance;
(3) Removal and disposal of ordnance,
debris and oversized material;
(4) On-site stabilization of hazardous
and contaminated soils from Sites A, E,
H, 129–3 and 129–5;
(5) Off-site disposal of stabilized
materials from Sites A, E, H, 129–3 and
129–5;
(6) Off-site transport, incineration and
disposal of soils containing low levels of
dioxin-furans from Site C (if required);
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(7) Backfill/regrade excavations;
(8) Restrict site access and use during
remedy implementation; and
(9) A limited period of monitoring to
verify remedy effectiveness.
The selected remedy for the dumps at
shallow soil Sites B and 129–15 was
characterization to determine the
contents of the dumps. If the contents
were found to be toxic, hazardous or
contaminated, then a remedy for the
landfill would be documented through
a ROD Amendment. If the contents were
not toxic, hazardous or contaminated
then a no further action remedy will be
selected.
The selected remedy for the shallow
and deep soil contamination at Site D
and for the deep soil contamination and
dump at Site G was to expand the SVE
systems vertically. The remedy
included:
(1) Groundwater monitoring;
(2) Access and use restrictions;
(3) Installation and operation of deep
SVE systems with modified shallow
SVE systems, as appropriate;
(4) Evaluation and potential use of
enhancements to the SVE systems;
(5) Maintenance of existing soil caps
and surface drainage controls; and
(6) Characterization of shallow soils at
Site D and the dump at Site G following
cessation of SVE system operation to
determine appropriate action.
The remedy in the 1997 OU2 ROD
also included the characterization of the
unsaturated Unit 1 soil at Site K as part
of the Site K shallow groundwater
remedy.
The 1997 OU2 ROD clarified that Site
F, a former disposal area within OU2,
was being closed under RCRA and was
not addressed in the OU2 ROD. The
1997 OU2 ROD also confirmed that the
1994 Final Site J Closure Report for the
sanitary sewer cleaning was approved
by the regulatory agencies, documented
the absence of contaminants above
background levels and recommended no
further action for this area.
Between 2007 and 2014, EPA, MPCA
and the Army issued five ROD
Amendments and an Explanation of
Significant Differences (ESD) modifying
various components of the selected
remedies for the shallow soil sites,
dumps and deep soil sites in the 1997
OU2 ROD and selecting remedies for the
five aquatic sites located within the
OU2 boundary.
OU2 ROD Amendment #1, issued in
2007, modified the requirements for Site
C–2 shallow soil and sediment
contamination discovered in 2004 in
two Site C–2 ditches. Because the depth
to groundwater is shallow at Site C–2,
it was not feasible to remove all of the
contaminated soil and sediment from
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this area. The OU2 ROD Amendment #1
modified the remedy to allow the
placement of a 4-foot thick soil cover
over the Site C–2 areas where the
contamination remains in-place above
the cleanup levels instead of excavating
the material. The OU2 ROD Amendment
#1 also specified LUCs to maintain the
integrity of the soil cover, prohibit
unauthorized disturbance to the
underlying soil and sediment and to
restrict the Site C area outside the soil
cover to site-specific industrial use. The
OU2 ROD Amendment #1 also included
the creation of a new wetland within the
TCAAP facility to replace the loss of
existing wetland.
OU2 ROD Amendment #3 was issued
in 2009 and modified the remedies for
the shallow soil and dump sites as
follows:
(1) Documented, as a final remedy,
the additional actions performed for
shallow soil at Site D (soil cover for
residual PCB-contaminated soil
following the 1985 interim remedial
action and 1989 thermal treatment
selected in the 1989 ROD for Removal
Action for PCB-Contaminated Soils Near
Site D, and excavation, stabilization and
off-site disposal of other contaminated
Site D soil) after completing the deep
soil cleanup at Site D.
(2) Documented, as a final remedy,
the additional action (capping)
implemented for the dump at Site G
after completing the Site G deep soil
cleanup.
(3) Documented the use of soil covers
as part of the final remedies, in addition
to excavation and off-site disposal, at
Sites E and H and as the primary
remedy for the dump at Site 129–15.
(4) Documented that three OU2 areas
not addressed in the 1997 OU2 ROD
were acceptable for unrestricted use:
135 Primer/Tracer Area (PTA)
Stormwater Ditch, Trap Range Site and
Water Tower Area. The OU2 ROD
Amendment #3 determined that the
previous soil removals at the 135 PTA
Stormwater Ditch in 2005 and at the
Water Tower Area in 1993 reduced soil
contamination to levels that allow for
unrestricted use. ROD Amendment #3
also determined that, based on the 1999
preliminary assessment of the Trap
Range Site, that the Trap Range Site is
acceptable for unrestricted use.
(5) Documented the final remedies for
two OU2 areas not addressed in the
1997 ROD: Grenade Range and Outdoor
Firing Range. The OU2 ROD
Amendment #3 determined that the
1993 and 1999 soil and unexploded
ordnance removal actions at the
Grenade Range and at the Outdoor
Firing Range, and the construction of a
soil cover at the Outdoor Firing Range
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in 2003–2004, cleaned up these areas to
levels that are acceptable for industrial
use.
(6) Requires long-term LUCs as an
additional remedy component for
shallow soil and dump Sites: D, E, G, H,
129–15, Grenade Range, and Outdoor
Firing Range. The LUCs restrict these
areas to site-specific industrial use,
require the integrity of the soil covers to
be maintained, and prohibit the
unauthorized disturbance of materials
underlying the soil covers. The exact
details of the LUCs were to be specified
and maintained in accordance with a
LUCRD document approved by EPA and
MPCA. ROD Amendment #3 concluded
that LUCs are not needed for the 135
PTA Stormwater Ditch or Trap Range
because contamination levels in these
areas are suitable for UU/UE. The
Amendment also concluded the Water
Tower Area is suitable for UU/UE;
however, it is located within the area of
‘‘blanket LUCs’’ the Army implemented
as specified in the 2010 LUCRD so it is
restricted.
ESD #2, issued in 2009, modified the
1997 OU2 ROD by requiring long-term
LUCs as an additional remedy
component for Sites A, C–1, 129–3 and
129–5 restricting these areas to
industrial use. ESD #2 also documented
that based on an additional
investigation, the Site B dump is cleared
for unrestricted use and no further
action is the final remedy for Site B.
OU2 ROD Amendment #4 was signed
in 2012. The OU2 ROD Amendment #4
documented remedy decisions for the
five aquatic sites located within the
OU2 boundary and the 535 PTA Site,
which were not addressed in the 1997
OU2 ROD. OU2 ROD Amendment #4
also documented the remedy decision
for the Site K unsaturated Unit 1 soil
characterized as part of the Site K
shallow groundwater remedy.
OU2 ROD Amendment #4
determined:
(1) No action is needed for Rice Creek,
Sunfish Lake, Marsden Lake North or
Marsden Lake South. The 2011 FS,
which the Army prepared following the
2004 Tier II Ecological Risk Assessment,
documented that there are no human
health risks associated with these areas
and that the ecological risks are
considered to be acceptable. These
aquatic areas are acceptable for
unrestricted use.
(2) In-situ treatment to raise hardness
is the selected cleanup remedy for Pond
G. No human health risks were
associated with Pond G, however, Pond
G surface water contains lead above the
State water quality standard and may
not be protective of the entire aquatic
ecosystem. Pond G surface water was to
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35329
be chemically altered and monitored to
verify that the adjusted level of hardness
increases to the minimum required level
to comply with the Class 2Bd Minnesota
chronic surface water quality standard
for lead.
(3) The 2009 removal actions at the
535 PTA Site and for the VOCcontaminated soil at Site K, which
involved the excavation and off-site
disposal of contaminated soil, cleaned
up the soils for unrestricted use. No
further action is necessary for the soil in
these areas and LUCs are not required.
OU2 ROD Amendment #5 was signed
in 2014. The OU2 ROD Amendment #5
documented remedy decisions for three
additional areas of soil contamination
not addressed in the 1997 OU2 ROD.
The Army remediated these areas as a
2013 removal action and addressed: (1)
Additional metal contamination at Site
A, (2) PAH-contamination at Site 135
PTA, and (3) PAH and/or metals
contamination discovered in two areas
during an environmental baseline
survey (EBS Areas) conducted by the
Minnesota National Guard before the
property was transferred to the National
Guard Bureau.
The 2013 soil removal action involved
excavating the soil that was
contaminated above industrial use
cleanup levels in these areas and
disposing of the contaminated materials
off-site. OU2 ROD Amendment #5
documented that the completed 2013
removal action constitutes the final
remedy for these soil areas of concern.
OU2 ROD Amendment #5 also added
the requirement that these areas be
covered by a LUC restricting the areas
to industrial use.
Decision documents that address the
groundwater components of the OU2
remedy (groundwater not included in
this partial deletion) include: OU2 ROD
(1997), OU2 ROD Amendment #2
(2009), OU2 ESD #1 (2009), OU2 ROD
Amendment #4 (2012) and OU2 ROD
Amendment #6 (2017).
Response Actions
The Army constructed a corrective
action management unit (CAMU) to aid
in the OU2 cleanup and initiated
shallow soil site remediation in 1998
beginning with Site A. The CAMU was
a bermed, asphalt pad with lined ponds
to store rainwater runoff from the pad.
The CAMU was to be a central staging
area where soils from each site would be
brought for treatment before loading for
off-site disposal at a permitted landfill.
In 1999, however, the Army discovered
asbestos-containing material (ACM) at
the shallow soil sites which made
further use of the CAMU impractical.
The safeguards needed to control the
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asbestos during handling defeated the
cost savings of the central processing
pad. The Army determined that it was
more convenient and cost-effective to
treat the soil at each site instead of
moving the contaminated material to a
central location for treatment.
The Army removed the CAMU in
2002. The Army decontaminated and
removed the storage and storm water
holding ponds, tested for contamination
under the pad and ponds, and
monitored the groundwater. EPA and
MPCA approved the Army’s CAMU
Closeout Report in 2004. The CAMU
Closeout Report states that there were
no adverse impacts to soil or
groundwater due to CAMU operations
and that no LUCs are required for this
area.
The Army completed the remedial
actions at the shallow soil Sites A, C, E,
H, 129–3, 129–5 and the Outdoor Firing
Range from 1999 to 2010. The Army
excavated debris and contaminated soil
above industrial cleanup levels,
stabilized the material and disposed of
it at an off-site landfill. The Army
excavated approximately: 16,300 CY
from Site A; 21,450 CY from Site C;
20,900 CY from Site E; 8,620 CY from
Site H; 3,470 CY from Site 129–3; 100
CY from Site 129–5 and 100 CY from
the Outdoor Firing Range.
The Army also constructed a 2-foot
thick protective soil cover over a portion
of Site E and a 30-inch thick soil cover
over a portion of Site H where ACM
remains in-place; a 4-foot thick soil
cover over portions of Site C where
metals-contaminated soils and sediment
from the former ditches remain in-place;
and a 2-foot thick soil cover at the 1900
Yard Range of the Outdoor Firing Range
where PAH-contaminated soils remain
in place.
The Army investigated the Site 129–
5 dump then constructed a protective
soil cover over the materials. The Army
also constructed a new wetland at Site
C to replace the loss of existing
wetlands when the Site C ditches were
backfilled.
The Army completed the remediation
work (shallow and deep soils) at the
deep soil Sites D and G in 2004. The
Army dismantled the SVE systems in
2000 after the deep soil cleanups were
complete. At Site D, the Army then
excavated 1,300 CY of shallow soils
contaminated with non-VOCs and
disposed of them at an off-site landfill.
The Army also constructed a four to six
foot soil cover over residual PCBcontaminated soils remaining at Site D
after the 1985 interim remedial action.
At Site G, the Army characterized the
dump then constructed a 2-foot thick
protective soil cover over the material.
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The Army conducted five years of
groundwater monitoring at the shallow
soil sites and Site D from 2003 through
2007. The Army conducted three years
of groundwater monitoring at the
Grenade Range from 1999 to 2004. The
Army conducted the monitoring to
verify that the groundwater beneath
these areas was not impacted by
remediation activities.
The Army conducted the groundwater
monitoring in accordance with
groundwater monitoring plans that were
reviewed and updated annually as part
of the Army’s Annual Performance
Report (APR). Based on the monitoring
data, the Army extended the monitoring
at Site H. The groundwater sampling is
now complete at all shallow soils sites
and confirms that there are no adverse
remedy impacts to groundwater in these
areas. Groundwater monitoring for
VOCs, however, continues as part of
OU2 deep groundwater monitoring in
the vicinity of Sites D and G.
The Army treated the Pond G surface
water in 2012 in accordance with the
Pond G RD/RA Work Plan. The Army
monitored the Pond G surface water in
2012 and 2013. The monitoring results
verified that the surface water in Pond
G was in compliance with the surface
water standard for lead. Since the Pond
G remedy does not result in hazardous
substances remaining in the Pond above
levels that allow for UU/UE, long-term
maintenance, monitoring, and LUCs are
not required.
Reports documenting the completion
of remedial activities for the shallow
soil Sites A, C, E, H, 129–3, 129–5, 129–
15, the shallow and deep soil in deep
soil Site D and the deep soil and dump
in deep soil Site G are in the Docket in
the following reports: Final Remedial
Action Completion and Shallow Soil
Sites Close Out, Volumes I through VIII;
Final Site 129–15 Dump Investigation,
Characterization and Remedial Action
Completion and Close Out Report; Final
Site D Shallow and Deep Soil Volatile
Organic Compound Investigation and
Close Out Report; Final Site G Volatile
Organic Compound Investigation and
Dump Close Out Report; and Outdoor
Firing Range 1900 Yard Range Cover
Construction: Addendum to the Final
Close Out Report, Outdoor Firing Range
and #150 Reservoir Site Removal. The
completed Pond G remedial action work
and surface water monitoring results are
documented in the 2013 Remedial
Action Completion and Close Out
Report, Pond G.
No action or no further action (other
than LUCs) was required for shallow
soil Site B, Site J, the Unit 1 soil in Site
K, Grenade Range, Site 135 PTA, Site
135 PTA Stormwater Ditch, Site 535
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PTA, the EBS areas, Water Tower Area,
the Trap Range Site, Former Building
576, Rice Creek, Sunfish Lake, Marsden
Lake North or Marsden Lake South.
Also, Site F was closed under RCRA.
Additional information about these
areas is documented in the 1997 OU2
ROD, 2009 OU2 ROD Amendment #3,
2009 ESD #2, 2012 OU2 ROD
Amendment #4 and 2014 ROD
Amendment #5 and the following
reports in the Docket: Final Site B Dump
Investigation, Characterization, and
Close Out Report; Final Close Out
Report, Outdoor Firing Range and #150
Reservoir Site Soil Removal Action,
Completion of Soil Removal; Remedial
Action Report, Site K; Lead-Impacted
Soil Cleanup documentation, TCAAP
Former Building 576; Close Out Report:
Removal of Contaminated Sediment at
the 135 Primer/Tracer Area Stormwater
Outfall; Removal Action Completion
Report, Site K; Final Close Out Report
for Soil Removal Action at 535 Primer/
Tracer Area; and Removal Action
Completion Report for Soil Areas of
Concern—Site A, 135 Primer/Tracer
Area, EBS Areas.
Cleanup Levels
The cleanup levels for shallow soils
in the 1997 OU2 ROD were derived
specifically for each shallow soil site
because MPCA did not have published
rules or guidance values for soil at the
time. The ROD selected cleanup levels
for shallow soils based on background
levels, ARARs and the more stringent of
either the site-specific industrial healthbased value or leaching-based goal (see
Table 8 in the 1997 OU2 ROD in the
Docket). The health-based values were
the lower of either an excess lifetime
cancer risk equal to one in a million or
a noncancer hazard of one, adjusted for
exposure to multiple contaminants. The
cleanup levels for the deep soil Sites D
and G were based primarily on leachingbased goals that are protective of the
underlying groundwater.
The site-specific health-based values
calculated for the shallow soils sites
assumed that adult industrial workers at
TCAAP would be exposed to
contaminated soil through dermal
contact and ingestion for 250 days a
year for 25 years. The calculations
assumed an adult body weight of 70
kilograms, a soil ingestion rate of 50
milligrams/day and a dermal exposure
over 0.31 square meters of body surface.
For Site 129–15, a one-time
commercial, industrial or utility
construction scenario was utilized. The
construction scenario assumed that
construction workers would be exposed
to excavated soils for 40 days (i.e., a
two-month construction period) a year
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for two years. The construction
exposure assumes that the excavated
soils are managed to eliminate or greatly
reduce exposure to fugitive dusts; all
other parameters were assumed to be
the same as the industrial exposure
scenario.
The leaching-based goals for shallow
and deep soils were calculated by
MPCA using a soil model for chemicals
that were found at the site in
groundwater above drinking water or
health-based standards. The industrial
soil cleanup level for lead of 1,200
milligrams per kilogram (mg/Kg) was
calculated by EPA using the Exposure
Model for Assessing Risks Associated
with Adult Exposure to Lead in Soil.
Additional information concerning the
soil cleanup standards is in Appendix C
of the 1997 OU2 ROD.
Additional soil cleanup standards
were later added based on subsequent
investigations for Site A
(tetrachloroethene and TCE), Site D
(antimony, lead, and nitroglycerine) and
Site 129–15 (lead). PCBs were not
specifically listed as COCs for Site D in
the OU2 ROD; however, the PCBs that
were ‘‘secured in-place’’ exist at
concentrations that exceed the ARAR of
10 mg/Kg cited in the OU2 ROD, so the
cleanup standard for PCBs is considered
to be 10 mg/Kg. Nitroglycerine was
listed as a COC for Site 129–3 in the
OU2 ROD; however, no cleanup level
was established. The current cleanup
level for nitroglycerine was calculated at
the time of soil remediation work at Site
129–3.
In 1999, the background number for
arsenic in the TCAAP soils increased
from 4 mg/Kg to 10 mg/Kg, as
documented in a June 14, 1999 MPCA
letter to the Army. This resulted in the
cleanup level for arsenic increasing to
10 mg/Kg at Sites C and H. At Site 129–
15 the highest arsenic concentration
detected in soils was 5 mg/Kg and
arsenic was dropped as a COC.
In 2002, the soil cleanup level for TCE
at Site G increased to 36.1 mg/Kg. This
revised cleanup standard is based on an
updated soil leaching analysis that
specifically accounted for the lower
permeability of the Site G cover. EPA
and MPCA agreed with this change on
July 24, 2002. For cleanup levels that
were established subsequent to the OU2
ROD, the health risk calculations are
noted to be based on the same
methodology and input parameters that
were documented in Appendix C of the
OU2 ROD.
The current cleanup standards for the
OU2 shallow and deep soils sites are
provided in Table 1 of the 2018 LUCRD
Revision 5. A copy of Table 1 and the
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complete 2018 LUCRD document are
available in the Docket.
The cleanup level for lead in Pond G
is the Minnesota Class 2Bd surface
water quality standard for lead, as
promulgated in Minnesota Rule
7050.0222. The lead standard is
calculated based on the hardness value
of the surface water. At Pond G, the
calculated lead standard ranged from a
concentration of 11.4 micrograms per
liter (mg/L) after initial treatment with
lime and calcium to 1.6 to 2.0 mg/L
approximately one year later.
The Army confirmed that the soil
cleanup levels were attained at each of
the shallow and deep soils sites through
extensive soil verification sampling
around each of the excavated areas, and
by soil sampling below the shallow and
deep vents at the SVE systems at Sites
D and G. The Army conducted the
verification sampling at the shallow soil
Sites A, C, E, H, 129–3, 129–5, 129–15,
the shallow soil at deep soil Site D and
the dump at deep soil Site G through
field and laboratory sampling and
analysis at gridded locations in
accordance with the 2000 Final
Comprehensive Work Plan, Final
Sampling and Analysis Plan and Final
Site Safety and Health Plan, Shallow
Soil Sites RD/RA Activities and
associated Work Plan Clarifications. The
Army conducted the verification
sampling for deep soil at deep soil Sites
D and G in accordance with the 1997
Final Work Plan, Sites D and G Pilot
Study and the 1999 Addendum 1, Final
Work Plan Sites D and G Pilot Study.
The Army conducted the verification
sampling at the other sites in
accordance with the Removal Action
Work Plan or other work plan for each
area.
The Army confirmed that the cleanup
level for lead in the Pond G surface
water was met through four rounds of
post-treatment monitoring. The Army
detected lead during the second
monitoring event at an average
concentration of 0.61 mg/L. This
concentration was well below the
calculated standard for lead of 10.6 mg/
L based on the average surface water
hardness of 255 mg/L for that event. The
Army did not detect lead in any of the
other rounds of post-treatment
monitoring.
Complete documentation of the
verification of the cleanup levels for
Pond G and the shallow and deep OU2
soils is available in the Remedial Action
Completion Reports, Removal Action
Completion Reports and Final Close Out
Reports referenced in the Response
Actions section above which are
available in the Docket.
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Operation and Maintenance
Operation and maintenance (O&M) for
the soil portion of OU2 (shallow and
deep) is limited to inspecting and
maintaining the cautionary warning
signs and the thicknesses of the soil
covers at Sites C, D, E, G, H, 129–15 and
the Outdoor Firing Range; annually
removing woody vegetation from the
Site G soil cover to prevent deep rooting
that could cause increased infiltration
by any VOCs remaining below the
cover; and to maintain, monitor and
enforce the ESD and ROD Amendmentrequired LUCs, which are in the form of
the Army’s OU2 LUCRD document
approved by EPA and MPCA. No O&M
or LUCs are required for the five aquatic
sites within the OU2 boundary: Rice
Creek, Sunfish Lake, Marsden Lake
North, Marsden Lake South or Pond G.
The Army issued the initial EPA and
MPCA-approved OU2 LUCRD (Revision
1) in 2010. The Army updated the
LUCRD in 2011, 2015, 2016 and 2018 as
portions of OU2 were further
characterized, remediated as needed,
and transferred for reuse and
redevelopment. The current LUCRD is
LUCRD Revision 5 issued in 2018.
The LUCRD documents that since
1997, the working presumption is that
the OU2 property outside of the
individual areas of concern (i.e., the
OU2 property beyond Site A, Site C,
Site D, etc.) does not have soil
contamination above the typical
‘‘industrial use’’ cleanup levels derived
for the areas of contamination within
OU2. Ongoing and future uses of the
OU2 property outside of the areas of
concern would be compatible with past
uses. Land used for manufacturing
could continue to be used for
manufacturing; open space could
continue to be used for open space. As
such, the mostly open space along Rice
Creek and the former OU2 staff housing
area the Army previously transferred to
Ramsey County and other OU2 property
the Army transferred to the City of
Arden Hills without any use restrictions
(approximately 270 acres total) would
remain acceptable for UU/UE.
LUCRD Revision 1 and subsequent
revisions formalize the Army’s decision
to implement ‘‘blanket LUCs’’ limiting
the OU2 property to industrial land use
and restricting groundwater use across
the remaining federally-owned OU2
property at the time LUCRD Revision 1
was issued in 2010 (except for Site F
which the Army cleaned up to
unrestricted use under RCRA). A map
showing the initial federally-owned
property with LUCs at the time of the
2010 LUCRD is in the September 2010
Figure 4 in the Docket.
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The ‘‘blanket LUCs’’ resolved the
outstanding LUC issues for the OU2
property outside of the individual areas
of concern (i.e., OU2 property beyond
Site A, Site C, Site D, etc.,) because the
remedy-required LUCs in the OU2 ESDs
and ROD Amendments only apply to
each individual area of concern, not to
the OU2 property outside of those areas.
The Army’s ‘‘blanket LUCs’’ also
address the uncertainty associated with
not having soil data to characterize the
entire OU2 property outside of the areas
of concern. The 2010 LUCRD and
subsequent revisions include additional
restrictions for OU2 areas with soil
covers and components of the OU2
groundwater extraction and treatment
systems to protect the integrity of these
remedies.
The 2010 LUCRD and subsequent
revisions allow and formalize a process
for the Army to demonstrate to EPA and
MPCA that less restrictive uses of OU2
property are acceptable in anticipation
of future redevelopment and property
transfers at the NB/AH/TCAAP site.
The Army issued Revisions 2, 3, 4 and
5 to the LUCRD from 2011 to 2018.
These revisions: (1) Cleared the
Watchable Wildlife Area of AHATS for
unrestricted public use and revised the
LUCs for a portion of the AHATS
Cantonment Area to allow uses
compatible with a restricted commercial
exposure scenario (Revision 2, 2011); (2)
revised the LUCs for the remainder of
the Cantonment Area and the Army
Reserve Center to restricted commercial
use and documented the transfer/lease
of 427 acres of Army/BRAC controlled
property to Ramsey County (Revision 3,
2015); (3) revised the LUCs to eliminate
soil LUCs from the 380-acre ‘‘CaliforniaShaped Area’’ of the 427 acres
transferred to Ramsey County in 2013
following the County’s additional
investigation and soil cleanup to levels
consistent with UU/UE (Revision 4,
2016); and (4) revised the LUCs to allow
recreational use on 108 acres in the
western portion of OU2 to be used as
part of the Rice Creek Regional Trail
Corridor (Revision 5, 2018).
The specific details of the current
OU2 soil and groundwater use
restrictions and the provisions for longterm stewardship of the LUCs are
contained in the 2018 OU2 LUCRD
Revision 5 which is available in the
Docket. The technical basis and
supporting documentation for the LUC
revisions are included in Appendices B
through E of LUCRD Revision 5. Maps
showing the areas covered by the
current soil and groundwater LUCs for
OU2 are in Figures 4 and 5 in the
Docket.
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The Army is the lead agency for the
NB/AH/TAACP Site and is responsible
for conducting routine inspections to
ensure that the LUCs are maintained
and enforced. The Army is responsible
for reporting the results of the
inspections and any breach of the LUCs
to the MPCA and EPA.
Five-Year Review
The Army is required to conduct
statutory five-year reviews (FYR) at the
NB/AH/TCAAP Site because hazardous
substances, pollutants, or contaminants
remain at the Site above levels that
allow for UU/UE. The Army completed
the last FYR of the NB/AH/TCAAP Site
in 2014. The FYR was approved by
MPCA and by EPA on August 19, 2014.
The Army’s 2014 FYR concluded that
the remedy has been completed for the
OU2 soils sites: Sites A, C, D, E, G, H,
129–3, 129–5, 129–15, the Grenade
Range and the Outdoor Firing Range.
The FYR also determined that the
protective soil covers at Sites C, D, E, G,
H, 129–15 and the Outdoor Firing
Range, in conjunction with the
implemented LUCs, effectively prevent
exposure to contaminated soils/debris
remaining at OU2 above industrial
exposure levels. The protective soil
cover at Site G also minimizes
infiltration and reduces the leaching of
any remaining VOCs below the cover.
The 2014 FYR concluded that OU2
has been restored for industrial use. The
Army also reviewed the toxicity data
that the 1991 and 1997 health risk
assessments for the soil sites were based
on and determined that no changes have
occurred that could potentially affect
the protectiveness of the soil remedies.
The 2014 FYR did not identify any
issues or recommendations for the OU2
soils sites.
For OU2 groundwater, the FYR
concluded that the OU2 groundwater
remedies are protective in the short
term. The groundwater containment
systems are meeting the containment
objectives and the treatment systems are
meeting their discharge requirements.
The alternate water supply and well
abandonment program, along with
Ramsey County’s Special Well
Construction Area permitting system,
mitigate potential risks associated with
private wells. At Site A, monitored
natural attenuation is adequately
controlling plume migration and water
quality trends indicate that aquifer
restoration continues to occur in both
shallow and deep groundwater. A vapor
intrusion investigation the Army
conducted north of County Road I in
2014 indicates that there are no
significant soil vapor risks and no
further vapor intrusion investigation
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work is warranted (see the 2014 Site A
Vapor Intrusion Investigation Report in
the Docket).
The Army must complete the next
FYR of the NB/AH/TCAAP Site and
have it approved by EPA and MPCA on
or before August 19, 2019.
Community Involvement
The Army satisfied public
participation activities for the NB/AH/
TCAAP Site as required by Sections
113(k)(2)(B)(i–v) and 117 of CERCLA, 42
U.S.C. 9613(k)(2)(B)(i–v) and 9617. The
communities near the NB/AH/TCAAP
Site have been involved in NB/AH/
TCAAP Site activities since the
environmental problems were initially
identified. The Army developed a
Community Involvement Plan for the
NB/AH/TCAAP Site in 1991 to establish
processes for sharing knowledge and
encouraging community participation
concerning the hazardous waste
remediation activities underway and
planned at the NB/AH/TCAAP Site. The
Community Relations Plan outlines
specific community relations strategies
for addressing these goals and for
updating the plan as needed to adjust to
evolving community needs and
concerns. The Army updated the
Community Involvement Plan in 1997.
Over the years the Army has prepared
and distributed numerous fact sheets to
a large number of local and interested
residents to keep the community
apprised of the remedial activities at the
NB/AH/TCAAP Site. The Army
sponsored tours of the facility and
accompanying wildlife areas, in
addition to providing monthly
Technical Review Committee (TRC)
meetings open to the public to review
the status of restoration activities at the
NB/AH/TCAAP Site.
The TCAAP Restoration Advisory
Board (RAB) was established in 1996 to
provide citizen input into the cleanup of
the NB/AH/TCAAP Site. The RAB
provides an opportunity for community
representatives to review and analyze
issues concerning the contamination
and remediation of the NB/AH/TCAAP
soils and groundwater; provide
comments and recommendations
regarding the remediation of
contaminated areas at the site; and to
provide advice on decisions that affect
the quality of the environment of the
communities that are impacted by the
contamination.
The Army met the public
participation requirements for selecting
cleanup remedies and the amended
cleanup remedies for the NB/AH/
TCAAP Site required by CERCLA
Sections 113(k)(a)(B)(i–v) and 117. The
Army met these requirements by issuing
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fact sheets and Proposed Plans,
notifying the public of the availability of
the Proposed Plans in newspaper
advertisements, holding public meetings
and holding 30-day public comment
periods.
The Army involves project
stakeholders in the FYR process by
notifying them at the start of each FYR.
Project stakeholders notified at the start
of the 2014 FYR include EPA, MPCA,
Alliant Techsystems, Army National
Guard, U.S. Army Environmental
Command, U.S. Army Corp of
Engineers, City of New Brighton, and
the RAB.
The Army published a notice
indicating that the 2014 FYR for the NB/
AH/TCAAP Site was starting during the
week of November 18, 2013 in the
following newspapers: Minneapolis Star
Tribune, Mounds View/New Brighton
Sun Focus, and the Shoreview Press.
The notice invited anyone interested in
the FYR process to contact the Army
TCAAP representative. The City of New
Brighton was interested in participating
in the FYR process.
The Army published a notice
indicating that the FYR was complete
and included contact information and
the location of the public repository for
the report (470 West Hwy. 96, Suite 100,
Shoreview, MN 55126) in the
newspapers after the FYR was finalized.
EPA has satisfied public participation
activities for this partial deletion of the
NB/AH/TCAAP Site as required by
CERCLA section 113(k), 42 U.S.C.
9613(k), and CERCLA section 117, 42
U.S.C. 9617. EPA arranged to publish
advertisements announcing this
proposed direct final Partial Deletion
and the 30-day public comment period
in the Minneapolis Star Tribune, the
Mounds View/New Brighton Sun Focus,
and the Shoreview Press 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 NB/AH/TCAAP Site from the NPL,
are available to the public in the
information repositories and at https://
www.regulations.gov. Documents in the
Docket include maps which identify the
NB/AH/TCAAP Site, the locations of the
OU2 areas of contamination/sites, the
OU2 area included with this proposed
direct final Partial Deletion, and the
LUCs implemented for OU2.
Determination That the Criteria for
Partial Deletion Have Been Met
The soil (shallow and deep) portion of
OU2 and the five aquatic sites located
within the OU2 boundary of the NB/
AH/TCAAP Site: Rice Creek, Sunfish
Lake, Marsden Lake North, Marsden
Lake South and Pond G, meet all of the
site completion requirements specified
in Office of Solid Waste and Emergency
Response (OSWER) Directive 9320.2–22,
Close-Out Procedures for National
Priorities List Sites. All cleanup actions
and remedial action objectives for OU2
shallow and deep soil and these five
aquatic sites set forth in the 1997 ROD,
2007 ROD Amendment #1, 2009 ROD
Amendment #3, 2009 ESD #2, 2012
ROD Amendment #4 and 2014 ROD
Amendment #5 have been implemented
for all pathways of exposure. The
selected remedial actions, RAOs, and
associated cleanup levels for OU2 soil
and the five aquatic sites located within
the OU2 boundary are consistent with
EPA policy and guidance. No further
Superfund response is necessary to
protect human health or the
environment from the soil portion of
OU2 (shallow and deep) or from the five
aquatic sites located within the OU2
boundary.
Section 300.425(e) of the NCP states
that a Superfund site or a portion of a
site may be deleted from the NPL when
no further response action is
appropriate. EPA, in consultation with
the State of Minnesota, has determined
that all required response actions have
been implemented for all soil (shallow
and deep) located within the OU2
boundary of the NB/AH/TCAAP Site
and for the five aquatic sites located
within the OU2 boundary: Rice Creek,
Sunfish Lake, Marsden Lake North,
Marsden Lake South and Pond G, and
that no further response action by the
Army is appropriate for these media/
areas.
V. Deletion Action
EPA, with concurrence of the State of
Minnesota, through the MPCA, has
determined that all appropriate
response actions under CERCLA, other
than maintenance, monitoring and fiveyear reviews, have been completed for
all soil (shallow and deep) located
within the OU2 boundary and for the
five aquatic sites located within the
OU2 boundary: Rice Creek, Sunfish
Lake, Marsden Lake North, Marsden
Lake South and Pond G. Therefore, EPA
is deleting all soil (shallow and deep)
located within OU2 and these five
aquatic sites located within the OU2
boundary from the NPL.
Because EPA considers this action to
be noncontroversial and routine, EPA is
taking it without prior publication. This
action will be effective September 23,
2019 unless EPA receives adverse
comments by August 22, 2019. If
adverse comments are received within
the 30-day public comment period, EPA
will publish a timely notice of
withdrawal of this direct final Notice of
Partial Deletion before its effective date
and the partial deletion will not take
effect. EPA will prepare a response to
comments and continue with the
deletion process on the basis of the
notice 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.
Dated: July 8, 2019.
Cathy Stepp,
Regional Administrator, Region 5.
For the reasons set out in this
document, 40 CFR part 300 is amended
as follows:
PART 300—NATIONAL OIL AND
HAZARDOUS SUBSTANCES
POLLUTION CONTINGENCY PLAN
1. The authority citation for part 300
continues to read as follows:
■
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.
2. Table 2 of Appendix B to part 300
is amended by revising the entry for
‘‘MN, New Brighton/Arden Hills/Twin
Cities Army Ammunition Plant, New
Brighton’’ to read as follows:
■
Appendix B to Part 300—[Amended]
TABLE 2—GENERAL SUPERFUND SECTION
State
Site name
City/county
*
MN .........................
*
*
*
*
New Brighton/Arden Hills/TCAAP (USARMY) ...............................................................
*
New Brighton .........
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16:11 Jul 22, 2019
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Notes a
*
P
35334
Federal Register / Vol. 84, No. 141 / Tuesday, July 23, 2019 / Rules and Regulations
TABLE 2—GENERAL SUPERFUND SECTION—Continued
State
Site name
*
*
*
*
*
City/county
Notes a
*
*
a*
* *
* P = Sites with partial deletion(s).
[FR Doc. 2019–15633 Filed 7–22–19; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6560–50–P
FEDERAL COMMUNICATIONS
COMMISSION
47 CFR Part 11
[PS Docket No. 15–94, FCC 18–39; PS
Docket Nos. 15–91, 15–94, FCC 18–94]
Emergency Alert System; Wireless
Emergency Alerts
Federal Communications
Commission.
ACTION: Final rule; announcement of
effective date.
AGENCY:
In this document, the
Commission announces that the Office
of Management and Budget (OMB) has
approved, for a period of three years, the
information collection associated with
the State EAS Plan Order and Alerting
Reliability Order. This document is
consistent with the State EAS Plan
Order, which stated that the
Commission would publish a document
in the Federal Register announcing
OMB approval of these rules, and the
Alerting Reliability Order, which stated
that the Commission would publish a
document in the Federal Register
announcing the effective date of these
rules.
SUMMARY:
Effective date: The amendments
to 47 CFR 11.45(b) and 11.61 published
at 83 FR 39610, August 10, 2018, are
effective July 23, 2019.
Compliance date: The Commission
will publish a document in the Federal
Register announcing the compliance
date for the amendments to 47 CFR
11.18 and 11.21. See the SUPPLEMENTARY
INFORMATION for additional details.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Nicole McGinnis, Deputy Bureau Chief,
Public Safety and Homeland Security
Bureau, at (202) 418–7452, or by email
at Nicole.McGinnis@fcc.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: This
document announces that, on June 17,
2019, OMB approved, until June 30,
2022, the information collection
requirements associated with (i) the
Commission’s State EAS Plan Order, PS
Docket No. 15–94, FCC 18–39, adopted
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DATES:
VerDate Sep<11>2014
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on March 28, 2018, released on April
10, 2018, and published at 83 FR 37750,
August 2, 2018, which among other
things required State Emergency
Communications Committees (SECC) to
file State EAS Plans electronically and
established an online Alert Reporting
System (ARS) for that purpose; and, (ii)
the false alert notification requirements,
and rules governing ‘‘Live Code Tests’’
of the EAS contained in the
Commission’s Alerting Reliability Order,
PS Docket Nos. 15–94 and 15–91, FCC
18–94, adopted on July 12, 2018,
released on July 13, 2018, and published
at 83 FR 39610, August 10, 2018. The
Commission publishes this document as
an announcement of the effective date of
the false alert notification requirements,
and rules governing ‘‘Live Code Tests’’
of the EAS contained in the
Commission’s Alerting Reliability Order.
In addition, the Commission publishes
this document as an announcement of
OMB’s approval of the information
collection requirements associated with
the State EAS Plan online reporting
requirements contained in the
Commission’s State EAS Plan Order.
The State EAS Plan Order stated that
compliance with the State EAS Plan
online reporting requirements would be
required within one year of publication
in the Federal Register of a Public
Notice announcing: (i) OMB approval of
ARS information collection
requirements or (ii) the availability of
the ARS to receive such information,
whichever is later. Accordingly,
compliance with the State EAS Plan
online reporting requirements contained
in the Commission’s State EAS Plan
Order will be required within one year
of publication in the Federal Register of
a Public Notice announcing the
availability of the ARS for filing State
EAS Plans.
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, 3060–0207, in your
correspondence. The Commission will
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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).
Synopsis
As required by the Paperwork
Reduction Act of 1995 (44 U.S.C. 3507),
the FCC is notifying the public that it
received final OMB approval on June
17, 2019, for the information collection
requirements contained in the
modifications to the Commission’s rules
in 47 CFR part 11. 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
collection of information subject to the
Paperwork Reduction Act that does not
display a current, valid OMB Control
Number. The OMB Control Number is
3060–0207.
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: 3060–0207.
OMB Approval Date: June 17, 2019.
OMB Expiration Date: June 30, 2022.
Title: Part 11, Emergency Alert
System, (EAS), Orders, FCC 18–94.
Form Number: N/A.
Respondents: Business and other forprofit entities, Not-for-profit
institutions, and State, Local and Tribal
Government.
Number of Respondents and
Responses: 63,084 respondents;
3,588,830 responses.
Estimated Time per Response: 0.017–
100 hours.
Frequency of Response: One-time
reporting requirement and on-occasion
reporting requirements.
Obligation to Respond: Mandatory.
The statutory authority for this
information collection is contained in
E:\FR\FM\23JYR1.SGM
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 84, Number 141 (Tuesday, July 23, 2019)]
[Rules and Regulations]
[Pages 35324-35334]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2019-15633]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY
40 CFR Part 300
[EPA-HQ-SFUND-1983-0002 FRL-9996-98-Region 5]
National Oil and Hazardous Substances Pollution Contingency Plan;
National Priorities List: Partial Deletion of the New Brighton/Arden
Hills/Twin Cities Army Ammunition Plant (TCAAP) 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 Partial Deletion of all soil and
five aquatic sites in Operable Unit 2 (OU2) of the New Brighton/Arden
Hills/TCAAP Superfund Site in 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, because all appropriate response actions for soil and these
five aquatic sites under CERCLA, other than maintenance, monitoring 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 23,
2019 unless EPA receives adverse comments by August 22, 2019. 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-1983-0002 by one of the following methods:
https://www.regulations.gov. Follow the on-line 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 (ST-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, Phone: (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-
1983-0002. EPA's policy is that all comments received will be included
in the public docket without change and may be made available online at
https://www.regulations.gov, including any personal information
provided, unless the comment includes information claimed to be
Confidential Business Information (CBI) or other information whose
disclosure is restricted by statute. Do not submit information that you
consider to be CBI or otherwise protected through https://www.regulations.gov or email. 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
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
[[Page 35325]]
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 statute. Certain other material, such
as copyrighted material, will be publicly available only in hard copy.
Publicly available docket materials are available either electronically
at https://www.regulations.gov or electronically 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.
Minnesota National Guard, 4761 Hamline Avenue North, Arden Hills,
MN 55112, Contact: Mary Lee, Arden Hills Army Training Site, Phone:
(651) 282-4420. Hours: Monday through Friday, 8 a.m. to 3:30 p.m.,
excluding State holidays.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Randolph Cano, NPL Deletion
Coordinator, U.S. Environmental Protection Agency Region 5 (ST-6J), 77
West Jackson Boulevard, Chicago, IL 60604, Phone: (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 New Brighton/Arden Hills/Twin Cities Army Ammunition
Plant Site (NB/AH/TCAAP Site), from the NPL. This partial deletion
pertains to all soil (shallow and deep) located within the boundary of
OU2 of the NB/AH/TCAAP Site and to the surface water and sediment (not
groundwater) of the five aquatic sites located within the OU2 boundary:
Rice Creek, Sunfish Lake, Marsden Lake North, Marsden Lake South and
Pond G (see Figures 2-2 and 11-1 in the Docket). The remaining areas at
the NB/AH/TCAAP Site, including OU1, OU3, groundwater in OU2 and a
sixth aquatic site, Round Lake located southwest of the OU2 boundary,
will remain on the NPL and are not being considered for deletion as
part of this action.
The NPL constitutes Appendix B of the NCP, which EPA promulgated
pursuant to CERCLA. 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 NB/AH/TCAAP 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 40 CFR 300.425(e)(3) of the NCP, a
portion of a site deleted from the NPL remains eligible for Fund-
financed remedial actions 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 the shallow and deep soil and the
five aquatic sites located within OU2 of the NB/AH/TCAAP Site and
demonstrates how they meet the deletion criteria. Section V discusses
EPA's action to partially delete the soil and five aquatic sites
located within the OU2 boundary of the NB/AH/TCAAP 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, or portions
thereof, 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 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 five-year reviews even if a site or a
portion of 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. Deletion Procedures
The following procedures apply to the deletion of the soil portion
of OU2 and to the five aquatic sites located within the OU2 boundary of
the NB/AH/TCAAP Site:
(1) EPA consulted with the State of Minnesota prior to developing
this direct final Notice of Partial Deletion and the Notice of Intent
for Partial Deletion co-published today in the ``Proposed Rules''
section of the Federal Register.
(2) EPA has provided the State 30 working days for review of this
notice and the parallel Notice of Intent for Partial Deletion prior to
their publication today, and the State, through the MPCA, has concurred
on the partial deletion of the NB/AH/TCAAP Site from the NPL.
(3) Concurrent with the publication of this direct final Notice of
Partial Deletion, an announcement of the availability of the parallel
Notice of Intent for Partial Deletion is being published in three major
local newspapers, the Minneapolis Star Tribune, The Mounds View/New
Brighton Sun Focus and the Shoreview Press. The newspaper notices
announce the 30-day public comment period concerning the Notice of
Intent for Partial Deletion of the NB/AH/TCAAP Site from the NPL.
(4) The 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 NB/AH/TCAAP Site information
repositories identified above.
(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
[[Page 35326]]
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 Partial Site Deletion
The following information provides EPA's rationale for deleting the
soil portion of OU2 and the five aquatic sites located within the OU2
boundary (Rice Creek, Sunfish Lake, Marsden Lake North, Marsden Lake
South and Pond G) of the NB/AH/TCAAP Site from the NPL:
Site Background and History
The NB/AH/TCAAP Site (CERCLIS ID: MN7213820908) consists of a 25-
square mile area located in Ramsey County, Minnesota. The NB/AH/TCAAP
Site includes the 4-square mile area of the original TCAAP facility
(about 2,370 acres) operated by the U.S Army (Army), located east of
U.S. Interstate Highway 35W and north of Ramsey County Highway 96 at
the time of NPL listing in 1983 (OU2) and portions of seven nearby
communities with Site-related groundwater contamination (OU1 and OU3).
These communities include: New Brighton, Arden Hills, St. Anthony,
Shoreview, Mounds View, Columbia Heights and Minneapolis. See Figure 2-
1 in in the Docket.
The TCAAP facility manufactured, stored and tested small-caliber
ammunition and related materials for the United States military and
handled and stored strategic and critical materials for other
government agencies from 1941 to 2005. Between 1941 and 1981, the
facility disposed of waste materials including volatile organic
compounds (VOCs), heavy metals, corrosive materials and explosives at
several locations on the TCAAP property. Alliant Techsystems Inc.
(Alliant) was the Army's installation services contractor for TCAAP and
also operated manufacturing facilities at the TCAAP property.
The U.S. Army Toxic Hazardous Materials Agency issued a report on
waste disposal activities at TCAAP in 1978. In 1981, MPCA and the
Minnesota Department of Health (MDH) began sampling water supply wells
in the TCAAP area. The sampling found that municipal and private
drinking water wells near the TCAAP facility and wells at TCAAP were
contaminated with VOCs.
Due to the contamination, the City of New Brighton shut down six
municipal wells, deepened two municipal wells and constructed three new
municipal wells from 1982 to 1984. One of the City of St. Anthony's
municipal wells was also contaminated and this well was closed.
In 1983 EPA installed carbon treatment filters on two of the City
of New Brighton wells that were reopened to meet summertime peak
demand. EPA also provided New Brighton with an additional deep well and
carbon treatment for two of St. Anthony's municipal wells in the late
1980s.
In 1983, MPCA connected several private well users adjacent to the
TCAAP facility to New Brighton's and Arden Hills' water mains. In 1984,
MPCA constructed a temporary water connection from the City of St.
Anthony to the City of Roseville to alleviate a water shortage due to
the shutdown of one of St. Anthony's wells.
EPA proposed the NB/AH/TCAAP Site to the NPL on December 30, 1982
(47 FR 58476). EPA finalized the NB/AH/TCAAP Site on the NPL on
September 8, 1983 (48 FR 40658).
The Army began a Phase I investigation at the TCAAP facility in
1981. The Army installed and sampled a significant number of monitoring
wells at TCAAP to identify the overall contribution of the facility to
the groundwater contamination identified by MPCA and MDH.
Site records and investigations conducted at TCAAP subsequent to
the Army's 1978 waste disposal report identified 14 source areas of
contamination at TCAAP. These areas were used for the burial or open-
burning of waste or were industrial sources of contamination. The Army
designated the source areas as Sites A, B, C, D, E, F, G, H, I, J, K,
129-3, 129-5 and 129-15. See Figure 3 in the Docket.
The Army entered into a Federal Facilities Agreement (FFA) with EPA
and the State of Minnesota in 1987. The FFA establishes the framework,
schedule and requirements for the Army to conduct a remedial
investigation (RI) and feasibility study (FS) at the TCAAP facility and
to implement the selected cleanup actions.
The Army implemented several interim remedial actions (IRAs) at the
TCAAP facility (i.e., OU2 of the NB/AH/TCAAP Site) under the Army's
Installation Restoration Program (IRP). The Army conducted the IRAs in
the 1980s and 1990s before an overall remedy was selected for OU2 in
the OU2 Record of Decision (ROD) in 1997. These actions included
unilateral actions by the Army, actions with EPA and State concurrence,
and other actions initiated by the Army/Alliant. The IRAs were
coordinated with the State and Federal regulatory agencies.
The Army implemented unilateral removal actions at TCAAP using its
own delegated removal authorities under CERCLA Section 104. These
actions included installing in-situ soil vapor extraction (SVE) systems
at Sites D and G to remediate VOC-contaminated soils in 1986 and
installing groundwater pump-and-treat systems at Sites A and K to treat
VOC-contaminated groundwater in 1988.
Army IRAs at TCAAP undertaken with EPA and State concurrence
included: (1) Installing a Boundary Groundwater Recovery System (BGRS)
in 1987 to prevent additional groundwater contaminants from flowing off
of the TCAAP property pursuant to a 1987 ROD; (2) expanding the BGRS
into the TCAAP Groundwater Recovery System (TGRS) with source control
wells installed downgradient of Sites D, G and I; (3) thermally
treating 1,400 cubic yards of soil contaminated with polychlorinated
biphenyls (PCBs) at Site D in 1989 pursuant to a 1989 ROD on Removal
Action for PCB-Contaminated Soils Near Site D; (4) remediating heavy
metal soil contamination through soil washing/leaching technologies at
Site F from 1993-1997 under the Resource Conservation and Recovery Act
(RCRA); and (5) modifying the Site A groundwater remediation system
installed in 1983 to include eight boundary extraction wells in 1994.
Other IRAs the Army implemented at TCAAP included: Cleaning of the
sanitary sewer system lines (Site J) from 1984 to 1986 and closing Site
J in accordance with the EPA and MPCA-approved Final Site J Closure
Report issued in 1994; and excavation by Alliant of the PCB-
contaminated soils around Building 502 in 1985 and disposing of the
soils at a permitted off-site facility in 1996.
Several property ownership transfers and reassignments of control
have occurred at the TCAAP property since the NB/AH/TCCAP Site was
listed on the NPL. See Figure 4 in the Docket. Since 1983, control of
over 1,500 acres of TCAAP has been reassigned to the National Guard
Bureau which licenses the use of the property to the Minnesota Army
National Guard for the operation of the Arden Hills Army Training Site
(AHATS) and to the U.S. Army Reserve.
[[Page 35327]]
The National Guard Bureau and Army Reserve property is still federally-
owned and is controlled by the Army, but it is no longer controlled by
TCAAP, which reports to a different division.
Prior to 2010, the Army also transferred more than 270 acres of
TCAAP that did not require land or groundwater use restrictions to
Ramsey County and the City of Arden. This property consists of: Parcels
093023320001 and 093023240003 owned by Ramsey County (the unlabeled OU2
area in the northwest corner of OU2 on Figure 4 in the Docket); Parcel
153023340001 located at 1425 Paul Kirkwold Drive owned by Ramsey
County; and Parcel ID 153023430001 located at 1245 Highway 96W owned by
the City of Arden Hills (shown as the unlabeled OU2 areas along the
southern boundary of OU2 on Figure 4).
In 2013, the Army transferred another 397 acres of TCAAP to Ramsey
County and leased another 30 acres of TCAAP to the County. In 2017, the
Army transferred the ownership of the 30 acres Ramsey County was
leasing from the Army to Ramsey County.
Forty-seven of the 427 acres of property the Army transferred and
leased to Ramsey County in 2013 did not require land or groundwater use
restrictions (see the Operation and Maintenance section of this
notice). The other 380 acres were restricted by land use controls
(LUCs) for soil and groundwater.
Ramsey County conducted an additional soil investigation at the 380
acres of restricted property they owned or were leasing in 2014. Ramsey
County remediated the areas of remaining soil contamination, including
the soil contamination at Sites I and K located within the 380-acre
area.
Following the additional cleanup, MPCA and EPA approved the soil in
the 380-acre area to be suitable for unlimited use/unrestricted
exposure (UU/UE). The Army removed the soil LUCs on the 380 acres in
Revision 4 of the OU2 Land Use Control Remedial Design (LUCRD) dated
August 2016. This property, however, is still subject to the
groundwater LUCs (see Figure 5, Area with Groundwater LUCs, in the
Docket).
The Army determined that the remaining 160 acres of the TCAAP
property are surplus to the needs of the Federal government. This
property is in the process of being transferred out of Federal
ownership. These 160 acres are controlled by the Base Realignment and
Closure (BRAC) Division of the Army, the organization to which TCAAP
currently reports.
Ramsey County identified 108 acres of the remaining 160-acre TCAAP
property (Parcels A through D) for use as part of the Rice Creek
Regional Trail Corridor (RCRTC) (see Attachment B, Site Boundary--Rice
Creek Regional Trail Parcels A-D in the Docket). Ramsey County
completed an additional soil investigation and cleanup on the 108 acres
to levels that are suitable for recreational use. The Army removed the
soil LUCs on the 108-acre property in Revision 5 of the OU2 Land Use
Control Remedial Design (LUCRD) dated March 2018.
The Army will transfer title to Parcels A, B, and D of the 108-acre
property to Ramsey County. Parcel C will remain under Federal
ownership, but the government intends to grant Ramsey County a
perpetual easement to Parcel C for its use as part of the RCRTC.
This partial deletion pertains to all soil (shallow and deep)
located within the OU2 boundary of the NB/AH/TCAAP Site (see Figure 2-2
in the Docket). This partial deletion also pertains to surface water
and sediment (not groundwater) in the five aquatic sites located within
the OU2 boundary of the NB/AH TCAAP Site: Rice Creek, Sunfish Lake,
Marsden Lake North, Marsden Lake South and Pond G (see Figure 11-1 in
the Docket).
The remaining areas at the NB/AH/TCAAP Site, including OU1, OU3,
groundwater in OU2 and a sixth aquatic site, Round Lake located
southwest of the OU2 boundary, will remain on the NPL and are not being
considered for deletion as part of this action.
Remedial Investigation (RI) and Feasibility Study (FS)
The Army conducted a RI at the TCAPP portion of the NB/AH/TCAAP
Site (OU2) from 1988 to 1991. The purpose of the RI was to characterize
the nature and extent of soil, sediment, surface water and groundwater
contamination within the OU2 boundary. The FS developed and evaluated
cleanup alternatives to address the unacceptable risks identified at
OU2.
The Army completed the OU2 RI and conducted an OU2 Terrestrial
Ecological Risk Assessment in 1991. The Army conducted a Tier II
Ecological Risk Assessment for the OU2 aquatic sites in 2004. Due to
EPA and MPCA concerns, the Army conducted additional sampling at
Marsden Lake and Pond G in 2008. The Army issued a separate FS for the
five aquatic sites located within the OU2 site boundary in 2011. The
Army is addressing Round Lake, which is still considered part of OU2
but is located outside of the OU2 site boundary, southwest of OU2,
separately.
EPA completed a Human Health Risk Assessment (HHRA) addressing OU1,
OU2 and OU3 of the NB/AH/TCAAP Site in 1991. In 1992, the Army
collected additional data as part of the FS development process to
further characterize the nature and extent of OU2. The Army completed
the OU2 FS in 1997. The OU2 FS included an updated list of additional
contaminants of concern (COCs) and cleanup levels.
The Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease Registry (ATSDR)
completed a Public Health Assessment of the NB/AH portion of the NB/AH/
TCAAP Site (OU1 and OU3) in 1994. Based on the assessment, ATSDR
considered the NB/AH portion of the NB/AH/TCAAP Site to be a ``public
health hazard'' because people were exposed to past groundwater
contaminants from TCAAP at concentrations that could result in adverse
health effects.
The Army's RI identified all known or suspected sources of
contamination at OU2 of the NB/AH/TCAAP Site. The RI separated the OU2
contamination into four categories: Shallow soil sites, with soil
contamination less than 12 ft-bgs (Sites A, C, E, H, 129-3 and 129-5);
deep soil sites, with soil contamination greater than 12 ft-bgs, down
to depths between 50 and 170 feet (Sites D and G); shallow (Unit 1)
groundwater contamination (Sites A, I and K); and deep (Units 3 and 4)
groundwater contamination (groundwater underlying the southwestern
portion of OU2, originating primarily from Sites D, G and I). Although
Sites D and G were considered deep soil sites, shallow soil
contaminants were also present at Site D, and Site G also contains a
dump.
The Army addressed Sites F (RCRA) and J (sewer line cleaning)
separately and did not include these areas in the OU2 RI. Also, the
Army did not find any contamination in Site B other than part of a dump
(Site B-3) that would require additional investigation.
The RI and additional FS sampling indicated that the shallow soil
sites (Sites A, C, E, H, 129-3 and 129-5) were contaminated by heavy
metals, VOCs, polynuclear aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs) and PCBs. The
contamination was generally present in the upper five to 10 feet of
soil. Contaminated soil volumes ranged from as little as 15 cubic yards
(CY) at Site 129-5 to as much as 2,600 CY at Site C.
Unpermitted landfills or dumps also existed within the boundaries
of shallow soil Sites A, E and H. The estimated material in these dumps
ranged from 4,400 CY at Site A to 12,200 CY at Site E. The RI
identified
[[Page 35328]]
two additional dumps in OU2. Dump Site B-3 was estimated to contain
12,400 CY of material. The other dump is Site 129-15 and is estimated
to be 53,000 CY.
The RI did not investigate the material at Site B-3 or Site 129-15.
The RI indicated that additional characterization would be required
before response actions could be selected for these areas. There was no
clear indication, however, that either dump was contaminating the
groundwater.
The Army updated EPA's 1991 HHRA in the 1997 OU2 FS to incorporate
the results of the additional sampling. The updated risk assessment in
the FS indicated that the surface soil and debris at Sites A, C, H and
129-3 posed an unacceptable cancer and/or noncancer risk to on-site
workers under a current industrial exposure scenario. Subsurface soil
and debris at Sites A, C, H and 129-3 and at Sites D, E, G and 129-5
also posed an unacceptable cancer and/or noncancer risk to future
construction workers in these areas. The risks were primarily due to
the incidental ingestion of and dermal contact with surface and/or
subsurface soil and debris.
According to the updated HHRA, surface soil and debris at Sites A,
C, E, H and 129-3 posed an unacceptable cancer and/or noncancer risk to
potential future residents living in these areas under a future
residential exposure scenario. These risks were primarily due to the
incidental ingestion of and dermal contact with surface soil and debris
and to the ingestion of home-grown fruits and vegetables.
The Army developed remedial action objectives (RAOs) for the OU2
cleanup in the FS based on the current and most probable future land
use for the property, which was industrial. The FS then developed
numerical remediation goals for the cleanup based on applicable or
relevant and appropriate requirements (ARARs), health-based risk
values, background concentrations of metals, contaminant migration
potential and technological limitations.
The health-based risk values developed for surface soil were based
on the lower of either an excess lifetime cancer risk equal to one in a
million or a noncancer hazard of one, adjusted for exposure to multiple
contaminants. The industrial values were calculated based on the
primary routes of exposure which were ingestion and dermal contact. The
cleanup levels for the deep soil Sites D and G were based primarily on
leaching-based goals that are protective of the underlying groundwater
for use as residential drinking water. For Site 129-15, a one-time
commercial, industrial or utility construction scenario was utilized.
The construction scenario assumed that construction workers would be
exposed to excavated soils for 40 days (i.e., a two-month construction
period) a year for two years. See the Cleanup Levels section below for
additional information. The FS developed general response actions for
the OU2 cleanup based on the technical applicability and the
contaminant characteristics of each individual site within OU2. After
initial screening, the FS retained a set of final cleanup alternatives
for full evaluation. The alternatives evaluated for the shallow soil
Sites A, C, E, H, 129-3 and 129-5 were: No action, in-situ fixation/
capping, soil washing/soil leaching and excavation/stabilization with
off-site disposal. The alternatives evaluated for the deep soil Sites D
and G were: No action, continue shallow SVE, or expand the SVE systems
vertically.
The only alternative the FS evaluated for the unpermitted landfills
in Sites A, E and H was excavation and off-site disposal. The FS
indicated that the landfills in Site B and Site 129-15 would require
further characterization.
Selected Remedy
EPA, MPCA and the Army selected an industrial cleanup remedy for
the OU2 shallow soil sites, dumps and deep soil sites in a 1997 OU2
ROD. The agencies also selected remedies for the five aquatic sites
located within the OU2 boundary in OU2 ROD Amendment #4 (Rice Creek,
Sunfish Lake, Marsden Lake North, Marsden Lake South and Pond G).
The selected remedy for the shallow soil Sites A, C, E, H, 129-3
and 129-5 and for the dumps within Sites A, E and H in the 1997 OU2 ROD
included the following remedial components (see the 1997 ROD for
information about the groundwater components of the OU2 remedy):
(1) Identification/characterization of contaminated soil
boundaries, surface and subsurface debris and dump contents;
(2) Excavation and sorting of hazardous and nonhazardous dump
materials, debris and ordnance;
(3) Removal and disposal of ordnance, debris and oversized
material;
(4) On-site stabilization of hazardous and contaminated soils from
Sites A, E, H, 129-3 and 129-5;
(5) Off-site disposal of stabilized materials from Sites A, E, H,
129-3 and 129-5;
(6) Off-site transport, incineration and disposal of soils
containing low levels of dioxin-furans from Site C (if required);
(7) Backfill/regrade excavations;
(8) Restrict site access and use during remedy implementation; and
(9) A limited period of monitoring to verify remedy effectiveness.
The selected remedy for the dumps at shallow soil Sites B and 129-
15 was characterization to determine the contents of the dumps. If the
contents were found to be toxic, hazardous or contaminated, then a
remedy for the landfill would be documented through a ROD Amendment. If
the contents were not toxic, hazardous or contaminated then a no
further action remedy will be selected.
The selected remedy for the shallow and deep soil contamination at
Site D and for the deep soil contamination and dump at Site G was to
expand the SVE systems vertically. The remedy included:
(1) Groundwater monitoring;
(2) Access and use restrictions;
(3) Installation and operation of deep SVE systems with modified
shallow SVE systems, as appropriate;
(4) Evaluation and potential use of enhancements to the SVE
systems;
(5) Maintenance of existing soil caps and surface drainage
controls; and
(6) Characterization of shallow soils at Site D and the dump at
Site G following cessation of SVE system operation to determine
appropriate action.
The remedy in the 1997 OU2 ROD also included the characterization
of the unsaturated Unit 1 soil at Site K as part of the Site K shallow
groundwater remedy.
The 1997 OU2 ROD clarified that Site F, a former disposal area
within OU2, was being closed under RCRA and was not addressed in the
OU2 ROD. The 1997 OU2 ROD also confirmed that the 1994 Final Site J
Closure Report for the sanitary sewer cleaning was approved by the
regulatory agencies, documented the absence of contaminants above
background levels and recommended no further action for this area.
Between 2007 and 2014, EPA, MPCA and the Army issued five ROD
Amendments and an Explanation of Significant Differences (ESD)
modifying various components of the selected remedies for the shallow
soil sites, dumps and deep soil sites in the 1997 OU2 ROD and selecting
remedies for the five aquatic sites located within the OU2 boundary.
OU2 ROD Amendment #1, issued in 2007, modified the requirements for
Site C-2 shallow soil and sediment contamination discovered in 2004 in
two Site C-2 ditches. Because the depth to groundwater is shallow at
Site C-2, it was not feasible to remove all of the contaminated soil
and sediment from
[[Page 35329]]
this area. The OU2 ROD Amendment #1 modified the remedy to allow the
placement of a 4-foot thick soil cover over the Site C-2 areas where
the contamination remains in-place above the cleanup levels instead of
excavating the material. The OU2 ROD Amendment #1 also specified LUCs
to maintain the integrity of the soil cover, prohibit unauthorized
disturbance to the underlying soil and sediment and to restrict the
Site C area outside the soil cover to site-specific industrial use. The
OU2 ROD Amendment #1 also included the creation of a new wetland within
the TCAAP facility to replace the loss of existing wetland.
OU2 ROD Amendment #3 was issued in 2009 and modified the remedies
for the shallow soil and dump sites as follows:
(1) Documented, as a final remedy, the additional actions performed
for shallow soil at Site D (soil cover for residual PCB-contaminated
soil following the 1985 interim remedial action and 1989 thermal
treatment selected in the 1989 ROD for Removal Action for PCB-
Contaminated Soils Near Site D, and excavation, stabilization and off-
site disposal of other contaminated Site D soil) after completing the
deep soil cleanup at Site D.
(2) Documented, as a final remedy, the additional action (capping)
implemented for the dump at Site G after completing the Site G deep
soil cleanup.
(3) Documented the use of soil covers as part of the final
remedies, in addition to excavation and off-site disposal, at Sites E
and H and as the primary remedy for the dump at Site 129-15.
(4) Documented that three OU2 areas not addressed in the 1997 OU2
ROD were acceptable for unrestricted use: 135 Primer/Tracer Area (PTA)
Stormwater Ditch, Trap Range Site and Water Tower Area. The OU2 ROD
Amendment #3 determined that the previous soil removals at the 135 PTA
Stormwater Ditch in 2005 and at the Water Tower Area in 1993 reduced
soil contamination to levels that allow for unrestricted use. ROD
Amendment #3 also determined that, based on the 1999 preliminary
assessment of the Trap Range Site, that the Trap Range Site is
acceptable for unrestricted use.
(5) Documented the final remedies for two OU2 areas not addressed
in the 1997 ROD: Grenade Range and Outdoor Firing Range. The OU2 ROD
Amendment #3 determined that the 1993 and 1999 soil and unexploded
ordnance removal actions at the Grenade Range and at the Outdoor Firing
Range, and the construction of a soil cover at the Outdoor Firing Range
in 2003-2004, cleaned up these areas to levels that are acceptable for
industrial use.
(6) Requires long-term LUCs as an additional remedy component for
shallow soil and dump Sites: D, E, G, H, 129-15, Grenade Range, and
Outdoor Firing Range. The LUCs restrict these areas to site-specific
industrial use, require the integrity of the soil covers to be
maintained, and prohibit the unauthorized disturbance of materials
underlying the soil covers. The exact details of the LUCs were to be
specified and maintained in accordance with a LUCRD document approved
by EPA and MPCA. ROD Amendment #3 concluded that LUCs are not needed
for the 135 PTA Stormwater Ditch or Trap Range because contamination
levels in these areas are suitable for UU/UE. The Amendment also
concluded the Water Tower Area is suitable for UU/UE; however, it is
located within the area of ``blanket LUCs'' the Army implemented as
specified in the 2010 LUCRD so it is restricted.
ESD #2, issued in 2009, modified the 1997 OU2 ROD by requiring
long-term LUCs as an additional remedy component for Sites A, C-1, 129-
3 and 129-5 restricting these areas to industrial use. ESD #2 also
documented that based on an additional investigation, the Site B dump
is cleared for unrestricted use and no further action is the final
remedy for Site B.
OU2 ROD Amendment #4 was signed in 2012. The OU2 ROD Amendment #4
documented remedy decisions for the five aquatic sites located within
the OU2 boundary and the 535 PTA Site, which were not addressed in the
1997 OU2 ROD. OU2 ROD Amendment #4 also documented the remedy decision
for the Site K unsaturated Unit 1 soil characterized as part of the
Site K shallow groundwater remedy.
OU2 ROD Amendment #4 determined:
(1) No action is needed for Rice Creek, Sunfish Lake, Marsden Lake
North or Marsden Lake South. The 2011 FS, which the Army prepared
following the 2004 Tier II Ecological Risk Assessment, documented that
there are no human health risks associated with these areas and that
the ecological risks are considered to be acceptable. These aquatic
areas are acceptable for unrestricted use.
(2) In-situ treatment to raise hardness is the selected cleanup
remedy for Pond G. No human health risks were associated with Pond G,
however, Pond G surface water contains lead above the State water
quality standard and may not be protective of the entire aquatic
ecosystem. Pond G surface water was to be chemically altered and
monitored to verify that the adjusted level of hardness increases to
the minimum required level to comply with the Class 2Bd Minnesota
chronic surface water quality standard for lead.
(3) The 2009 removal actions at the 535 PTA Site and for the VOC-
contaminated soil at Site K, which involved the excavation and off-site
disposal of contaminated soil, cleaned up the soils for unrestricted
use. No further action is necessary for the soil in these areas and
LUCs are not required.
OU2 ROD Amendment #5 was signed in 2014. The OU2 ROD Amendment #5
documented remedy decisions for three additional areas of soil
contamination not addressed in the 1997 OU2 ROD. The Army remediated
these areas as a 2013 removal action and addressed: (1) Additional
metal contamination at Site A, (2) PAH-contamination at Site 135 PTA,
and (3) PAH and/or metals contamination discovered in two areas during
an environmental baseline survey (EBS Areas) conducted by the Minnesota
National Guard before the property was transferred to the National
Guard Bureau.
The 2013 soil removal action involved excavating the soil that was
contaminated above industrial use cleanup levels in these areas and
disposing of the contaminated materials off-site. OU2 ROD Amendment #5
documented that the completed 2013 removal action constitutes the final
remedy for these soil areas of concern. OU2 ROD Amendment #5 also added
the requirement that these areas be covered by a LUC restricting the
areas to industrial use.
Decision documents that address the groundwater components of the
OU2 remedy (groundwater not included in this partial deletion) include:
OU2 ROD (1997), OU2 ROD Amendment #2 (2009), OU2 ESD #1 (2009), OU2 ROD
Amendment #4 (2012) and OU2 ROD Amendment #6 (2017).
Response Actions
The Army constructed a corrective action management unit (CAMU) to
aid in the OU2 cleanup and initiated shallow soil site remediation in
1998 beginning with Site A. The CAMU was a bermed, asphalt pad with
lined ponds to store rainwater runoff from the pad. The CAMU was to be
a central staging area where soils from each site would be brought for
treatment before loading for off-site disposal at a permitted landfill.
In 1999, however, the Army discovered asbestos-containing material
(ACM) at the shallow soil sites which made further use of the CAMU
impractical. The safeguards needed to control the
[[Page 35330]]
asbestos during handling defeated the cost savings of the central
processing pad. The Army determined that it was more convenient and
cost-effective to treat the soil at each site instead of moving the
contaminated material to a central location for treatment.
The Army removed the CAMU in 2002. The Army decontaminated and
removed the storage and storm water holding ponds, tested for
contamination under the pad and ponds, and monitored the groundwater.
EPA and MPCA approved the Army's CAMU Closeout Report in 2004. The CAMU
Closeout Report states that there were no adverse impacts to soil or
groundwater due to CAMU operations and that no LUCs are required for
this area.
The Army completed the remedial actions at the shallow soil Sites
A, C, E, H, 129-3, 129-5 and the Outdoor Firing Range from 1999 to
2010. The Army excavated debris and contaminated soil above industrial
cleanup levels, stabilized the material and disposed of it at an off-
site landfill. The Army excavated approximately: 16,300 CY from Site A;
21,450 CY from Site C; 20,900 CY from Site E; 8,620 CY from Site H;
3,470 CY from Site 129-3; 100 CY from Site 129-5 and 100 CY from the
Outdoor Firing Range.
The Army also constructed a 2-foot thick protective soil cover over
a portion of Site E and a 30-inch thick soil cover over a portion of
Site H where ACM remains in-place; a 4-foot thick soil cover over
portions of Site C where metals-contaminated soils and sediment from
the former ditches remain in-place; and a 2-foot thick soil cover at
the 1900 Yard Range of the Outdoor Firing Range where PAH-contaminated
soils remain in place.
The Army investigated the Site 129-5 dump then constructed a
protective soil cover over the materials. The Army also constructed a
new wetland at Site C to replace the loss of existing wetlands when the
Site C ditches were backfilled.
The Army completed the remediation work (shallow and deep soils) at
the deep soil Sites D and G in 2004. The Army dismantled the SVE
systems in 2000 after the deep soil cleanups were complete. At Site D,
the Army then excavated 1,300 CY of shallow soils contaminated with
non-VOCs and disposed of them at an off-site landfill. The Army also
constructed a four to six foot soil cover over residual PCB-
contaminated soils remaining at Site D after the 1985 interim remedial
action. At Site G, the Army characterized the dump then constructed a
2-foot thick protective soil cover over the material.
The Army conducted five years of groundwater monitoring at the
shallow soil sites and Site D from 2003 through 2007. The Army
conducted three years of groundwater monitoring at the Grenade Range
from 1999 to 2004. The Army conducted the monitoring to verify that the
groundwater beneath these areas was not impacted by remediation
activities.
The Army conducted the groundwater monitoring in accordance with
groundwater monitoring plans that were reviewed and updated annually as
part of the Army's Annual Performance Report (APR). Based on the
monitoring data, the Army extended the monitoring at Site H. The
groundwater sampling is now complete at all shallow soils sites and
confirms that there are no adverse remedy impacts to groundwater in
these areas. Groundwater monitoring for VOCs, however, continues as
part of OU2 deep groundwater monitoring in the vicinity of Sites D and
G.
The Army treated the Pond G surface water in 2012 in accordance
with the Pond G RD/RA Work Plan. The Army monitored the Pond G surface
water in 2012 and 2013. The monitoring results verified that the
surface water in Pond G was in compliance with the surface water
standard for lead. Since the Pond G remedy does not result in hazardous
substances remaining in the Pond above levels that allow for UU/UE,
long-term maintenance, monitoring, and LUCs are not required.
Reports documenting the completion of remedial activities for the
shallow soil Sites A, C, E, H, 129-3, 129-5, 129-15, the shallow and
deep soil in deep soil Site D and the deep soil and dump in deep soil
Site G are in the Docket in the following reports: Final Remedial
Action Completion and Shallow Soil Sites Close Out, Volumes I through
VIII; Final Site 129-15 Dump Investigation, Characterization and
Remedial Action Completion and Close Out Report; Final Site D Shallow
and Deep Soil Volatile Organic Compound Investigation and Close Out
Report; Final Site G Volatile Organic Compound Investigation and Dump
Close Out Report; and Outdoor Firing Range 1900 Yard Range Cover
Construction: Addendum to the Final Close Out Report, Outdoor Firing
Range and #150 Reservoir Site Removal. The completed Pond G remedial
action work and surface water monitoring results are documented in the
2013 Remedial Action Completion and Close Out Report, Pond G.
No action or no further action (other than LUCs) was required for
shallow soil Site B, Site J, the Unit 1 soil in Site K, Grenade Range,
Site 135 PTA, Site 135 PTA Stormwater Ditch, Site 535 PTA, the EBS
areas, Water Tower Area, the Trap Range Site, Former Building 576, Rice
Creek, Sunfish Lake, Marsden Lake North or Marsden Lake South. Also,
Site F was closed under RCRA. Additional information about these areas
is documented in the 1997 OU2 ROD, 2009 OU2 ROD Amendment #3, 2009 ESD
#2, 2012 OU2 ROD Amendment #4 and 2014 ROD Amendment #5 and the
following reports in the Docket: Final Site B Dump Investigation,
Characterization, and Close Out Report; Final Close Out Report, Outdoor
Firing Range and #150 Reservoir Site Soil Removal Action, Completion of
Soil Removal; Remedial Action Report, Site K; Lead-Impacted Soil
Cleanup documentation, TCAAP Former Building 576; Close Out Report:
Removal of Contaminated Sediment at the 135 Primer/Tracer Area
Stormwater Outfall; Removal Action Completion Report, Site K; Final
Close Out Report for Soil Removal Action at 535 Primer/Tracer Area; and
Removal Action Completion Report for Soil Areas of Concern--Site A, 135
Primer/Tracer Area, EBS Areas.
Cleanup Levels
The cleanup levels for shallow soils in the 1997 OU2 ROD were
derived specifically for each shallow soil site because MPCA did not
have published rules or guidance values for soil at the time. The ROD
selected cleanup levels for shallow soils based on background levels,
ARARs and the more stringent of either the site-specific industrial
health-based value or leaching-based goal (see Table 8 in the 1997 OU2
ROD in the Docket). The health-based values were the lower of either an
excess lifetime cancer risk equal to one in a million or a noncancer
hazard of one, adjusted for exposure to multiple contaminants. The
cleanup levels for the deep soil Sites D and G were based primarily on
leaching-based goals that are protective of the underlying groundwater.
The site-specific health-based values calculated for the shallow
soils sites assumed that adult industrial workers at TCAAP would be
exposed to contaminated soil through dermal contact and ingestion for
250 days a year for 25 years. The calculations assumed an adult body
weight of 70 kilograms, a soil ingestion rate of 50 milligrams/day and
a dermal exposure over 0.31 square meters of body surface.
For Site 129-15, a one-time commercial, industrial or utility
construction scenario was utilized. The construction scenario assumed
that construction workers would be exposed to excavated soils for 40
days (i.e., a two-month construction period) a year
[[Page 35331]]
for two years. The construction exposure assumes that the excavated
soils are managed to eliminate or greatly reduce exposure to fugitive
dusts; all other parameters were assumed to be the same as the
industrial exposure scenario.
The leaching-based goals for shallow and deep soils were calculated
by MPCA using a soil model for chemicals that were found at the site in
groundwater above drinking water or health-based standards. The
industrial soil cleanup level for lead of 1,200 milligrams per kilogram
(mg/Kg) was calculated by EPA using the Exposure Model for Assessing
Risks Associated with Adult Exposure to Lead in Soil. Additional
information concerning the soil cleanup standards is in Appendix C of
the 1997 OU2 ROD.
Additional soil cleanup standards were later added based on
subsequent investigations for Site A (tetrachloroethene and TCE), Site
D (antimony, lead, and nitroglycerine) and Site 129-15 (lead). PCBs
were not specifically listed as COCs for Site D in the OU2 ROD;
however, the PCBs that were ``secured in-place'' exist at
concentrations that exceed the ARAR of 10 mg/Kg cited in the OU2 ROD,
so the cleanup standard for PCBs is considered to be 10 mg/Kg.
Nitroglycerine was listed as a COC for Site 129-3 in the OU2 ROD;
however, no cleanup level was established. The current cleanup level
for nitroglycerine was calculated at the time of soil remediation work
at Site 129-3.
In 1999, the background number for arsenic in the TCAAP soils
increased from 4 mg/Kg to 10 mg/Kg, as documented in a June 14, 1999
MPCA letter to the Army. This resulted in the cleanup level for arsenic
increasing to 10 mg/Kg at Sites C and H. At Site 129-15 the highest
arsenic concentration detected in soils was 5 mg/Kg and arsenic was
dropped as a COC.
In 2002, the soil cleanup level for TCE at Site G increased to 36.1
mg/Kg. This revised cleanup standard is based on an updated soil
leaching analysis that specifically accounted for the lower
permeability of the Site G cover. EPA and MPCA agreed with this change
on July 24, 2002. For cleanup levels that were established subsequent
to the OU2 ROD, the health risk calculations are noted to be based on
the same methodology and input parameters that were documented in
Appendix C of the OU2 ROD.
The current cleanup standards for the OU2 shallow and deep soils
sites are provided in Table 1 of the 2018 LUCRD Revision 5. A copy of
Table 1 and the complete 2018 LUCRD document are available in the
Docket.
The cleanup level for lead in Pond G is the Minnesota Class 2Bd
surface water quality standard for lead, as promulgated in Minnesota
Rule 7050.0222. The lead standard is calculated based on the hardness
value of the surface water. At Pond G, the calculated lead standard
ranged from a concentration of 11.4 micrograms per liter ([mu]g/L)
after initial treatment with lime and calcium to 1.6 to 2.0 [mu]g/L
approximately one year later.
The Army confirmed that the soil cleanup levels were attained at
each of the shallow and deep soils sites through extensive soil
verification sampling around each of the excavated areas, and by soil
sampling below the shallow and deep vents at the SVE systems at Sites D
and G. The Army conducted the verification sampling at the shallow soil
Sites A, C, E, H, 129-3, 129-5, 129-15, the shallow soil at deep soil
Site D and the dump at deep soil Site G through field and laboratory
sampling and analysis at gridded locations in accordance with the 2000
Final Comprehensive Work Plan, Final Sampling and Analysis Plan and
Final Site Safety and Health Plan, Shallow Soil Sites RD/RA Activities
and associated Work Plan Clarifications. The Army conducted the
verification sampling for deep soil at deep soil Sites D and G in
accordance with the 1997 Final Work Plan, Sites D and G Pilot Study and
the 1999 Addendum 1, Final Work Plan Sites D and G Pilot Study. The
Army conducted the verification sampling at the other sites in
accordance with the Removal Action Work Plan or other work plan for
each area.
The Army confirmed that the cleanup level for lead in the Pond G
surface water was met through four rounds of post-treatment monitoring.
The Army detected lead during the second monitoring event at an average
concentration of 0.61 [mu]g/L. This concentration was well below the
calculated standard for lead of 10.6 [mu]g/L based on the average
surface water hardness of 255 mg/L for that event. The Army did not
detect lead in any of the other rounds of post-treatment monitoring.
Complete documentation of the verification of the cleanup levels
for Pond G and the shallow and deep OU2 soils is available in the
Remedial Action Completion Reports, Removal Action Completion Reports
and Final Close Out Reports referenced in the Response Actions section
above which are available in the Docket.
Operation and Maintenance
Operation and maintenance (O&M) for the soil portion of OU2
(shallow and deep) is limited to inspecting and maintaining the
cautionary warning signs and the thicknesses of the soil covers at
Sites C, D, E, G, H, 129-15 and the Outdoor Firing Range; annually
removing woody vegetation from the Site G soil cover to prevent deep
rooting that could cause increased infiltration by any VOCs remaining
below the cover; and to maintain, monitor and enforce the ESD and ROD
Amendment-required LUCs, which are in the form of the Army's OU2 LUCRD
document approved by EPA and MPCA. No O&M or LUCs are required for the
five aquatic sites within the OU2 boundary: Rice Creek, Sunfish Lake,
Marsden Lake North, Marsden Lake South or Pond G.
The Army issued the initial EPA and MPCA-approved OU2 LUCRD
(Revision 1) in 2010. The Army updated the LUCRD in 2011, 2015, 2016
and 2018 as portions of OU2 were further characterized, remediated as
needed, and transferred for reuse and redevelopment. The current LUCRD
is LUCRD Revision 5 issued in 2018.
The LUCRD documents that since 1997, the working presumption is
that the OU2 property outside of the individual areas of concern (i.e.,
the OU2 property beyond Site A, Site C, Site D, etc.) does not have
soil contamination above the typical ``industrial use'' cleanup levels
derived for the areas of contamination within OU2. Ongoing and future
uses of the OU2 property outside of the areas of concern would be
compatible with past uses. Land used for manufacturing could continue
to be used for manufacturing; open space could continue to be used for
open space. As such, the mostly open space along Rice Creek and the
former OU2 staff housing area the Army previously transferred to Ramsey
County and other OU2 property the Army transferred to the City of Arden
Hills without any use restrictions (approximately 270 acres total)
would remain acceptable for UU/UE.
LUCRD Revision 1 and subsequent revisions formalize the Army's
decision to implement ``blanket LUCs'' limiting the OU2 property to
industrial land use and restricting groundwater use across the
remaining federally-owned OU2 property at the time LUCRD Revision 1 was
issued in 2010 (except for Site F which the Army cleaned up to
unrestricted use under RCRA). A map showing the initial federally-owned
property with LUCs at the time of the 2010 LUCRD is in the September
2010 Figure 4 in the Docket.
[[Page 35332]]
The ``blanket LUCs'' resolved the outstanding LUC issues for the
OU2 property outside of the individual areas of concern (i.e., OU2
property beyond Site A, Site C, Site D, etc.,) because the remedy-
required LUCs in the OU2 ESDs and ROD Amendments only apply to each
individual area of concern, not to the OU2 property outside of those
areas. The Army's ``blanket LUCs'' also address the uncertainty
associated with not having soil data to characterize the entire OU2
property outside of the areas of concern. The 2010 LUCRD and subsequent
revisions include additional restrictions for OU2 areas with soil
covers and components of the OU2 groundwater extraction and treatment
systems to protect the integrity of these remedies.
The 2010 LUCRD and subsequent revisions allow and formalize a
process for the Army to demonstrate to EPA and MPCA that less
restrictive uses of OU2 property are acceptable in anticipation of
future redevelopment and property transfers at the NB/AH/TCAAP site.
The Army issued Revisions 2, 3, 4 and 5 to the LUCRD from 2011 to
2018. These revisions: (1) Cleared the Watchable Wildlife Area of AHATS
for unrestricted public use and revised the LUCs for a portion of the
AHATS Cantonment Area to allow uses compatible with a restricted
commercial exposure scenario (Revision 2, 2011); (2) revised the LUCs
for the remainder of the Cantonment Area and the Army Reserve Center to
restricted commercial use and documented the transfer/lease of 427
acres of Army/BRAC controlled property to Ramsey County (Revision 3,
2015); (3) revised the LUCs to eliminate soil LUCs from the 380-acre
``California-Shaped Area'' of the 427 acres transferred to Ramsey
County in 2013 following the County's additional investigation and soil
cleanup to levels consistent with UU/UE (Revision 4, 2016); and (4)
revised the LUCs to allow recreational use on 108 acres in the western
portion of OU2 to be used as part of the Rice Creek Regional Trail
Corridor (Revision 5, 2018).
The specific details of the current OU2 soil and groundwater use
restrictions and the provisions for long-term stewardship of the LUCs
are contained in the 2018 OU2 LUCRD Revision 5 which is available in
the Docket. The technical basis and supporting documentation for the
LUC revisions are included in Appendices B through E of LUCRD Revision
5. Maps showing the areas covered by the current soil and groundwater
LUCs for OU2 are in Figures 4 and 5 in the Docket.
The Army is the lead agency for the NB/AH/TAACP Site and is
responsible for conducting routine inspections to ensure that the LUCs
are maintained and enforced. The Army is responsible for reporting the
results of the inspections and any breach of the LUCs to the MPCA and
EPA.
Five-Year Review
The Army is required to conduct statutory five-year reviews (FYR)
at the NB/AH/TCAAP Site because hazardous substances, pollutants, or
contaminants remain at the Site above levels that allow for UU/UE. The
Army completed the last FYR of the NB/AH/TCAAP Site in 2014. The FYR
was approved by MPCA and by EPA on August 19, 2014.
The Army's 2014 FYR concluded that the remedy has been completed
for the OU2 soils sites: Sites A, C, D, E, G, H, 129-3, 129-5, 129-15,
the Grenade Range and the Outdoor Firing Range. The FYR also determined
that the protective soil covers at Sites C, D, E, G, H, 129-15 and the
Outdoor Firing Range, in conjunction with the implemented LUCs,
effectively prevent exposure to contaminated soils/debris remaining at
OU2 above industrial exposure levels. The protective soil cover at Site
G also minimizes infiltration and reduces the leaching of any remaining
VOCs below the cover.
The 2014 FYR concluded that OU2 has been restored for industrial
use. The Army also reviewed the toxicity data that the 1991 and 1997
health risk assessments for the soil sites were based on and determined
that no changes have occurred that could potentially affect the
protectiveness of the soil remedies. The 2014 FYR did not identify any
issues or recommendations for the OU2 soils sites.
For OU2 groundwater, the FYR concluded that the OU2 groundwater
remedies are protective in the short term. The groundwater containment
systems are meeting the containment objectives and the treatment
systems are meeting their discharge requirements. The alternate water
supply and well abandonment program, along with Ramsey County's Special
Well Construction Area permitting system, mitigate potential risks
associated with private wells. At Site A, monitored natural attenuation
is adequately controlling plume migration and water quality trends
indicate that aquifer restoration continues to occur in both shallow
and deep groundwater. A vapor intrusion investigation the Army
conducted north of County Road I in 2014 indicates that there are no
significant soil vapor risks and no further vapor intrusion
investigation work is warranted (see the 2014 Site A Vapor Intrusion
Investigation Report in the Docket).
The Army must complete the next FYR of the NB/AH/TCAAP Site and
have it approved by EPA and MPCA on or before August 19, 2019.
Community Involvement
The Army satisfied public participation activities for the NB/AH/
TCAAP Site as required by Sections 113(k)(2)(B)(i-v) and 117 of CERCLA,
42 U.S.C. 9613(k)(2)(B)(i-v) and 9617. The communities near the NB/AH/
TCAAP Site have been involved in NB/AH/TCAAP Site activities since the
environmental problems were initially identified. The Army developed a
Community Involvement Plan for the NB/AH/TCAAP Site in 1991 to
establish processes for sharing knowledge and encouraging community
participation concerning the hazardous waste remediation activities
underway and planned at the NB/AH/TCAAP Site. The Community Relations
Plan outlines specific community relations strategies for addressing
these goals and for updating the plan as needed to adjust to evolving
community needs and concerns. The Army updated the Community
Involvement Plan in 1997.
Over the years the Army has prepared and distributed numerous fact
sheets to a large number of local and interested residents to keep the
community apprised of the remedial activities at the NB/AH/TCAAP Site.
The Army sponsored tours of the facility and accompanying wildlife
areas, in addition to providing monthly Technical Review Committee
(TRC) meetings open to the public to review the status of restoration
activities at the NB/AH/TCAAP Site.
The TCAAP Restoration Advisory Board (RAB) was established in 1996
to provide citizen input into the cleanup of the NB/AH/TCAAP Site. The
RAB provides an opportunity for community representatives to review and
analyze issues concerning the contamination and remediation of the NB/
AH/TCAAP soils and groundwater; provide comments and recommendations
regarding the remediation of contaminated areas at the site; and to
provide advice on decisions that affect the quality of the environment
of the communities that are impacted by the contamination.
The Army met the public participation requirements for selecting
cleanup remedies and the amended cleanup remedies for the NB/AH/TCAAP
Site required by CERCLA Sections 113(k)(a)(B)(i-v) and 117. The Army
met these requirements by issuing
[[Page 35333]]
fact sheets and Proposed Plans, notifying the public of the
availability of the Proposed Plans in newspaper advertisements, holding
public meetings and holding 30-day public comment periods.
The Army involves project stakeholders in the FYR process by
notifying them at the start of each FYR. Project stakeholders notified
at the start of the 2014 FYR include EPA, MPCA, Alliant Techsystems,
Army National Guard, U.S. Army Environmental Command, U.S. Army Corp of
Engineers, City of New Brighton, and the RAB.
The Army published a notice indicating that the 2014 FYR for the
NB/AH/TCAAP Site was starting during the week of November 18, 2013 in
the following newspapers: Minneapolis Star Tribune, Mounds View/New
Brighton Sun Focus, and the Shoreview Press. The notice invited anyone
interested in the FYR process to contact the Army TCAAP representative.
The City of New Brighton was interested in participating in the FYR
process.
The Army published a notice indicating that the FYR was complete
and included contact information and the location of the public
repository for the report (470 West Hwy. 96, Suite 100, Shoreview, MN
55126) in the newspapers after the FYR was finalized.
EPA has satisfied public participation activities for this partial
deletion of the NB/AH/TCAAP Site as required by CERCLA section 113(k),
42 U.S.C. 9613(k), and CERCLA section 117, 42 U.S.C. 9617. EPA arranged
to publish advertisements announcing this proposed direct final Partial
Deletion and the 30-day public comment period in the Minneapolis Star
Tribune, the Mounds View/New Brighton Sun Focus, and the Shoreview
Press 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 NB/AH/TCAAP Site from the NPL,
are available to the public in the information repositories and at
https://www.regulations.gov. Documents in the Docket include maps which
identify the NB/AH/TCAAP Site, the locations of the OU2 areas of
contamination/sites, the OU2 area included with this proposed direct
final Partial Deletion, and the LUCs implemented for OU2.
Determination That the Criteria for Partial Deletion Have Been Met
The soil (shallow and deep) portion of OU2 and the five aquatic
sites located within the OU2 boundary of the NB/AH/TCAAP Site: Rice
Creek, Sunfish Lake, Marsden Lake North, Marsden Lake South and Pond G,
meet all of the site completion requirements specified in Office of
Solid Waste and Emergency Response (OSWER) Directive 9320.2-22, Close-
Out Procedures for National Priorities List Sites. All cleanup actions
and remedial action objectives for OU2 shallow and deep soil and these
five aquatic sites set forth in the 1997 ROD, 2007 ROD Amendment #1,
2009 ROD Amendment #3, 2009 ESD #2, 2012 ROD Amendment #4 and 2014 ROD
Amendment #5 have been implemented for all pathways of exposure. The
selected remedial actions, RAOs, and associated cleanup levels for OU2
soil and the five aquatic sites located within the OU2 boundary are
consistent with EPA policy and guidance. No further Superfund response
is necessary to protect human health or the environment from the soil
portion of OU2 (shallow and deep) or from the five aquatic sites
located within the OU2 boundary.
Section 300.425(e) of the NCP states that a Superfund site or a
portion of a site may be deleted from the NPL when no further response
action is appropriate. EPA, in consultation with the State of
Minnesota, has determined that all required response actions have been
implemented for all soil (shallow and deep) located within the OU2
boundary of the NB/AH/TCAAP Site and for the five aquatic sites located
within the OU2 boundary: Rice Creek, Sunfish Lake, Marsden Lake North,
Marsden Lake South and Pond G, and that no further response action by
the Army is appropriate for these media/areas.
V. Deletion Action
EPA, with concurrence of the State of Minnesota, through the MPCA,
has determined that all appropriate response actions under CERCLA,
other than maintenance, monitoring and five-year reviews, have been
completed for all soil (shallow and deep) located within the OU2
boundary and for the five aquatic sites located within the OU2
boundary: Rice Creek, Sunfish Lake, Marsden Lake North, Marsden Lake
South and Pond G. Therefore, EPA is deleting all soil (shallow and
deep) located within OU2 and these five aquatic sites located within
the OU2 boundary from the NPL.
Because EPA considers this action to be noncontroversial and
routine, EPA is taking it without prior publication. This action will
be effective September 23, 2019 unless EPA receives adverse comments by
August 22, 2019. If adverse comments are received within the 30-day
public comment period, EPA will publish a timely notice of withdrawal
of this direct final Notice of Partial Deletion before its effective
date and the partial deletion will not take effect. EPA will prepare a
response to comments and continue with the deletion process on the
basis of the notice 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.
Dated: July 8, 2019.
Cathy Stepp,
Regional Administrator, Region 5.
For the reasons set out in this document, 40 CFR part 300 is
amended as follows:
PART 300--NATIONAL OIL AND HAZARDOUS SUBSTANCES POLLUTION
CONTINGENCY PLAN
0
1. The authority citation for part 300 continues to read as follows:
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.
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2. Table 2 of Appendix B to part 300 is amended by revising the entry
for ``MN, New Brighton/Arden Hills/Twin Cities Army Ammunition Plant,
New Brighton'' to read as follows:
Appendix B to Part 300--[Amended]
Table 2--General Superfund Section
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State Site name City/county Notes \a\
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* * * * * * *
MN............................. New Brighton/Arden New Brighton................... P
Hills/TCAAP (USARMY).
[[Page 35334]]
* * * * * * *
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\a\ * * *
* P = Sites with partial deletion(s).
[FR Doc. 2019-15633 Filed 7-22-19; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6560-50-P