210 likes | 336 Views
Cleanup and Remedy Implementation at the Rocky Flats Site, Jefferson County, Colorado Interstate Technology and Regulatory Council October 2011. Scott Surovchak Rocky Flats Site Manager U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) Office of Legacy Management (LM). Rocky Flats, 1995.
E N D
Cleanup and Remedy Implementation at the Rocky Flats Site,Jefferson County, ColoradoInterstate Technology and Regulatory Council October 2011 Scott SurovchakRocky Flats Site Manager U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) Office of Legacy Management (LM)
Rocky Flats Closure Project • Ten years and $7 billion – physical completion in October 2005 (1 year ahead of schedule and $500 million under budget) • 385-acre industrial area containing 800 buildings and other structures, including “the most dangerous building in America” • 360 potentially contaminated environmental sites with 88 requiring remediation • 21 tons of weapons-grade material shipped to other sites, 100 metric tons of plutonium residues dispositioned
Special Nuclear Material and Waste Shipping Required significant DOE Complex integration to support Rocky Flats closure
Rocky Flats Closure Project (continued) • 275,000 cubic meters of radioactive wastes disposed • Surface soils to a depth of 3 feet below the surface in the industrial area were cleaned up, where needed, to the 50 picocuries per gram (pCi/g) soil action level for plutonium-239/240. Majority of the site is below 7 pCi/g plutonium. • Some plutonium/americium contamination fixed and left in place in two building foundations and some process piping filled with grout (all below 6 feet) • 600,000 property items dispositioned by transfer, sale, donation, or disposal as contaminated waste
Nearly 15,000 m3 of Transuranic Waste Was Safely Shipped to Waste Isolation Pilot Plant
Regulatory Framework • Cleanup completed under the Comprehensive Environmental Response, Compensation, and Recovery Act (CERCLA) and Colorado Hazardous Waste Act (CHWA)/Resource Conservation and Recovery Act (RCRA) • Rocky Flats Cleanup Agreement (RFCA) is a legally binding agreement on cleanup decisions between DOE, U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, and Colorado Department of Public Health and Environment (CDPHE) • RFCA utilized accelerated actions • Significant public participation in cleanup decisions through participation of Rocky Flats Coalition of Local Governments, Rocky Flats Citizens Advisory Board, and numerous public meetings
Physical Completion • All buildings removed with the exception of two vehicle inspection sheds • Surface soil remediated to the soil action level • Two landfills covered • Four groundwater treatment systems operating • Continued evaluation of groundwater and surface water through sampling network • Ongoing DOE presence through LM
Regulatory Completion • The Corrective Action Decision/Record of Decision (CAD/ROD), signed in 2006, established two CERCLA Operable Units: Central Operable Unit (COU) and Peripheral Operable Unit (POU) • POU not impacted by hazardous substance releases and final remedy is no action • POU deleted from the National Priorities List (NPL) in May 2007 • Rocky Flats National Wildlife Refuge established on the POU (excluding some mineral rights areas) in July 2007
Current Rocky Flats Site • The Rocky Flats Site managed by LM currently consists of 1,309 acres in the COU plus 945 acres outside of the COU that will eventually transfer to the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service (USFWS) • Primary regulatory oversight of CERCLA remedy by CDPHE through the Rocky Flats Legacy Management Agreement (RFLMA) • LM maintains community and public interaction • Rocky Flats Stewardship Council • Public meetings involving LM, CDPHE, and U.S. Environmental Protection Agency
Legacy Management • COU retained by LM for ongoing monitoring and maintenance to implement the CERCLA remedy • COU contains the areas with remaining contamination concerns: • Two closed landfills, areas of groundwater contamination above maximum contaminant levels, some subsurface and residual surface soil contamination • COU remedy is institutional controls, physical controls, and monitoring • CERCLA 5-year reviews of continuing protectiveness of the remedy required for COU • Ecology systems – wetlands and Preble’s meadow jumping mouse (PMJM) habitat
Recent Activities Design and construction of new nitrate treatment component and reconfiguration of uranium treatment component for the Solar Ponds Plume Treatment System Environmental Assessment and Adaptive Management Plan for surface water configuration (dam breach) RFLMA modification to relocate Point of Compliance (POC) surface water monitoring locations CAD/ROD Amendment/RFLMA modification to clarify several institutional controls Reconsultation with USFWS on Programmatic Biological Assessment due to change in PMJM critical habitat Media changeout for the Mound Site Plume Treatment System and installation of polishing component
Ongoing Activities Routine groundwater and surface water monitoring in accordance with RFLMA (primary contaminants include volatile organic compounds, nitrate, uranium); 98 groundwater monitoring and 18 surface water sampling locations Non-RFLMA/Adaptive Management Plan water monitoring Operation of four groundwater treatment systems Inspection and monitoring of physical and institutional controls Inspection and maintenance for two closed landfills Erosion control and erosion monitoring Site management activities, such as road maintenance and weed control
Ongoing Activities (continued) • Revegetation and wetland mitigation • PMJM critical habitat monitoring and reporting