
Department of Ecology News Release - October 17, 2012
12-347
OLYMPIA - Residents of north Tacoma and Ruston can now do a simple online search to find out if their yards were part of the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency's (EPA) Superfund cleanup of Asarco smelter contaminated yards.
Over the past year, the Washington Department of Ecology (Ecology) worked with EPA to build the Areawide Remediation Environmental Information System (AREIS). The online database provides quick access to arsenic and lead soil sampling results and cleanup reports for most of the residential properties within the Superfund site.
The database can be accessed at https://fortress.wa.gov/ecy/areispublic/.
"AREIS greatly improves the public's access to important data about their yards," said EPA project manager Kevin Rochlin. "In the past, we would have to copy and mail paper files or have people come to our Ruston office."
In the future, AREIS will also hold data from Ecology-led cleanup of Asarco contamination. Next steps include loading data from Ecology's Soil Safety Program, which samples and cleans up play areas at schools, child-care facilities, parks, and camps.
Ecology project manager Marian Abbett noted, "This was a great opportunity for collaboration. We are two different agencies, but we serve the same communities, and it helps to have cleanup information in one place."
The former Asarco copper smelter sat on the border of Ruston and north Tacoma. Emissions from the facility contaminated a 1,000-square-mile area of surface soils with arsenic and lead. Neighborhoods within the Superfund site, closer to the smelter, had among the highest levels of contamination.
After nearly 20 years of cleaning up yards, EPA is nearly done, though some recent cleanups do not have records loaded into the database yet. Superfund cleanup began in 1993. Only the yards with soil that contained at least 230 parts per million (ppm) of arsenic qualified for cleanup.
In 2013, Ecology will begin offering cleanup for properties within the Superfund site that did not qualify for EPA's program.
When Superfund cleanup began in 1993, EPA's cleanup plan set an action level of 230 parts per million (ppm) arsenic. Only the yards with soil exceeding that threshold qualified for cleanup.
Ecology, using funding from a $94.6 million settlement with Asarco, is cleaning up remaining yards that average over 100 ppm arsenic.
The state will also offer soil sampling and cleanup outside of the Superfund site, in the next most contaminated areas of the Tacoma Smelter Plume.
###
Media Contacts:
For more information:
Tacoma Smelter Plume cleanup (www.ecy.wa.gov/programs/tcp/sites_brochure/tacoma_smelter/2011/ts-hp.htm)
Areawide Remediation Environmental Information System -AREIS (https://fortress.wa.gov/ecy/areispublic/)
Ecology’s social media (www.ecy.wa.gov/about/newmedia.html)
Copyright © Washington State Department of Ecology. See http://www.ecy.wa.gov/copyright.html.