&EPA
Unitm Statn 0«fic« of Errw^nev & ; - ,P/ HW~10 14
e nvironm«nt»! Prottction f«m»ai«l RMOOHM w • -*-^
A«»ncv W»»h,nqton. DC 20460 AUgUSt 1990
••.f^Vsr:Gi'. : •
J10.14 4G£;V,/
DALLAS,- Y ••••;
BACKGROUND INFORMATION:
NATIONAL PRIORITIES LIST, FOAL RDI£
The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) is adding 106 proposed
sites (including 23 Federal facility sites) to the final National Priorities
List (NPL) and dropping 10 proposed sites (including one Federal facility
site) from further consideration. Of the States and Territories, 39 are
adding sites to the NPL in a final rule published in the Federal Register in
August 1990. California leads with 11 new final sites, followed by Iowa with
9 and Illinois with 7. The number of final sites now totals 1,187, including
116 in the Federal facility section.
Of the States and Territories, five have no sites on the new final NPL:
American Samoa, Commonwealth of the Northern Mariana Islands, the District of
Columbia, Trust Territory of the Pacific Islands, and the Virgin Islands. New
Jersey has the largest number of final sites (109), followed by Pennsylvania
(95), California (86), and New York (83). —
Proposed sites now total 20. Final and proposed sites total 1,207. New
Jersey has the largest number of final and proposed sites (109), followed by
Pennsylvania (95) and California (88).
The NPL identifies uncontrolled hazardous waste sites that warrant
further investigation to determine if long-term "remedial action" is
necessary. Sites on the NPL are eligible for such action under the
Comprehensive Environmental Response, Conpensation, and Liability Act
(CERCLA), enacted on December 11, 1980, as amended by the Superfund Amendments
and Reauthorization Act (SARA), enacted on October 17, 1986. SARA authorizes
a "Hazardous Substances Superfund" totaling $8.5 billion over 5 years to pay
costs not assumed by responsible parties. EPA has the primary responsibility
for managing cleanup and enforcement activities under Superfund.
This document provides background information on the final rule and the
following lists:
o The 106 sites being added to the final NPL arranged alphabetically
by State.
o The distribution of all sites by State arranged by the number of
new final sites.
Recent Promulgation/ Deletion
At the time of the NPL rulemaking of February 21, 1990 (55 FR 6154),
1,081 sites were on the final NPL. Since then, this proposed site has been
placed on the final NPL:
o United Heckathorn Co., Richmond, California, prcraulgated on March
14, 1990 (55 FR 9688).
-------
Since February 1990, this site has been deleted from the final NFL
because EPA and the State determined that all appropriate response has been
taken:
o Reeser's Landfill, Upper Macungie Township, Pennsylvania, deleted
on May 31, 1990 (55 FR 22030).
Contents of Rule
All of the 106 sites being added to the NPL have scores of 28.50 or above
on the Hazard Ranking System (HRS), a numerically based system designed to
evaluate the relative risks posed by a site to human health or the
environment.
EPA has revised the HRS scores for 37 sites in the rule based on its
review of comments and additional information developed by EPA and the States.
Some of the changes have placed sites in different groups of 50 sites. For
seven sites, including one Federal facility site, the public comments resulted
in an HRS score below the cut-off of 28.50. Accordingly, these sites are
being dropped from the proposed NPL at this time:
o Magnolia City Landfill, Magnolia, Arkansas
o Concord Naval Weapons Station, Concord, California
o Ford Motor Co. (Sludge Lagoon), Ypsilanti, Michigan
o Gautier Oil Co., Inc., Gautier, Mississippi
o Sunray Oil Co. Refinery, Allen, Oklahoma
o Rio Grande Oil Co. Refinery, Sour lake, Texas
o Fort Howard Paper Co. Sludge lagoons, Green Bay, Wisconsin
RCRA-Related Sites
When the first final NPL was promulgated in September 1983, EPA announced
certain listing policies relating to sites that might qualify for the NPL.
One of these policies involved facilities subject to RCRA Subtitle C. EPA's
policy was generally not to place on the NPL, RCRA "regulated units" (that is,
land disposal units that received hazardous waste after the effective date of
the RCRA land (liRprxvil regulations) because EPA can require the owner/operator
to clean them up under RCRA. The RCRA cleanup process and standards are
similar to those under CERCLA, ensuring that all actions taken will protect
human health and the environment. Dropping such sites from the NPL also
preserves CERCLA resources for sites where no other cleanup authority is
available.
-------
In November 1984, the Hazardous and Solid Waste Amendments (HSWA) were
enacted, expanding EPA's authority to require corrective measures under
Subtitle C. As a result of this broadened RCRA authority, EPA revised its
policy for placing non-Federal RCRA-regulated sites on the NPL, and on
June 10, 1986 (54 FR 21109) announced that facilities subject to RCRA Subtitle
C corrective action authorities would be placed on the NPL if one or more of
these conditions exist:
o The facilities are owned by persons who have demonstrated an
inability to finance appropriate corrective action by invoking
bankruptcy laws.
o The facilities have lost authorization to operate (also known as
the loss of Interim Status, or IDIS provision), and there are
additional indications that the owner or operator is unwilling to
undertake corrective action.
o The facilities have not lost authorization to operate but have a
clear history of unwillingness to undertake corrective action.
These situations are determined on a case-by-case basis.
On June 24, 1988 (53 FR 23978) and October 9, 1989 (54 FR 41000), EPA
announced additional components of the NPL/RCRA policy. As a matter of
policy, EPA will list four additional categories of RCRA-related sites:
o Facilities that were treating, storing, or disposing Subtitle C
hazardous waste after November 19, 1980, but that did not file a
Part A permit application by that date as ^required and have little
or no history of compliance with RCRA. EPA believes that these
non- or late filers, although they are technically subject to RCRA,
are not likely to be cleaned up expeditiously under RCRA and so
should be on the NPL.
o Facilities with permits for the treatment, storage, or disposal of
hazardous waste issued before enactment of HSWA, and whose
owners/operators will not voluntarily modify the permit. Pre-HSWA
permittees are not required to take corrective action for releases
from solid waste management units. Under RCRA Section 3004 (u), EPA
does not have the authority to modify a pre-HSWA permit for
corrective action until the permit is reissued. Many pre-HSWA
permits are for 10 years. Since the last pre-HSWA permit was issued
prior to November 8, 1984, it could be 1994 before EPA could modify
some permits to include corrective action. In these cases, EPA
believes CERCLA authorities will result in the most expeditious
cleanup.
-------
o Facilities that filed a Part A permit application for treatment,
storage, or disposal of Subtitle C hazardous waste as a
precautionary measure only. Such facilities — for example,
generators, transporters, or recyclers of hazardous waste — are
not subject to Subtitle C corrective action authorities. These are
referred to as protective filers.
o Facilities that at one time treated or stored Subtitle C hazardous
waste but have since converted to generator-only status (i.e.,
facilities that now store hazardous waste for 90 days or less) or
any other hazardous waste activity not requiring Interim Status.
These facilities, whose Part A permit applications have been
withdrawn with EPA or State approval, are referred to as
converters. EPA believes it has the authority under RCRA Section
3008(u) to compel corrective action at such facilities. However,
RCRA's corrective action program currently focuses primarily on
treatment, storage, and disposal facilities (due to permitting
deadlines in RCRA). Therefore, this category should be on the NFL
to ensure expeditious cleanup. However, if a consent order
requiring remedial action is in effect, a converter need not be
listed.
Three sites in this rule are being dropped from the proposed NPL
consistent with the NPL/RCRA policy.
This site is a late-filer that has come within the RCRA system and over
the past 2 years demonstrated a history of compliance with RCRA regulations:
o Kearney-KPF, Stockton, California. '
This site now is subject to a post-HSWA permit that includes corrective
action requirements:
o Solvent Service, Inc., San Jose, California.
This site is a converter that has agreed to corrective action under a
RCRA consent corrective action order:
o Warner Electric Brake and Clutch Co., Roscoe, Illinois.
s
Five sites in this rule are being added to the final NPL consistent with
the NPL/RCRA policy.
-------
These three sites are subject to Subtitle C corrective action
authorities, but the Part A permits have been withdrawn (converter status):
o Advanced Micro Devices (Building 915), Sunnyvale, California
o Hexcel Corp., Livermore, California
o Westinghouse Electric Corp. (Sharon Plant), Sharon, Pennsylvania.
This site has lost its RCRA authorization to operate and appears
unwilling to undertake corrective action:
o Chera-Solv, Inc., Cheswold, Delaware.
Contamination at this site may not be addressable under RORA Subtitle C
corrective action authorities:
o Apache Powder Co., St. David, Arizona.
Federal Facility Sites
Section 120 (a) of SARA requires that Federal facilities be subject to
and comply with CERdA in the same manner as any nongovernmental entity.
CERCLA Section lll(e) (3), however, generally prohibits use of the Superfund
for remedial actions at Federally owned facilities.
Federal facility sites are placed in a separate section of the NPL.
Prior to this current action, 93 Federal facility sites were on the NPL and 24
were proposed, for a total of 117. This rule adds 23 Federal facility sites
to the NPL and drops 1 site, bringing the total number of final Federal
facility sites to 116. None are in proposed status. '
RCRA Policy for Federal Facility Sites. On June 10, 1986 (FR 21054), EPA
announced components of a policy for several categories of non-Federal sites
subject to RCRA Subtitle C corrective action authorities. Because most
Federal facilities have RCRA-regulated units within their boundaries, EPA
determined that a separate NPI/RCRA policy should be adopted for Federal
facilities. As a result, on March 13, 1989 (54 FR 10520), EPA announced it
would place on the NPL those sites located on Federally owned or operated
facilities that meet the NPL eligibility requirements—e.g., HRS scores of
28.50 or greater—even if the Federal facility also is subject to the
corrective action authorities of RCRA Subtitle C. Cleanup, if appropriate,
could then proceed at those sites under either CERdA or RCRA. The policy is
based on several considerations:
-------
o Congress clearly intended that Federal facility sites should be on
the NFL.
o Strict application of the non-Federal NPL/RCRA policy would exclude
virtually all Federal facility sites from the NFL because they
would not likely meet any of the criteria necessary for listing
(inability to pay as evidenced by invocation of bankruptcy laws or
demonstrated unwillingness to comply with RCRA).
o Placing RCRA-regulated Federal sites on the NFL serves the primary
purpose of listing Federal facility sites: to advise the public of
the status of Federal government cleanup efforts.
o Listing these sites helps Federal agencies set priorities and focus
cleanup efforts on those sites that present the most serious
problem.
Radioactive Release Sites
Three sites with radioactive releases are being added to the final NFL
because they are not contaminated as a result of operations licensed by the
Nuclear Regulatory Commission:
o Kerr-MoGee (Reed-Keppler Park), West Chicago, Illinois
o Kerr-^fcGee (Residential Areas), West Chicago/DuPage County,
Illinois
o Kerr-MaGee (Sewage Treatment Plant), West Chicago, Illinois.
Revised HRS
On December 23, 1988 (53 FR 51962), EPA proposed, revisions to the HRS in
response to CERCIA Section 105 (c) (1), added by SARA, which provides that EPA
should revise the HRS by October 17, 1988 (24 months after the enactment of
SARA). The revised HRS is scheduled to be published in the Federal Register
in 1990. Until then, EPA is continuing to propose and promulgate sites using
the current HRS, in accordance with CERCIA Section 105(c) (1) and Congressional
intent (see 54 FR 13299, March 31, 1989). EPA plans to take final action on
all sites now in proposed status before the effective date of the revised HRS.
Name Revisions
The names of two sites in this final rule have been changed in response
to information received during the comment period. The change is intended to
reflect more accurately the location, nature, or potential sources of
contamination at these sites:
o Cheshire Ground Water Contamination (proposed as Cheshire Associate
Property), Cheshire, Connecticut.
o North Market Street (proposed as Tosco Corp. (Spokane Terminal)),
Spokane, Washington.
-------
Additional Publications
Three additional publications relative to this final rule are available:
ions of 106 Sites Placed on the Final National Priorities
in August 1990. Publication HW-8.25. For a single free copy,
contact EPA's Public Information Center (PIC), PM-211B, 401 M St.
SW, Washington, DC 20460, telephone 202-382-2080.
o Descriptions of 20 Sites Proposed for the National Priorities
as of August 1990. The descriptions have not been updated since
they were last issued but have merely been compiled into one
document as a convenience. Publication HW-8.26. Available from
PIC.
o National Priorities T.ist. S»'yplementaTy T.isKg and Supporting
Materials. August 1990. Publication HW-10.14S. Available from PIC.
Descriptions of all proposed and final NPL sites are now contained in
eight documents: HW-8.25 and 8.26 (just issued) plus these six previously
issued documents:
o Descriptions of 71 Sites Placed on the Final National Priorities
List in February 1990. Publication HW-8.23. Available from PIC.
O Descriptions Of 29 Sites Placed OP the Final National PHrnHHea
List in November 1989. Publication HW-8.21. Available from PIC.
Placed on the Firv*1 National Prior it i«?g
Publication HW-8.19. Available from PIC.
List in March 1989.
Placed on the
Publication HW-8.15.
National Prioritigg
Available from PIC.
Descritions of 272 Sit^s Placed on the
National
List. 1985-87. Previously, these descriptions were available in
two documents. They have been compiled into one document as a
convenience. Publication HW-8.10/8.11. Available from PIC.
o pogrrriptions of sit>?s on QiTent National Prioritig^ T.i
-------
National Priorities List,
New Final Sites (by State)
August 1990
NPL
Rank
436
332
293
521
901
588
587
188
1053
335
1052
505
584
662
573
814
826
838
942
699
703
575
516
660
414
295
564
799
68
74
284
806
356
St
AK
AL
AR
AZ
CA
CA
CA
CA
CA
CA
CA
CA
CO
CT
DE
DE
DE
DE
FL
FL
FL
FL
FL
GA
GA
IA
IA
IA
IA
IA
IA
IA
IA
Site Name
Arctic Surplus
T.H. Agricul & Nutri (Montgomery)
Monroe Auto Equip (Paragould Pit)
Apache Powder Co .
Advanced Micro Devices (Bldg. 915)
Crazy Horse Sanitary Landfill
Hexcel Corp.
Industrial Waste Processing
Intersil Inc. /Siemens Components
Sulphur Bank Mercury Mine
Watkins- Johnson Co. (Stewart Div)
Western Pacific Railroad Co.
Chemical Sales Co.
Cheshire Ground Water Contamin
Chem-Solv, Inc.
Kent County Landfill (Houston)
Koppers Co., Inc. (Newport Plant)
Sealand Limited
Anaconda Aluminum/Mil go Electron
B&B Chemical Co . , Inc .
BMI- Textron
Madison County Sanitary Landfill
Woodbury Chemical (Princeton Pint)
Diamond Shamrock Corp. Landfill
Woolfolk Chemical Works, Inc.
E.I. Du Pont (County Rd X23)
Fairfield Coal Gasification Plant
Farmers' Mutual Cooperative
Lehigh Portland Cement Co.
Northwestern States Portland Cem
Peoples Natural Gas Co.
Sheller-Globe Corp. Disposal
White Farm Equipment Co. Dump
City/County
Fairbanks
Montgomery
Paragould
St. David
Sunnyvale
Salinas
Livermore
Fresno
Cupertino
Clear Lake
Scotts Valley
Oroville
Denver
Cheshire
Cheswold
4 Houston
' Newport
Mount Pleasant
Miami
Hialeah
Lake Park
Madison
Princeton
Cedartown
Fort Valley
West Point
Fairfield
Hospers
Mason City
Mason City
Dubuque
Keokuk
Charles City
* State top priority site
8
-------
NPL
Rank St
National Priorities List,
New Final Sites (by State)
August 1990
Site Name
City/County
72 ID Eastern Michaud Flats Contamin
114 ID Monsanto Chemical (Soda Springs)
750 IL Adams County Quincy Landfills 2&3
164 IL Beloit Corp.
1034 IL Central Illinois Public Serv Co.
513 IL Kerr-McGee (Reed-Keppler Park)
554 IL Kerr-McGee (Residential Areas)
709 IL Kerr-McGee (Sewage Treat Plant)
205 IL MIG/Dewane Landfill
417 IN Conrail Rail Yard (Elkhart)
416 IN Tippecanoe Sanitary Landfill, Inc
176 IN Whiteford Sales&Ser/Nationalease
748 KY Caldwell Lace Leather Co., Inc.
347 KY Fort Hartford Coal Co Stone Qurry
1030 KY Green River Disposal, Inc.
791 LA Combustion, Inc.
637 MI Allied Paper/Portage Ck/Kalamaz R
990 MI Cannelton Industries, Inc.
344 MI Peerless Plating Co.
423 MN Dakhue Sanitary Landfill
285 MO Oronogo-Duenweg Mining Belt
1003 MO Westlake Landfill
1000 NC Hevi-Duty Electric Co.
1049 NE 10th Street Site
895 NE Nebraska Ordnance Plant (former)
570 NJ Chemical Insecticide Corp.
952 NJ Higgins Disposal
829 NJ Lodi Municipal Well
339 NM Prewitt Abandoned Refinery
522 NV Carson River Mercury Site
1022 NY Sealand Restoration, Inc.
Pocatello
Soda Springs
Quincy
Rockton
Taylorville
West Chicago
W Chic/DuPage Cnty
West Chicago
Belvidere
Elkhart
Lafayette
South Bend
Auburn
Olaton
Maceo
Denham Springs
Kalamazoo
Sault Sainte Marie
Muskegon
Cannon Falls
Jasper County
Bridgeton
Goldsboro
Columbus
Mead
Edison Township
Kingston
Lodi
Prewitt
Lyon/Churchill Cnty
Lisbon
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National Priorities List,
New Final Sites (by State)
August 1990
NPL
Rank
922
589
1045
413
868
78
453
845
428
950
542
447
635
640
854
159
223
1047
St
OH
OR
PA
PA
PA
PA
PA
SC
SD
TN
TX
UT
VA
WA
WA
WA
WI
WI
Site Name
Reilly Tar & Chemical (Dover Pint)
Union Pacific Railroad Tie Treat
Dublin TCE Site
Ohio River Park
Paoli Rail Yard
Salford Quarry
Westinghouse Elec (Sharon Plant)
Para-Chera Southern, Inc.
Williams Pipe Line Disposal Pit
Murray-Ohio Mfg (Horseshoe Bend)
Tex-Tin Corp.
Sharon Steel (Midvale Tailings)
Abex Corp .
Centralia Municipal Landfill
North Market Street
Seattle Mun Lndfll (Kent Hghlnds)
Better Brite Chrome & Zinc Shops
Waste Management (Brookfield Lfl)
City/County
Dover
The Dalles
Dublin Borough
Neville Island
Paoli
Salford Township
Sharon
Simpsonville
Sioux Falls
Lawrenceburg
Texas City
Midvale
Portsmouth
* Centralia
Spokane
Kent
DePere
Brookfield
874 WY Mystery Bridge Rd/U.S. Highway 20
Evansville
Number of New Final Sites:
83
10
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National Priorities List,
Federal Facility Sites, New Final (by State)
August 1990
NPL
Grl
7
8
6
12
17
19
13
13
8
22
21
3
16
11
21
11
14
12
17
10
11
3
3
St
AK
AK
AK
AZ
CA
CA
CA
CT
FL
HI
IA
ID
KS
NJ
NJ
NM
NY
PA
SD
TX
TX
UT
WA
Number of
Site Name
Elmendorf Air Force Base
Fort Wainwright
Standard Steel&Met Sal Yd (USDOT)
Luke Air Force Base
Edwards Air Force Base
Lawrence Livermore Lab-300(USDOE)
Tracy Defense Depot
New London Submarine Base
Homestead Air Force Base
Schofield Barracks
Iowa Army Ammunition Plant
Mountain Home Air Force Base
Fort Riley
Federal Aviation Admin Tech Cent '
Naval Weapons Stat Earle (Site A)
Lee Acres Landfill (USDOI)
Seneca Army Depot
Tobyhanna Army Depot
Ellsworth Air Force Base
Air Force Plant #4 Gener Dynamics
Longhorn Army Ammunition Plant
Tooele Army Depot (North Area)
Bangor Naval Submarine Base
New Final Federal Facility Sites: 23
City/County
Greater Anchorage Bo
Fairbanks N Star Bor
Anchorage
Glendale
Kern County
Livermore
Tracy
New London
Homestead
Oahu
Middletown
Mountain Home
Junction City
Atlantic County
Colts Neck
Farmington
Romulus
Tobyhanna
Rapid City
Fort Worth
Karnack
Tooele
Silverdale
* State top priority site
1: Sites are placed in groups (Gr) corresponding to groups of SO
on the final NPL
11
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National Priorities List,
Final and Proposed Sites Per State/Territory
(by New Final Sites)
August 1990
New Final Total Final Total Proposed
State/Territory
California
Iowa
Illinois
Florida
Pennsylvania
New Jersey
Alaska
Delaware
Washington
Idaho
Indiana
Kentucky
Michigan
Texas
Arizona
Connecticut
Georgia
Missouri
Nebraska
New Mexico
New York
South Dakota
Utah
Wisconsin
Alabama
Arkansas
Colorado
Hawaii
Kansas
Louisiana
Minnesota
Nevada
North Carolina
Ohio
Oregon
South Carolina
Tennessee
Virginia
Wyoming
American Samoa
Commonwealth of Marianas
District of Columbia
Guam
Maine
Maryland
Massachusetts
Mississippi
Montana
New Hampshire
North Dakota
Oklahoma
Puerto Rico
Rhode Island
Trust Territories
Vermont
Virgin Islands
West Virginia
Non-Fed Fed Non-Fed
8
8
7
5
5
3
1
4
3
2
3
3
3
1
1
1
2
2
2
1
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
3
1
0
1
1
2
3
0
1
1
0
0
0
2
1
1
0
0
0
1
1
1
1
0
0
0
0
1
1
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
66
19
32
47
91
103
2
19
31
7
35
17
78
25
7
14
11
19
5
8
79
2
5
39
10
10
13
0
10
10
40
1
21
30
7
22
12
19
2
0
0
0
1
7
7
22
2
8
15
2
9
8
9
0
8
0
5
Fed Non-Fed Fed Total
20
1
4
4
4
6
4
1
14
2
0
0
0
3
3
1
2
3
1
2
4
1
4
0
2
0
3
1
1
1
2 \
0
1
3
1
1
2
1
1
0
0
0
0
2
2
3
0
0
1
0
1
1
2
0
0
0
0
2
1
1
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
1
0
0
2
0
0
0
0
3
0
0
0
0
6
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
1
0
0
2
0
0
1
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
88
21
37
51
95
109
6
20
45
9
35
17
78
28
11
15
13
24
6
10
83
3
12
39
12
10
16
7
11
11
42
1
22
33
8
23
14
20
3
0
0
0
1
9
10
25
2
10
16
2
11
9
11
0
8
0
5
Total
83
23
1071
116
20
1207
12
-------
United States
Environmental Protection
Agency
For further mforrravon call the
Superfuna Hotline, :oil-free at
1-800-424-9346 or 382-3000
m Washington. DC. metropolitan
area, or the U S EPA
Superfund Offices listed below
For publications, contact
Public Information Center,
PM-211B
401 M Street SW
Washington DC 20460
CML (202) 382-2080
FTS 382-2080
Office of Emergency and Remedial
Response, OS-230
401 M Street. SW
Washington. DC 20460
CML: (202) 475-8103
FTS: 475-8103
Region 1
Superfund Branch. HSL-CAN 2
John F. Kennedy Building
Boston, MA 02203
CML: (617) 573-9610
FTS: 833-1610
Region 2
Emergency & Remedial Response
Division
26 Federal Plaza
New York. NY 10278
CML. (212) 264-8672
FTS: 264-8672
Region 3
Site Assessment Section. 3HW13
841 Chestnut Building
Philadelphia. PA 19107
CML: (215) 597-3437
FTS: 597-3437
Region 4
Waste Management Division
345 Courtland Street. NE
Atlanta. GA 30365
CML: (404) 347-3454
FTS: 257-3454
Region 5
Remedial Response Branch. 5HS-11 \
230 South Dearborn Street.
12th Floor
Chicago. IL 60604
CML: (312)886-5877
FTS: 886-5877
Region 6
Superfund Management Branch, 6H-M
1445 Ross Avenue
Dallas. TX 75202-2733
CML: (214) 655-6740
FTS: 255-6740
Region 7
Superfund Branch
726 Minnesota Avenue
Kansas City. KS 66101
CML: (913)551-7052
FTS: 276-7052
Region 8
Superfund Remedial Branch. 8HWM-SR
999 18th Street, Suite 500
Denver. CO 80202-2405
CML. (303) 294-7630
FTS: 330-7630
Region 9
Waste Management Division, H-1
1235 Mission Street
San Francisco. CA 94103
CML. (415)744-1730
FTS: 484-1730
Region 10
Superfund Branch. HW-113
1200 6tn Avenue
Seattle. WA 98101
CML: (206) 442-1987
FTS: 399-1987
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