SWMU 20, White Alice/Trout Creek Disposal Area CERCLA Site
Background
This 10.61-acre site occupies a hillside and floodplain area below the former White Alice complex about 2 miles west of downtown. The site consists of two distinct topographic environments: (1) a steep northwest-facing hillside, approximately 200 feet wide and 500 feet long, covered with native vegetation and debris, and (2) a portion of the heavily vegetated, marshy Trout Creek floodplain, at the base of the hillside. It was originally investigated because several 55-gallon drums and other debris (apparently originating from the closure of the White Alice facility in the 1980s) were disposed of on the hillside and in the valley below. A removal action was conducted in 1992 to remove about 100 55-gallon drums and various other debris. About 7 cubic yards of PCB-affected soils were also removed (US Navy 1996).
The remedial action objective for SWMU 20 is to maintain this area as a recreational area land use due to the presence of Aroclor 1260 at levels that result in an elevated residential ICR and that exceed ADEC residential soil cleanup levels. The estimated ICR for recreational use (2x10E-7) is below the ADEC cumulative risk level of 1x10E-5.
Identified Contaminants
Aroclor 1260 was identified in the OU-A ROD as a Chemical of Concern (COC). Its post removal maximum concentration was 33 mg/kg, which exceeds the ADEC residential soil cleanup level of 1 mg/kg. The estimated residential ICR is 2x10E-5, while the estimated recreational (current use) ICR is 2x10E-7 and the estimated industrial ICR is 8x10E-7.
CERCLA Institutional Controls
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CERCLA Engineering Controls
Engineering controls encompass a variety of engineered remedies to contain or reduce contamination, or physical barriers intended to limit access to property. Engineering controls, as they relate to Adak Island, include fences, signs, caps or barriers, and treatment systems including monitoring wells. The engineering controls identified in the OU A ROD, petroleum cleanup sites, and those that will apply as interim measures to OU B are described below.
Under the OU A ROD signed in 2000, fishing advisory signs were posted for subsistence fishers because of low levels of PCBs detected in bottom fish (rock sole) and shellfish (blue mussels) of Sweeper Cove and Kuluk Bay. The OU A ROD Amendment removes the requirement for fish advisory signs. Instead, the Navy will provide an information pamphlet to the residents of the City of Adak, because they are the most likely people to eat locally caught fish and shellfish as part of a subsistence diet. Fish information pamphlets will be updated as new information is collected and trends are analyzed. Copies of the updated pamphlets will be put in residence mail boxes, and copies will be placed at the City of Adak and U.S. Fish and Wildlife offices. The consumption of rock sole or blue mussels by recreational fishers poses no unacceptable health risks.
Ordnance hazard signs are in place on fencing around the part of the perimeter of the access restricted area adjacent to Lake Andrew. As of the end of the 2002 field season, remediation has been completed on all areas outside the access-restricted area adjacent to Lake Andrew. For this reason, with the exception of the signs at the perimeter of the Lake Andrew area, these signs are no longer required and were removed in 2003. Fences and gates at the access-restricted areas adjacent to Lake Andrew will be retained and maintained until the OU B-2 ROD is executed. Thereafter, ICs and ECs will be subject to the terms of the OU B-2 ROD.
| Other Engineering Controls Other engineering controls/remedies listed in the Comprehensive Monitoring Plan, Revision 1 are listed below.
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