United States
Environmental Protection
Agency
Office of Solid Waste and
Emergency Response
(5102W)
EPA 542-R-94-006
September 1994
v»ER
-------
Summary Proceedings
Rocky Mountain Remediation Marketplace: Business
Opportunities for Innovative Technologies
Sponsored, by:
U.S. Environmental Protection Agency
Technology Innovation Office
Washington, DC 20460
and
Risk Reduction Engineering Laboratory
Cincinnati, OH 45268
Western Governors' Association
and
and
^"7 Region IV
Georgia 3*31$
Regional States
Denver, Colorado
September 27-28, 1994
Printed on
Recycled Paper

-------
Acknowledgements
This conference was conducted under the direction of Ms. Linda Fiedler, work
assignment manager for the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency's Technology
Innovation Office. Mr. Thomas R. De Kay, Ph.D. is the Project Officer.
Special acknowledgement is due the Regional and state staff who assisted with the
conference and whose names appear on the List of Speakers. They provided the
detailed information in this document. Their cooperation and willingness to share their
knowledge and expertise on marketing and business opportunities for innovative
treatment technologies encourages the development and application of those
technologies.
Notice
The abstracts contained in this Proceedings do not nece«?<5ariu, ^ .
Agency, and no official endorsement should be inferred.	VI8WS
Mention of firms, trade names, or commercial product-? in thi* ^
constitute endorsement or recommendation for use	document does not
This material has been funded by the U.S. Environmental pr^+„^-
Contract Number 68-W2-0004.	Protect,°n Agency under
u

-------
Abstract
The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency's Technology Innovation Office and Risk
Reduction Engineering Laboratory are co-sponsoring The Rocky Mountain
Remediation Marketplace conference, with the Western Governors' Association and
states in the region to provide an opportunity for developers and vendors of innovative
treatment technologies to explore business opportunities and markets for cleaning up
waste sites. The information presented includes specific data on the number and
types of contaminated sites in each state and nationwide, international markets,
pertinent state regulations and contacts, and sources of technology development and
commercialization funding and guidance. The conference attendees include vendors
of innovative treatment technologies, entrepreneurs, private clean-up contractors, as
well as federal and state officials responsible for remediation.
This conference is the second in a series of conferences exploring regional markets
for remediating contaminated sites. The first conference, entitled Northeast
Remediation Marketplace, was held December 7-8, 1993 in Hartford, CT, and the third
for the West Coast Remediation Marketplace, is scheduled for November 15-16, 1994
in San Francisco, CA.
iii

-------
Table of Contents
Page
Agenda	vii
List of Speakers 		ix
List of Exhibitors	xi
Keynote Addresses
Peter D. Robertson, Deputy Assistant Administrator, Office of Solid Waste and
Emergency Response, U.S. Environmental Protection Agency 	3
Gordon M. Davidson, President, Capital Environmental
Technology Innovation in the Environmental Marketplace 	4
Colorado Markets and Regulations
Thomas Looby, Director, Colorado Office of Environment	6
Cleanup Needs and Opportunities in the State of Idaho
Lance Nielsen, Remediation Bureau Chief, Idaho Division of Environmental
Quality	6
Driving the Cleanup Market in New Mexico
David Coss, Director, Environmental Protection Division, New Mexico
Environment Department	7
Utah Markets and Regulations
Kent P. Gray, Deputy Director, Utah Division of Environmental Health	7
Federal Markets
Walter W. Kovalick, Jr., Ph.D., Director, Technology Innovation Office,
Office of Solid Waste and Emergency Response, U.S. Environmental
Protection Agency	10
Federal Markets
Rear Admiral Richard Guimond, Principal Deputy Assistant Secretary,
Environmental Management, Department of Energy 	26
Federal Markets
Colonel Jim M. Owendoff, Office of Deputy Undersecretary of
Defense, Environmental Security, Department of Defense	26
U.S. Export Strategy
Jeffrey Hunker, Senior Policy Advisory to the Secretary, U.S. Department
of Commerce	28
Colorado International Trade Program
Morgan Smith, Director, Colorado International Trade Office	28
v

-------
Table of Contents (Continued)
Page
Small Business Loans for Environmental Technology Companies
David Leavitt- Augustine, Assistant Regional Administrator for Economic
Development, U.S. Small Business Administration 	32
Small Business Assistance Programs
James Hudson, Ph.D., Director, Lakewood, Colorado Small Business
Development Center		
Attracting Financial Backing
Peter Bloomer, President, Colorado Venture Management, Inc		
EPA's Environmental Technology Initiative: The Role of the Private Sector
Jonathan Hermann, Senior Technical Advisor/Assistant to Director, Risk Reduction
Engineering Laboratory, U.S. EPA 	 34
Committee to Develop On-site Innovative Technologies
James Souby, Executive Director, Western Governors' Association	 44
Colorado Environmental Business Alliance
James "Skip" Spensley, Esq., Co-Chairman, Colorado Environmental
Business Alliance 	
. 44
New Mexico Environmental Alliance: An Environmental and Economic
Partnership for Opportunity
Marsha Oldakowski, New Mexico Economic Development Department .... 45
Cleanup Opportunities at Rocky Flats
Leanne Smith, Deputy Manager, Rocky Flats Environmental Field Office ... 4g
Idaho National Engineering Laboratory, Idaho
Dirk Gombert, Ph.D., Technical Program Manager, Westinghouse
Idaho Nuclear Company	 49
Remediation Options for the Environmental Restoration Project at Los Alamos
National Laboratory
Tracy G. Glatzmaier, Project Leader, Environmental Restoration Project, Los
Alamos National Laboratory	
Cleanup Opportunities at Federal Facilities
Thomas E. Blejwas, Ph.D., Director, Environmental Operations Center,
Sandia National Labs		 ^
List of Attendees	 62
vi

-------
Agenda
September 27, 1994
Welcoming Remarks	Walter W. Kovalick, Jr., Ph.D.
Director, Technology Innovation Office, Office of Solid Waste and Emergency Response, U.S. EPA
Plenary Session: Perspectives on New Technology Opportunities
Moderator: Walter W. Kovalick, Jr., Ph.D.
Peter D. Robertson
Deputy Assistant Administrator, Office of Solid Waste and Emergency Response, U.S. EPA
Gordon M. Davidson
President, Capital Environmental
Session 1: State Markets and Regulations
Moderator: Barry Levene, Chief, North Dakota and Colorado Remedial Section, U.S.EPA, Region VIII
Thomas Looby
Director, Colorado Office of Environment
Lance Nielsen
Remediation Bureau Chief, Idaho Division of Environmental Quality
David Coss
Director, Environmental Protection Division, New Mexico Environment Department
Kent P. Gray
Deputy Director, Utah Division of Environmental Quality
Session 2: Federal Markets
Walter W. Kovalick, Jr., Ph.D.
Director, Technology Innovation Office, Office of Solid Waste and Emergency Response, U.S. EPA
Rear Admiral Richard Guimond
Principal Deputy Assistant Secretary, Envimnmental Management, Department of Energy
Colonel Jim Owendoff
Office of Deputy Undersecretary of Defense, Environmental Security
Session 3: International Markets
Moderator: Linda Fiedler, Technology Innovation Office, Office of Solid Waste and Emergency Response, U.S. EPA
U. S. Export Strategy	Jeffrey Hunker
Senior Policy Advisor to the Secretary, U.S. Department of Commerce
Colorado International Trade Program	Morgan Smith
Director, Colorado International Trade Office
vii

-------
Agenda (continued)
September 28, 1994
Walter W. Kovallck, Jr., Ph.D.
Introductory Re/narte^	/nfl0v,aton Office, Office of Solid Waste and Emergency Response, U.S. EPA
Session* Business Manning
Moderator: Walter W. Kovalick, Jr., Ph.D.
romDanies	David Leavltt-Augustine
Small Business	US.» Business
James Hudson, Ph.D.
Small Business Assistance Programs Direc(of. ^evirood, Co/oracto Small Business Development Center
Peter Bloomer
Attracting Financial Backing	President Colorado Venture Management, Inc.
National Environment^^^J^/ /^tor/Assistant to Director, HfeAc Reduction Engineer^" La&orafo^
Committee to Develop On-site Innovative Technologies £xgcutjve Djrector> western Governors' Association
. A„ianrfi	James "Skip" Spensley, Esq.
Colorado Environmental Business Ainang	co-Chairman, Colorado Environmental Business Affiance
Marsha Oldakowskl
New Mexico Environmental Alliance	Moii, M/wi^	<->—
Session 6: Cleanup Opportunities at Federal Facilities
Moderator: Diane Lynne, Attorney, Federal Facilities Enforcement Office, U.S. EPA
Cleanup Opportunities at Rocky Flats, Colorado	i#dhk. »
Damitvkiananar /Vic 1.. _ ^1® SmitH
Idaho Natfonal Engineering Laboratory, Idaho	Dirk Gomhart di. n
Technical Program Manager, Westirighouse Idaho Nuclear Con^y ^/Jcoi
Los Alamos National Laboratory, New Mexico	Tracy G Giat.M i
Project Leader, Environmental Management Programs Office, Los Alamos NatfonajLaboJatoty
Sandia National Laboratory, New Mexico	Thomas E. Blaiwo* m. n.
Director, Environmental Operations Center, SanaatSSorm^
Closing Remarks
viii

-------
List of Speakers
Thomas E. Blejwas, Ph.D.
Director
Environmental Operations Center
Sandia National Labs
P.O. Box 5800
Albuquerque, NM 87185-1315
505-648-0905
505-848-0304 (Fax)
Peter Bloomer
President
Colorado Venture Management, Inc.
4845 Pearl East Circle #300
Boulder, CO 80301
303-440-4055
303-440-4636 (Fax)
David Coss
Director, Environmental Protection Division
New Mexico Environment Department
1190 St. Francis Drive
Santa Fe, NM 87503
505-827-2834
505-827-2836 (Fax)
Gordon M. Davidson
President
Capital Environmental
1299 Pennsylvania Avenue, NW
Washington, DC 20004
202-383-7446
202-383-6610 (Fax)
Dirk Gombert, Ph.D.
Technical Program Manager
Westinghouse Idaho Nuclear Company
P.O. Box 4000
MS-3428
Idaho Falls, ID 83415-3428
208-526-4624
208-526-9805 (Fax)
Kent P. Gray
Deputy Director
Division of Environmental Response and
Remediation
Utah Department of Environmental Quality
P.O. Box 144840
Salt Lake City, UT 84114-4840
801-536-4128
801-359-8853 (Fax)
Rear Admiral Richard Guimond
Principal Deputy Assistant Secretary
Environmental Management
U.S. DOE
1000 Independence Avenue, S.W.
EM-1
Washington, DC 20585
202-586-7710
202-586-7757 (Fax)
Tracy G. Glatzmaier
Project Leader
Environmental Management Programs Office
Los Alamos National Laboratory
P.O. Box 1663, MS-M992
Los Alamos, NM 87545
505-665-2613
505-665-4747 (Fax)
Jonathan Herrmann
Senior Technical Advisor/Assistant to
Director
Risk Reduction Engineering Laboratory, Office
of Research and Development
U.S. Environmental Protection Agency
26 W. Martin Luther King Drive
Cincinnati, OH 45266
513-569-7839
513-569-7787 (Fax)
James Hudson, Ph.D.
Director
Lakewood Small Business Development
Center
13300 West Sixth Avenue
Lakewood, CO 80401
303-987-0710
303-987-1331 (Fax)
Jeffrey Hunker
Senior Policy Advisor to the Secretary
U.S. Department of Commerce
Washington, D.C. 20230
202-482-6055
202-482-4636 (Fax)
Walter W. Kovalick, Jr., Ph.D.
Director, Technology Innovation Office
Office of Solid Waste and Emergency
Response
U.S. Environmental Protection Agency
401 M Street, S.W. (5102W)
Washington, DC 20460
703-308-8800
703-308-8528 (Fax)
ix

-------
Barry Levene
Chief, North Dakota and Colorado
Remedial Section
U.S. EPA - Region VIII
899 18th Street, Suite 500
Denver, CO 80202-2405
303-293-1843
303-293-1238 (Fax)
Thomas Looby
Director
Colorado Office of Environment
4300 Cherry Creek Dr. South
Denver, CO 80222-1530
303-692-3099
303-782-4969 (Fax)
David Leavitt-Augustine
Assistant Regional Administrator for
Economic Development
U.S. Small Business Administration
633 17th Street
Denver, CO 80202
303-294-7115
303-294-7153 (Fax)
Lance Nielsen
Remediation Bureau Chief
Idaho Division of
Environmental Quality
1410 N. Hilton
Boise, ID 83720
208-334-5885
208-334-0576 (Fax)
Marsha Oldakowski
New Mexico Environmental Alliance
NM Economic Development Department
1100 St. Francis Drive
Santa Fe, NM 87505
505-827-0563
505-827-0588 (Fax)
Colonel Jim M. Owendoff
Office of Deputy Undersecretary of Defense
Environmental Security
U.S. Department of Defense
3000 Defense
Pentagon
Washington, DC 20301-3000
703-697-9793
703-695-4981 (Fax)
Peter D. Robertson
Deputy Assistant Administrator
Office of Solid Waste and Emergency Response
U.S. Environmental Protection Agency
401 M Street, S.W. (MC 5101)
Washington, DC 20460
202-260-4610
202-260-3527 (Fax)
X
Leanne Smith
Deputy Manager
DOE Rocky Flats Field
Office
P.O. Box 928
Golden, CO 80402-0928
303-966-2025
303-966-6054 (Fax)
Morgan Smith
Director
Colorado International Trade Office
1625 Broadway, Suite 680
Denver, CO 80202
303-892-3850
303-892-3820 (Fax)
James Souby
Executive Director
Western Governors' Association
600 17th Street
Denver, CO 80202-5442
303-623-9378
303-534-7309 (Fax)
James "Skip" Spensley, Esq.
Co-Chairman Colorado Environmental
Business Alliance
Holme Roberts & Owen LLC
1700 Lincoln
Suite 4100
Denver, CO 80203
303-861-7000
303-866-0200 (Fax)

-------
List of Exhibitors
ARMY ENVIRONMENTAL CENTER
Attn: SFIM-AEC-IRB
Aberdeen Proving Ground, MD 21015
410-671-1523
410-671-1548 (Fax)
Contact: Mary Ellen Maly
COLORADO CENTER FOR ENVIRONMENTAL
MANAGEMENT
999 18th Street, #2750
Denver, CO 80202
303-297-0180
303-297-0188 (Fax)
Contact: Cha Snyder
STATE OF COLORADO/COLORADO SMALL
BUSINESS DEVELOPMENT CENTER
1625 Broadway
# 1710
Denver, CO 80202
303-892-3840
303-892-3848 (Fax)
Contact: Rick Garcia
GREAT PLAINS - ROCKY MOUNTAIN
HAZARDOUS SUBSTANCE RESEARCH
CENTER
Ward Hall 101
Kansas State University
Manhatten, KS 66506
913-532-6519
913-532-5985 (Fax)
Contact: Pat McDonald
IDAHO NATIONAL ENGINEERING
LABORATORY
c/o Westinghouse Idaho Nuclear Company
P.O. Box 4000
MS-3428
Idaho Falls, ID 83415-3428
208-526-0850
208-526-0953 (Fax)
Contact: Gary McDannel
LOS ALAMOS NATIONAL LABORATORY
EMMS J591
Los Alamos, NM 87545
505-667-1229
505-665-8190 (Fax)
Contact: Cindy Boone
NATIONAL ASSOCIATION OF STATE
DEVELOPMENT AGENCIES
750 First Street, NE
Suite 710
Washington, DC 20002
202-898-1302
202-898-1312 (Fax)
Contact: Julie Pike
NATIONAL GOVERNORS' ASSOCIATION
STATE ENVIRONMENTAL TECHNOLOGY
STRATEGIES AND PROGRAMS
444 North Capitol Street
Washington, DC 20001
202-624-7739
202-624-5313 (Fax)
Contact: Jim Solyst
On Site: Barbara Wells
NATIONAL INSTITUTE OF STANDARDS &
TECHNOLOGY
MS 104
325 Broadway
Boulder, CO 80303
303-497-7038
303-497-5222 (Fax)
Contact: Joseph Berke
On Site: Fred McGehan and Collier Smith
STATE OF NEW MEXICO AND NEW MEXICO
ENVIRONMENTAL ALLIANCE
NM Economic Development Department
1100 St. Francis Drive
Santa Fe, NM 87505
505-827-0563
505-827-0588 (Fax)
Contact: Marsha Oldakowski
xi

-------
ROCKY FLATS ENVIRONMENTAL
TECHNOLOGY SITE
P.O. Bo* 464, T130F
Golden, CO 80402-0464
303-966-2302
303-966-6153 (Fax)
Contact: Eileen Jemison
SUPERFUND INNOVATIVE TECHNOLOGY
EVALUATION (SITE)
U.S. Environmental Protection Agency
RREL/STDD (MS-215)
26 W. Martin Luther King Drive
Cincinnati, OH 45268
513-569-7696
513-569-7620 (Fax)
Contact: John Martin
TECHNOLOGY INNOVATION OFFICE
U.S. Environmental Protection Agency
Mail Code 5102
401 M Street, S.W.
Washington, DC 20460
703-308-8845
703-308-8528 (Fax)
Contact: John Quander
U.S. ARMY CORPS OF ENGINEERS
HTRW Center of Expertise
Attn: CEMPRO-ED-HS
P.O. Box 103 Downtown Station
Omaha, NE 68101-0103
402-221-7408
402-221-7561 (Fax)
Contacts: Don Ohnstad and Tom Pfeffer
U.S. DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
U.S. and Foreign Commercial Service
International Trade Administration
1625 Broadway, Suite 680
Denver, CO 80202
303-844-6622
303-844-5651 (Fax)
Contact: Neil W. Hesse, District Director
U.S. SMALL BUSINESS ADMINISTRATION
633 17th Street
Denver, CO
303-294-7115
303-291-7153 (Fax)
Contact: David Leavitt-Augustine

-------
Plenary Session:
Perspectives on
New Technology
Opportunities

-------
j	Keynote Addresses
I
|	Peter D. Robertson
|	Deputy Assistant Administrator, Office of Solid Waste and Emergency Response
|	U.S. Environmental Protection Agency
| The successful future of the U.S. EPA's cleanup programs will be heavily dependent
|	upon the development and use of innovative regulatory and technological approaches. EPA's
|	commitment to cleaning up contaminated sites must be combined with an aggressive search
|	for technologies that are more cost-effective, help us reach an endpoint faster, are acceptable
|	to the public, and provide answers where today there are no clear technical solutions. The
|	goal of more cost-effective, improved environmental protection can only strengthen U.S.
businesses as they expand into global environmental markets.
Some important changes have been made or are underway at EPA that are meant to
speed up and reduce the cost with which innovative environmental technologies are
introduced and accepted in the marketplace. The goals of the new Environmental
Technology Initiative are: to support technology commercialization; break down regulatory
barriers to technology development and use; provide third party evaluations of the
performance and cost of innovative technologies; and, diffuse commercial innovative
technologies here and abroad. Other recent Agency actions have made it easier to test
technologies on hazardous waste, and to use innovative technologies to meet restrictions on
land disposal of hazardous waste. The EPA also has promulgated a permanent exemption of
underground storage tank petroleum-contaminated media and debris from designation as
RCRA hazardous waste.
Lastly, two bills being considered by Congress will give the Agency new tools to use to
promote environmental technology. Under the new Superfund bill, the government would
share with private parties the risk of employing innovative technology to cleanup sites. And
the National Environmental Technology act is designed to better focus federal government
efforts to promote environmental technology.

-------
*
^	N
i
1
H
I
Technology Innovation in the Environmental Marketplace:
Fears Innovation/Repels Capital - Does It or Doesn }t It?
Gordon M. Davidson
President
Capital Environmental
Although federal and state governments are making a concerted effort to support the
development of environmental technologies, the public and private financing markets are still hesitant
to wade in with infusions of capital. The downturn in the marketplace generally and the drop in stock
price of key innovative technology stocks specifically, has left the financial community feeling that, In
spite of government policy and funding, the environmental marketplace seems to fear innovation and
repel capital.
The question is, why is this view held and how valid is it? What are the reasons for this view and
what impact is it having on the development of innovative technologies?
This talk will address these and similar questions, including covering the factors that are current
barriers to entry into the environmental market. It will also cover the factors that the financial
community assesses in determining whether or not to invest in a business or technology. Finally, It
will address some of the actions being taken by the government and private Industry that are key to
invigorating the environmental technology market.


-------
Session 1:
State Markets and
Regulations

-------
Colorado Markets and Regulations
Thomas Looby
Director
Colorado Office of Environment
Abstract not available at this printing.
Cleanup Needs and Opportunities in the State of Idaho
Lance Nielsen
Remediation Bureau Chief
Idaho Division of Environmental Quality
Introduction: Major sources of contamination in the state of Idaho include: leaking underground
and aboveground petroleum storage tanks (PSTs), active and inactive mining sites, the Idaho National
Engineering Laboratory (INEL) and solvents from past industrial/commercial activities. Contaminated
groundwater is of paramount concern to Idahoans because groundwater is the predominant water
source for most of the drinking water systems.
Background: The Idaho Division of Environmental Quality (DEQ) is a decentralized organization
with six regional offices located throughout the state. Most of the investigations and cleanups of
contaminated sites are overseen and administered by the regional offices. Persons who own or are
considering purchase of a contaminated site, which may need cleanup, should contact the Regional
Administrator and negotiate an agreement to proceed with investigation and cleanup of the site. DEQ
is committed to the protection of Idahoans and our environment. DEQ will work with you to ensure a
timely investigation, and where appropriate, cleanup of the site.
Policy: DEQ does not refer citizens to specific consultants. Idaho requires certification of
petroleum underground storage tank instalIers/retrofitters, tank decommission, and tank testers. A
roster of certified technicians is made available to tank owners upon request.
- Approaches to Cleanup -
General Information: Idaho is relatively under-industrialized. As a result, we do not suffer from
the variety and magnitude of contamination problems experienced by many states.
Petroleum Contamination: Over 700 petroleum contaminated sites have been cleaned up In
Idaho. DEQ staff have streamlined permitting requirements, standardized reporting formats and wHI
soon publish a "Contractor's Handbook" to clearly articulate Idaho's requirements for the
investigation and cleanup of petroleum contaminants.
Mining Sites: Over 5,000 inactive and abandoned mining sites exist in Idaho. Many of these
sites contain significant sources of sulfide ores which generate acid mine drainage. Heavy metal
contamination exists at many of the mine sites, and in the tributaries downstream of the mines.
6

-------
Ite
msm
Cleanup Needs and Opportunities in the State of Idaho, cont'd.
Voluntary Cleanups: Idaho is experiencing steady growth. New industry is relocating to Idaho
at a steady pace. Growth in population and industry has spawned a need to transfer property and to
re-develop former commercial sites for new Industry, in many cases, the property identified for
commercial or residential (re)development has some contamination present Usually, the
contamination must be assessed and remediated before the property can be sold and/or developed.
The Idaho voluntary cleanup program draws on existing statutes and cleanup standards and allows
for timely investigation and cleanup of the property so economic development can occur. Voluntary
cleanups represent the largest opportunity for the marketing of remediation in Idaho.
- Summary -
Idaho DEQ welcomes and encourages the investigation and cleanup of sites within our state.
We are open to the use of Innovative technologies, and focus on the performance standards rather
than the proposed technology.
Driving the Cleanup Market in New Mexico
David Coss
Director, Environmental Protection Division
New Mexico Environment Department
Business opportunities for consulting firms and contractors involved in environmental assessment
and restoration in New Mexico have never been better. The development of vigorous hazardous
waste, Superfund, and water quality programs has fostered environmental awareness on the part of
private industry. Recent emergence of state-funded or state-administered cleanup programs,
particularly in the realm of underground storage tanks, has served to further enhance opportunity for
the "environmental entrepreneur."
Regulations and the government programs that administer them are often thought of as make-
work programs for environmental consultants. While this may be so, technology Innovation spurred
by agencies has become a major force in opening new markets for the imaginative and Innovative
firm. For example, New Mexico's Underground Storage Tank Bureau has actively solicited faster,
better, and cheaper ways to assess and clean up leaking UST sites. Several emerging alternative
(I*®., non-pump and treat) cleanup technologies, such as air sparging/soil venting, have been
developed in New Mexico especially for UST sites in response to the agency's steadfast refusal to
permit "tried-and-true," but demonstrably ineffective, cleanup systems. This in turn has encouraged
small consulting firms to take the risks inherent in applied research and development. A proliferation
of small local firms taking the lead In technology innovation has resulted in environmental benefits
from well-conceived and effective cleanup systems.
Utah Markets and Regulations
Kent P. Gray
Deputy Director
Utah Division of Environmental Quality
Abstract not available at this printing.

-------
Session 2:
Federal Markets

-------
| Federal Markets
Walter W. Kovalick, Jr., Ph.D.
| Director, Technology Innovation Office, Office of Solid Waste and Emergency Response
% U.S. Environmental Protection Agency
J;
Speaker Slides/Overheads follow.


10

-------
oEPA
Cleaning Up the Nation's Waste Sites:
Markets and Technology Trends
J |






4








A
/

d
fs

J





J







y







=4
/







.£=
-rt=J
Market Study Overview **
•	Assist developers/investors by characterizing future
demand
•	View remediation as an opportunity for new firms
•	Focus on site characteristics rather than costs
•	Use existing information plus an analysis of Superfund
n

-------
Sites/Facilities to be Cleaned Up in the U.S. **
Program
¦	Superfund
¦	RCRA Corrective Action
¦	Underground Storage Tanks
¦	Dept. of Defense (DOD)
¦	Dept. of Energy (DOE)
¦	Other Federal Agencies
¦	States
Approximate Number
1,500 - 2,100
1,500 - 3,500
295,000
7,300 (at 1,800 installations)
4,000 (at 110 installations)
350
19,000*
* Sites needing some further investigation that might lead to cleanup
Available Information for Market Analysis **
Cleanup
Program
Site
Identification
Site
Characterization
Technology
Analysis
Historical
Selection
Trends
Superfund
•
•
•
•
Dept. of
Defense
•
•
•

UST
•
•
•

Dept. of
Energy
•
•


RCRA
•
•


Other
Federal
Agencies
•



States
•
O
O

12

-------
Treatment and Disposal Decisions
for Source Control
Superfund Remedial Actions: Summary of
Alternative Treatment Technologies Through
Fiscal Year 1993
(Total Number of Technologies = 666)
Jnpnvative Technologies (290) 44%
Fctahlished Tprhnolooies (376) 56%
Oil-Site Incineration
(102) 15% V
On-Site Incineration
(73) 11%
Solidification/Stabilization ¦
(190) 29%
fiOMDBDDanDDODBI
UOODDCJODODCIOOOOO
janDDDODDonDoaDn
BooaQDQoaaaoaDaa
DDDDDQClDDnDDDaD
DDDnaDDDaDaaaapa
^~aaaDDaoociDon'3
jaaQDDDODDDDPDI
bdpdddoddd001301
JDQaaDQDPPDCID
3QaDDaaaaaaD
3DDPOaaOQD
~~~DDQDO
Other Established (11) 2%
I Washing (15) 2%
Solvent Extraction (4) < 1%
• Ex Situ Bioremediation (38) 6%
• In Situ Bioremediation (30) 5%
In Situ Flushing (18) 3%
Soil Vapor Extraction
(121) 18%
Dechlorination (5) < 1%
- In Situ Vitrification (2) < 1%
Chemical Treatment (1) < 1 /<>
Thermal Desorption (41) 6%
Other Innovative (15) 2%
September 9,1994
13

-------
Project Status of Innovative Treatment
Technologies at NPL Sites as of
September 1994 ft
Technology
Predesign/
In design
Design Complete/
Being Installed/
Operational
Project
Completed
Total
Soil Vapor Extraction
69
42
10
121
Thermal Desorption
26
7
8
41
Ex Situ Bioremediation
24
12
2
38
In Situ Bioremediation
14
14
2
30
Soil Washing
11
3
1
15
In Situ Flushing
14
3
1
18
Dechlorination
3
1
1
5
Solvent Extraction
3
1
0
4
In Situ Vitrification
1
1
0
2
Chemical Treatment
1
0
0
1
Other Innovative Treatment 12
3
0
15
Total
178 (61%)
87 (30%)
25 (9%)
290
September 9,1994
Superfund Remedial Actions:
Application of Innovative Treatment
Technologies ^
140
120
100
Number 80
of
Applications60
40
20
o
Soil Vapor Thermal	Bio-	In Situ	Solvent	Soil
Extraction Desorption remediation Flushing Extraction Washing
Innovative Technology
September 9,1994
14
121
23l
¦I VOCs
n SVOCs
~ Metals
Kffel
To~T2"
TT

-------
Frequency of Volatile Organic Compounds, Semi-volatile
Organic Compounds, and Metals at NPL Sites Without RODs
Number
of Sites
200-1
150
100
50
139
58%
110
31%
107
52
Total VOCs = 318
Total SVOCs = 143
Total Metals = 277
3%
40
10

-Jr
Contaminant Groups

-------
Estimated Quantities of Contaminated Material **
10,000
8,000
6,000
Cubic Yards
(x 1,000) 4,000
2,000
0
* Includes explosives, radon, nitrates, and other organics
Findings for Future Superfund Markets **
¦	The most common contaminants in the intermediate-term market (3-5 years):
•	VOCs (60% of sites)
•	Metals (53% of sites)
•	SVOCs (27% of sites)
¦	EPA will select technologies for at least 26 million cubic yards of
contaminated material at 523 sites in the intermediate term
¦	An additional 400 to 800 sites compose the longer-term demand (to be listed
on the NPL by the year 2000)
¦	The greatest potential needs for new technology in the Superfund program
are for treatment of ground water in place and treatment of metals in soil
¦	There is a trend toward more treatment of soil in place
Intermediate-Term Market
(Total quantity = 26 million cubic yards)
Jfi
m
16

-------
RCRA TSD Processes **
5,165 RCRA Corrective Action Facilities
Incinerator
Processes
(298)
Underground Injection (88)
Landfill (531)
Surface Impoundment (1,307)
-	Treatment (319)
-	Storage (689)
-	Disposal (299)
Waste Pile (310)
Land Treatment (145)
Storage &
Treatment
Processes
(6,468)
Tank (2,611)
-	Treatment (783)
-	Storage (1,828)
Container (3,152)
Other (705)
Location of RCRA Treatment, Storage, and Disposal Facilities
NUMBER OF SITES
¦ 301 to 400
~	201 to 300
101 to 200
~	1 to 100
17

-------
Commonly Managed Wastes
in RCRA SWMUs in 1986 **
Ignitable waste
Corrosive waste
Reactive waste
Waste oil
Spent halogenated/
nonhalogenated solvents
Metals (lead, chromium,
silver)
Wastewater treatment
sludge from
electroplating
Oil-water separator
sludge from petroleum
refining
SWMU = Solid Waste Management Unit
Contents of Federally Regulated Tanks**
(61%)
Gasoline
Hazardous Material (2%)
Empty (2%)
Heating Oil (3%)
Kerosine (3%)
Used Oil (4%)
Other (5%)
Diesel Fuel (20%)
18

-------
Cleanup of Petroleum
Contaminated Soils**
In Situ Treatment H QO/ *
Thermal Treatment (13%) I
Landfilling (55%)
Land Treatment (11%
Other (2%)
Cleanup Required at UST Sites **
Approximately 295,000 sites containing at least 56 million
cubic yards of soil and debris require cleanup
Although the size of UST sites varies widely, the average
site contains about 190 yards of contaminated soil and
debris and three tanks
91% of USTs contain petroleum products
19

-------
Number of DOD Sites to be Cleaned Up**
Navy (16%)
1
Army (37%)
2,728
Air Force (26%)
1,867
Defense Logistics Agency (DLA) (1%)
80
Formerly Used Defense Sites (FUDS) (20%)
1,475
Top Four Contaminant Groups at DOD Sites**
¦	Petroleum, oil, lubricants, or sludge are found at 42%
of Navy sites, 36% of Air Force sites, and 31% of
Army sites
¦	Heavy metals are found at 25% of Army sites, 11% of
Navy sites, and 2% of Air Force sites
¦	Solvents are found at 22% of Navy sites, 14% of Army
sites, and 11 % of Air Force sites
¦	Pesticides are found at 7% of Army sites, 7% of Navy
sites, and 2% of Air Force sites
DOD has not identified all contaminants at about half of the sites
20

-------
Examples of DOE Installations To Be Cleaned Up
*

State
Installation/Site
Program
Information
Status
Matrices of
Concern
-'n -A
Examples of
Known Soli
Contaminants
Est. Soli
Vol. To Be
Remediated
(CuYards)
1
Est. Cost
FY 94-98
Imfllions
CA Energy Technology Includes
Engineering Center D&D
Laboratory for Includes
Energy-Related D&D
Health Research
Lawrence Berkeley
Laboratory
Lawrence	On NPL
Livermore
Laboratory
Sandia National
Laboratory -
Livermore
A/C
A/C
A/C
A/C
A/C
Soil, Ground
Water
Soil, Ground,
Water,
Masonry,
Metals, Sludge
Soil, Ground
Water
Soil, Ground
Water
Low-level
Radioactive
Waste
Nitrate, Sr-90,
Ra-226, VOCs,
C-14
Chlordane, Cr,
H-3
Soil, Buried
Material
Unknown
Gasoline,
Explosives,
VOCs
Diesel Fuel Oil,
Benzene, Pb
Unknown
20,000
Unknown
Unknown
$25.7
$27.5
$24.2
$353.9
$18.5
A/C = Assessment and characterization activities in progress
D&D = Decontamination and decommissioning
Number of Federal Agency Sites Needing Cleanup
Agency	Total Sites Evaluated Sites Needing Cleanup |
Department of Agriculture
91
73
Central Intelligence Agency
1
0
Department of Commerce
9
2
Environmental Protection Agency
15
5
General Services Administration
18
3
Health and Human Services
5
1
Department of the Interior
337
168
Department of Justice
9
7
National Aeronautics and Space Admin.
12
10
Postal Service
5
0
Small Business Administration
1
0
Tennessee Valley Authority
17
3
Department of Transportation
101
74
Department of the Treasury
2
0
Veterans Administration
11
3
Total
634
349
21

-------
State Hazardous Waste Cleanup Programs **
¦	Of 69,000 sites identified, 19,000 will need some level of
action*
¦	States with the most sites are: Michigan (2,844),
Massachusetts (2,224), and Pennsylvania (1,067)
¦	State trust fund balances totaled $2.2 billion at the end of
1991
¦	States with the largest totals were New York ($977
million), New Jersey ($410 million), and Michigan ($398
million)
'Action may range from further investigation to cleanup. Many will not require remedial action.
Superfund Innovative Technology
Evaluation (SITE) Program
¦	Demonstration Program, in its 9th year, tests
technologies almost ready for commercialization
¦	Pilot and full scale demonstrations conducted at
contaminated sites
¦	Emerging Technologies Program, in its 7th year,
funds evaluation of bench and early pilot scale
technologies in the laboratory and field
¦	EPA provides up to $150K/year for up to two years
22

-------
SITE Demonstration Program Technologies
(Total = 98)
Radioactive Waste Treatment (2)
Thermal Destruction (10)
Vendor Information System for
Innovative Treatment Technologies
(VISITT)
Automated database on new technologies to treat
ground water in place, soils, sludge, & sediments
Used by cleanup professionals to screen
technologies for specific sites
Third version (3.0) released August 1994 contains
data on 277 technologies offered by 171 vendors
Over 10,000 requests from over 60 countries
Fax orders to (513) 891-6685
23

-------
SUMMARY OF VISITT 3.0
TECHNOLOGIES
Technology	Frequency
Bioremediation
3 4
Thermal Desorption	^
Chemical Treatment	*
Soil Washing
Acid or Solvent Extraction	1
Soil Vapor or Dual-Phase Extraction 12
Vitrification	1 \
In situ Thermally Enhanced Recovery
Other	J*9
Total	277
Vendor Sales Data for Innovative Technology
Vendors (1993)*
5-20 (22%)
'Based on available data for 107 companies
Sales are in millions of dollars
24

-------
Vendor Size by Number of Employees for^
Innovative Technology Developers (1993)*
<5 (7%)
>500 (24
6-50 (44%)
101-500 (18%)
51-100 (7%)
'Based on available data for 108 companies
** U.S. EPA, Technology Innovation Office, Cleaning Up the Nation's Waste Sites. Mar ®
Technology Trends, PB93-140762, April 1993. Available from the National Technical
Service (NTIS) at 703-487-4600.
tt U.S. EPA, Technology Innovation Office, Innovative Treatment Tec/in^994^0^°^
(Sixth Edition) at printer, EPA-542-R-94-005, September 1994. Avertable In November 1994 from
EPA at 703-308-8800.
25

-------
Federal Markets
Rear Admiral Richard Guimond
Principal Deputy Assistant Secretary, Environmental Management
Department of Energy
Rear Admiral Richard Guimond, Principal Deputy Assistant Secretary for Environmental
Management at the U.S. Department of Energy, will discuss issues, accomplishments and plans
relating to the Department's program to clean up the legacy of 50 years of nuclear weapons
production across the nation. He will discuss some of the problems encountered in the massive
cleanup effort, technology development activities associated with the program, and how the
Department's contract reform activities are contributing to program management and execution.
Federal Markets
Colonel Jim M. Owendoff
Office of Deputy Undersecretary of Defense
Environmental Security
Abstract not available at this printing.
26

-------
Session 3•
International
Markets

-------
U.S. Export Strategy
Jeffrey Hunker
Senior Policy Advisor to the Secretary
U.S. Department of Commerce
Abstract not available at this printing.
Colorado International Trade Program
Morgan Smith
Director
Colorado International Trade Office
The Colorado International Trade Office was established by the Colorado General Assembly in
1983 with two goals - to attract to Colorado the kind of foreign investment that will create Jobs here
and to promote the export of Colorado goods and services. Our main office is in Denver and we also
have representatives in Japan, Korea, and the United Kingdom. In addition, we are in the process of
opening an office in Guadalajara, Mexico.
Our principal focus is on export promotion and we do this in a variety of ways including:
'	counseling individual companies; preparing market research; helping organize trade-related
conferences, seminars and educational programs; and, attracting buying missions to Colorado. In
addition, we participate in 15-20 trade shows around the world each year and organize numerous
Colorado trade missions.
The environmental industry has been one of our target industries. Although we have taken
Colorado environmental delegations to at least a dozen countries, our major focus for the last two
years has been Mexico. Our effort there has been twofold: to help individual companies find agents,
distributors and other forms of business partners, and; to promote Colorado more generally as a
center for environmental research, technology and services.
I want to focus on the latter because I think it is a critical but often overlooked element of the
export process.
The United States has been struggling with environmental issues for at least twenty five years.
To a degree, it has been a trial and error process and we've made both many mistakes and much
progress. The result, however, is an enormous reservoir of experience that could be made available
'	to countries like Mexico that are in the early stages of environmental remediation and that are seeking
to avoid our time consuming mistakes.
Our plan, therefore, has been to identify those environmental areas where Colorado is a leader,
to initiate a series of interchanges of scientific personnel and to make available to Mexico's
environmental leaders the many years of experience available here.
28

-------
Colorado International Trade Program, cont'd.
We initially chose the field of air pollution because Mexico City and Denver have very common
geographic characteristics - high altitude, mountains that tend to trap the air pollution, and winter
inversions. We formed the Colorado - Mexico City Air Quality Initiative and acted as a liaison for a
number of exchanges of scientific personnel, some for as short as three days, others involving lengthy
processes of consultation.
In mid June 1993, we entered into an Environmental Cooperation Agreement with Mexico City's
environmental office and in June 1994 we formed a similar agreement with CONCAMIN, a
confederation of industrial chambers of commerce with about 360,000 member companies. We're
now discussing similar agreements with officials in Ciudad Juarez, Mexico; Santiago, Chile; and Quito,
Ecuador.
Our belief is that forming these types of partnerships and making available our many years of
experience can help other countries dramatically accelerate their processes of environmental
remediation. In addition, it will help us build Colorado's reputation as a center for environmental
remediation and develop the kinds of personal relationships that will eventually give Colorado
companies a unique entry into those new environmental markets.
29

-------
Session 4:
Business Planning

-------
Small Business Loans for Environmental Technology Companies
David Leavitt-Augustine
Assistant Regional Administrator for Economic Development
U.S. Small Business Administration
The Small Business Administration is the federal government's primary source of financial and
technical assistance to small business. In Region VIII alone the agency has a current loan portfolio of
$1.6 billion; this strong level of entrepreneurism is growing $60 million per month.
Traditionally, bank and non-bank loan guarantees for environmental technology, pollution
prevention processes, energy conservation, and other sustainable development investments have not
been seriously considered as part of the overall loan package. Today, however, it is apparent that the
return-on-investment, and payback periods for environmental investments are equivalent or superior to
traditional working capital and asset investments like inventory, labor, buildings, machinery, etc. Also,
the efficiency of traditional assets can be improved dramatically by a simple retrofit or relatively
inexpensive substitute (solvents, motors, etc.). This efficiency can improve profits,.not adversely
impact them as is commonly assumed by the financial community.
Also, SBA must recognize that education which only includes time-honored business skills like
accounting, marketing, finance, etc. often fails to acknowledge the importance of responding to both
a business and planetary need for long term survival. Indeed, Region VIII SBA is teaming with the
USDOE to include the environment and energy as part of the traditional business curricula, not some
idea or concept peripheral to business culture.
Small Business Assistance Programs
James Hudson, Ph.D.
Director
Lakewood, Colorado Small Business Development Center
The purpose of this talk will be to summarize a number of general business and technology-
oriented resources that are currently available to assist Colorado-based companies.
Attracting Financial Backing
Peter Bloomer
President
Colorado Venture Management, Inc.
Abstract not available at this printing.
32

-------
Session 5:
Public/Private
Partnerships &
Industry Alliances

-------
EPA's Environmental Technology Initiative:
The Role of the Private Sector
Jonathan Herrmann
Senior Technical Advisor/Assistant to the Director
U.S. Environmental Protection Agency
Jn February of 1993, President Clinton outlined his Environmental Technology Initiative (ETI)
during his State of the Union address. The goals of ETI are to spur the development and use of
innovative environmental technologies to protect the environment, and enhance the competitiveness
of the United States environmental technology industry. In February of 1994, Administrator Browner
announced EPA's FY 1994 Program Plan in support of the President's ETI goals.
ETI was funded at $36 million in FY 1994 and a proposed $80 million in FY 1995. EPA's
Innovative Technology Council (ITC) coordinates ETI activities agency-wide. The Council is working
closely with a broad network of interested parties including other federal agencies, the environmental
technology industry, non-profit groups, universities, state and local governments, and others.
"Environmental technologies" include technologies, goods, and services whose development is
triggered primarily by environmental improvement objectives. These include: products and services to
monitor and assess pollutant releases and exposure levels; innovative technologies which prevent
pollution, control air and water pollution levels, safely manage waste and remediate contaminated soil
and groundwater; and, manage environmental data.
EPA has just completed the process of soliciting FY 1995 project proposals. In this first
solicitation, EPA sought environmental technology proposals from federal agencies, state
governments (including state colleges that are departments of state agencies), and tribal governments
(including Alaska Native Villages). The second solicitation will seek proposals from non-profit groups,
universities, and their partners. The third solicitation will be aimed at Phase 3, Small Business
Innovation Research (SBIR) projects. Candidate projects must have already completed Phases 1 and
2 of the SBIR process. There are opportunities for the private sector to be actively involved in ETI.
This is true for the areas of gaps in, and barriers to, the diffusion of environmental technologies, and
in the verification of environmental technologies at a number of verification entities that will be piloted
in the next few years. Technology vendors and technology users are an integral part of ETI and the
role they play, either direct or indirect, should not be underestimated.
Speaker slides/overheads follow.
34

-------
EPA's ENVIRONMENTAL
TECHNOLOGY INITATIVE
The Role of the Private Sector
Jonathan G. Herrmann, P.E., DEE
U. S. Environmental Protection Agency
Risk Reduction Engineering Laboratory
ETI
Presentation Outline
V	What is it?
V	How does it work?
V	Who are the players?
V Where do I sign up?
35

-------
ENVIRONMENTAL TECHNOLOGY
INITIATIVE (ETI)
President Clinton's 1993 Initiative to:
~	Accelerate Environmental Protection
~	Strengthen America's Industrial Base
~	Increase Exports of Technology

.J

IX
ETI
1994 - -$36 Million
~ 1995 - -$80 Million ^
~ EPA plans to give about 50% away
jnyw	^PfBHyfVnMpBt
f A %	WMr HwriiiHinn Fnniw—mm 1 HWHw
36

-------
ETI
~ EPA administers ETI through the
Innovative Technology Council (ITC)
3^
,S. Environmental ProtectionAoencv
Reduction Engineering Laboratory
mncinnati. Offio
ETI
~	National solicitation was issued on
July 8,1994
~	Seven-page proposals were due on
September 21.1994
o
U S Enylronmental Protection
Risk Reduction Enqw^erm^ Laboratory
37

-------
ETI
EPA is targeting six areas
~	Policy Framework
~	Innovation Capacity
~	Environmental Technologies
~	Pollution Prevention Technologies
~	Domestic Diffusion
~	International Diffusion
WHO MAY PROPOSE?
~	Federal Agencies
~	State governments
~	State Universities (that are a
department under the State
government)
*¦ Tribal governments
38,

-------
NOT INCLUDED
~	Municipalities
~	Universities and Colleges
~	Private Sector
However, a// these partner!!!
V-gE^ironmenta1 ProtectlonAomx^
#jQl*	Risk Reduction Engineering Laboratory
I I	CinannaiirOWo
ET1 RULES
~	One year funding only guarantee
~	Range $50k to $2 Million, typical $300k
~	Partnership a plus!!!!
~	Leverage funds!!!
~	Try for a 50% match
39

-------
ETI
~ Environmental Technologies
~	Monitoring systems
~	Municipal control technology
~	Drinking water, recycling, wastewater,
landfill methane control
~	Industrial control technology
~	Particulate, indoor air, NOx, Biomass, Air
toxics, non-point sources
~	Remediation technologies
~	In-situ treatment, biotechnology
POLLUTION PREVENTION
TECHNOLOGIES
~ INDUSTRIAL SECTORS
~	Metals
~	Electronics
~	Dry cleaning
~	Printing
40

-------
POLLUTION PREVENTION
TECHNOLOGIES
~ UNIT OPERATIONS
~	Cleaning and degreasing
~	Coatings and solvents
~	Refrigerants
..o ^
m
POLLUTION PREVENTION
TECHNOLOGIES
~ FUNCTIONAL AREAS
~	Green chemistry
~	Process controls and feedback
systems
~	Green buildings
.o.
=3>-
41

-------
COMMON SENSE INITIATIVE
~	Automobile assembly
~	Electronics
~	Iron and Steel
*• Metal plating and finishing
~	Petroleum refining
ENVIRONMENTAL TECHNOLOGY
INNOVATION, COMMERCIALIZATION,
AND ENHANCEMENT

(EnTICE)
US.Envimnmental	Agenqr
RedMC^n^rgi^nq Lafr>ratt?rY
42

-------
EnTICE
Focus Areas in FY95
•	Verify Environmental Technologies
•	Support Test Facilities
•	Provide Business Planning and
Technical Support
•	Convene and Support Partnerships
•	Overcome Non-Regulatory Barriers to
Innovation
INTERNATIONAL DIFFUSION
(US TIES)
~	Int'l Regulatory Development
~	Tech Assistance and Training
~	Information Generation and Dissemination
~	Demonstrating Performance
~ Argentina, Chile, China, Czech Republic,
Hong Kong, South Korea, Poland, or Tiawan
43

-------
;J	Committee to Develop On-site Innovative Technologies
i	James Souby
;	Executive Director
]	Western Governors' Association
In December of 1992 a federal advisory committee was formed by western governors and the
senior cabinet officials from DoD, DOE, Interior, and USEPA. The committee, called the Committee to
Develop On-site Innovative Technologies (DOIT), is establishing a more cooperative approach to the
; development of technical solutions to environmental restoration and waste management problems
shared by states, commercial entities, and the federal government. To obtain the views of a broad
array of interests, the DOIT Committee created regional stakeholder working groups to develop new
models/approaches to the development, testing, and commercialization of innovative remediation
, < ¦. technologies. The Committee has also approved demonstration sites at which to test and evaluate
these new approaches. The results or the demonstration of these new approaches will be reported to
the Committee in 1996. It is anticipated that the results will lead to changes in state and federal
policy to embrace the successful new approaches.

Colorado Environmental Business Alliance
* S	*


James "Skip" Spensley, Esq.
Co-Chairman
Colorado Environmental Business Alliance
Colorado has something many other states yearn for - major environmental opportunities with
national prominence and with the federal government engaged in their fate. These opportunities are
the familiar former federal defense facilities like Rocky Flats and the Rocky Mountain Arsenal, which
no longer serve a military mission and which have been viewed as liabilities, not assets. In the spirit
of reinventing a government paradigm, Colorado now has the opportunity to turn these "lemons into
lemonade" in the words of our Governor.
Recently, a group of business leaders has come together in Colorado to tackle these challenges
by forming a cluster of environmental businesses dedicated to making Colorado the national center of
environmental commerce with international recognition. Under the leadership of the Denver World
Trade Center, the group co-chaired an effort to solicit environmental companies in Colorado to unite
and consolidate our resources and efforts to promote Colorado in the international marketplace.
From these beginnings, the Colorado Environmental Business Alliance (CEBA) was born with the
support and assistance of the Denver World Trade Center and twenty other environmental businesses.
¦44

-------

«\ I
The New Mexico Environmental Alliance:
An Environmental and Economic Partnership for Opportunity
Marsha Oldakowski
New Mexico Economic Development Department
New Mexico, the Land of Enchantment, is also a center of scientific activity with a growing
mission - technology transfer. With support from Governor King and the state legislature, the state
government is a catalyst in building partnerships among internationally recognized research
laboratories and universities, and the private sector. The state promotes economic diversification
while preserving Its quality of life, with increasing focus on technology commercialization, maquila
opportunities, and global markets.
Among the state's key industries, the environmental and manufacturing sectors are the focus of
several important partnerships for New Mexico's future growth.
New Mexico Industry Network Corporation (NM-INC) - a recently created public/private
partnership which coordinates strategic resources among 64 partner organizations for regional
job creation, job redeployment, and job preservation.
New Mexico Manufacturing Extension Program (MEP) - Under NM-INC, MEP helps to increase
the productivity and global competitiveness of regional manufacturing companies, facilitated by
an upcoming information technology delivery system. Serving New Mexico and EL Paso, Texas,
MEP is funded by DoC/NIST, the state of New Mexico, and partners of NM-INC.
New Mexico Environmental Alliance (NMEA) - NMEA is one of New Mexico's strategic
alliances to help stimulate industry cluster development. The Alliance is an innovative partnership
of industry, science and government working in a common forum to meet environmental and
economic challenges. NMEA links resources needed to meet environmental/industrial needs:
a single contract for environmental issues and assistance
access to technical resources and facilities
a working laboratory to test and demonstrate innovative technologies
networking, partnership and commercialization opportunities
shared costs and risks
NMEA, as the environmental arm of NM-INC, adds benefit to industry as it integrates cost-
effective environmental opportunities with NM-INC's ongoing industrial assistance and
manufacturing services.
In October 1994, the New Mexico Environmental Alliance, with support from EPA Region 6 and
the state of New Mexico, will launch a statewide Integrated Pollution Prevention Program. The
program helps businesses to be responsive, cost-effective and competitive in global markets as they
Identify and implement pollution prevention strategies and technologies into their operations. NMEA's
emphasis is on regional outreach to industry and communities, coordination of pollution prevention
resources, and integration of ongoing efforts. Industry guidance and participation is critical. NMEA is
already working with industry, NM-INC and other partners from state and regional agencies, research
laboratories, universities, community colleges and service providers to ensure significant benefit to
industry.
45

-------
Session 6:
Cleanup
Opportunities at
Federal Facilities

-------
Cleanup Opportunities at Rocky Flats
Leanne Smith
Deputy Manager
Rocky Flats Environmental Field Office
The Rocky Flats Environmental Technology Site (formerly the Rocky Flats Nuclear Weapons
Plant) Is undergoing significant change - change that could signal significant opportunity.
With its weapons production mandate completed, the Site now looks to its present day mission
to "manage waste and materials, clean up and convert the Rocky Flats site to beneficial use In a
manner that is safe, environmentally and socially responsible, physically safe, and cost-effective."
The evolution of Rocky Flats includes changing the mission to environmental cleanup and
economic development, opening up large portions of the site, communicating openly and honestly
with stakeholders, restructuring the work force for the new mission, awarding work to the most cost-
effective performers, measuring performance on tangible results, and placing high value on
Innovation. The Site wants to do work faster, better and more cost-effectively.
Contract reform plays a significant role at Rocky Flats. The Site is in the process of soliciting
proposals for a Performance Based Integrating Contractor to replace the Maintenance and Operations
Contractor system. No longer will a single, large contractor be responsible for the vast majority of
work done at Rocky Flats. The Integrating Contractor will be expected to locate and contract with
those companies that do certain tasks well. This could mean many opportunities for companies
interested in doing cleanup work at Rocky Flats.
This summer, Rocky Rats hosted its Vendors Conference '94, which sought to solicit creative,
innovative technologies and approaches to clean up Rocky Flats, invite and encourage participation in
environmental commerce in Colorado, describe the new business environment at Rocky Flats, provide
information on how to become involved, and facilitate the exchange of information among vendors
regarding capabilities and opportunities for potential teaming. The technical areas in which proposals
were sought during Vendors Conference '94 were environmental restoration, waste management,
decontamination and decommissioning, computing services, telecommunication services, and
economic development.
The Site is greatly interested in innovative ideas that link economic conversion with cleanup, as
evidenced by the National Conversion Pilot Project now underway at Rocky Flats. The Site is
committed to working alongside the state and with private companies to help make Colorado a model
for environmental technology development in the United States.
48

-------
Idaho National Engineering Laboratory, Idaho
Dirk Gombert, Ph.D.
Technical Program Manager
Westinghouse Idaho Nuclear Company
The Idaho National Engineering Laboratory (INEL) is committed to environmental restoration,^ and
deletion from the National Priorities Ust by 2019. With a history of nuclear reactor research and tua
reprocessing dating back to just after World War II, we face many challenges to mitigate tne rs
human health and the environment due to heavy metals, and solvents, as well^as radioactive
contamination. While the most significant risk-drivers are fission products (Cs and Co ) n so ,
and plutonium in buried wastes shipped from DOE's Rocky Flats facility, we must also evalua e
treatments for many other materials in specific locations, including mercury, chromium, TCE, an
carbon tetrachloride. Through an innovative multi-track system, we have made significant progress in
a short time, gathering only the characterization data necessary to estimate risks - thereby allow ng us
to eliminate inconsequential sites, and focus resources on sites of true concern.
Removal actions have eliminated compelling risks at several sites, also providing data to evaluate
technologies under controlled conditions. The DOE has chosen Lockheed Idaho Technologies
Company to manage the INEL starting October 3,1994, and significant emphasis will be placed on
technology development and collaboration with industry to expedite our restoration schedule.
Through a variety of technology transfer mechanisms, private industry can make use of federal
facilities and technical support to Improve, test, and potentially demonstrate their better Ideas for
environmental restoration. Available DOE facilities, including engineering and scientific support can
be used at cost to develop new concepts. In addition, collaborative research and cost-shared
contracts are examples of how private and government funding can be leveraged to bring
technologies to market more rapidly. We welcome new Ideas, and look forward to partnering with
private enterprise to produce the next generation of remediation technologies.
Speaker slides/overheads follow.
49

-------
Rocky Mountain Marketplace
Business Opportunities for Innovative
Technologies
September 27-28, 1994
Dirk Gombert
Idaho National Engineering Laboratory
A94 0888
Location of the INEL
.	I IML88
H lr'-rJ
' 4 • II KUWTIM
AO*'
50

-------
Compliance History of INEL
•	Consent Order Compliance Agreement (COCA), July
1987
•	National Priorities List (NPL), November 1989
•	Federal Facility Agreement/Consent Order (FFA/CO)
December 1991
- Agreement among State of Idaho, EPA Region 10 and
DOE-ID
A940892
	""J
INEL Consolidation
October 3,1994
•	5 Contracts
•	Westinghouse Idaho Nuclear
•	EG&G Idaho
•	Babcock & Wilcox Idaho
•	MK Ferguson of Idaho
•	Protection Technology Idaho
1 Contract
Lockheed Idaho Technologies
(Parsons RD/RA)
A940C9I
INEL
51

-------
Amounts of Buried Waste at the INEL
•	Low-level waste (1952-1992) - 5.1Mft3
•	TRU waste (1954-1970) - 2.2Mft3
•	"Stabilized" liquids (solvents) - 88K gal.
•	Other? (Unknown)
•	Interstitial soils - 12.6Mft3
•	Total waste in SDA - 20Mft3
A940694
INEL
Types of Buried Waste at the INEL
•	Radioactive
-LLW
-TRU
•	Hazardous
-	Solvents
-Metals
-	Others (PCB's, asbestos, unknowns)
•	Primarily mixed wastes
•	Drums, boxes, various "structures"
AM0W3
INEL
52

-------
Contaminated Soils at the INEL:
•	Estimated volume of contaminants soil - 2.5 x 105 m3
•	Mode of contamination:
-	Cooling water discharge
-	Process/piping leaks/spills
-	Stack plume deposition
-	Waste disposal in lined trenches
•	Also 5 x 105 m3 mixed soil and debris
AM 0t9S
JNEk
Soil Contaminants at the INEL
•	Radionuclides: Cs137, Sr90, Co60, U, TRU
•	Heavy metals: Cr, Pb, Hg, Cd
•	Acids: HN03, H2S04, HF
•	Hydrocarbons - diesel, fuel oil
•	Solvents - TCE, benzene
•PCB's
A940196
JNEL.
53

-------
Soil Treatability Testing
•	Emphasis on Cs137
•	Chemical extraction
•	Physical separation
Other Potential Treatments
•	In-situ vitrification - soils, buried wastes
•	Vapor vacuum extraction - solvents
•	Plasma arc - buried waste (Pit 9)
•	Pump-and-treat, ion-x, carbon - GW
•	Thermal desorption - Hg, hydrocarbons
A940I99
JNELJ1
54

-------
Vitrified
mmmm
Electrode
\
Hood
In Situ Vitrification
2
Offgas to
^ treatment
/C
=]
system


f,

W




Graphite //

]

and frit //


starter //



/

Subsidence
Backfills


Iff
sd wast*
r.n>
		
55
.

-------
Vapor Vacuum Extraction
• Status at INEL
-	RI/FS for VOC's at Radioactive Waste Management
Complex underway
-	Primary technology in proposed plan
-	Secondary treatment catalytic oxidation
-	Public comments - April, 1994
-	Record of Decision - September, 1994
A94 0190
INEL
56

-------
INEL's Role:
Use INEL as a Resource for
Increasing U.S. Competitiveness
Mechanisms for Partnering
Bottom line: If there's a need, there's a way!
57

-------
Research & Development Partnerships
Cooperative Research and
Development Agreement
(CRADA)
Lab
Partner
> Disclosure Protection
Negotiated Intellectual
Property Rights
Collaborative
Agreements
Lab
Partner
Limited Protection
Contracts
(Cost -shared)
Lab
Partner
Standardized Intellectual
Property Rights
Limited Protection
Labs under DOE, NASA, and DOD aim to devote
10-20% of budget to R&D partnerships with industry.
Access and Use
Lab
SI
Partner
Note: usually <1 year
Lab (
Free Help!
Partner
R93 1608
58

-------
INEL User Resources
•	Pilot Plants
•	Instrumentation
•	Laboratories
•	Facilities
•	Technical Support
-Available at Incremental Cost
A940M0
-WEtl
Points of Contact
Technology Transfer: Lloyd McClure
(208) 526-1170
Jo Ferguson
(208) 526-4865
Lydia Clarksean
(208) 526-3324
Dirk Gombert
(208) 526-4624
User Facilities:
ER Technologies:
mom
59

-------
Remediation Options for the Environmental Restoration Project at
Los Alamos National Laboratory
Tracy G. Glatzmaier
Project Leader, Environmental Restoration Project
Los Alamos National Laboratory
The Los Alamos National Laboratory is a Department of Energy multipurpose research and
development facility which occupies 43 square miles in northern New Mexico. Since its inception in
1943, the Laboratory's primary mission has been nuclear weapons research and development. In
recognition of the end of the cold war, for the next 3-5 years the Laboratory will continue Its defense
programs as directed by Congress, and will focus on developing new programs in three nationally
significant areas: health and biotechnology, environmental technologies, and industrial partnerships.
Because of the history of the Laboratory, a Resource Conservation and Recovery Act (RCRA)
Facility Assessment (RFA) was conducted in the late 1980's which identified over 2000 potentially
contaminated sites. As of the end of fiscal year 1994, archival searches and preliminary investigations
have eliminated approximately 600 of these sites as being non-problematic. Another approximately
200 are likely to be recommended for no further action after a few confirmatory samples are obtained.
The remaining sites being investigated consist of active and inactive firing sites, above-ground and
buried material disposal areas, outfalls, discrete units such as septic tanks, drainlines, and random
sites such as areas contaminated by cooling tower drift.
Currently, the Environmental Restoration Project is primarily in the characterization phase for
these remaining sites. Some early remediation is being conducted In the townsite areas (formerly
occupied by the Laboratory), and at some areas where the remediation is obvious and cost-effective.
The remaining sites are potentially contaminated with radionuclides, metals, organics and high
explosives; creating waste types of radioactive, hazardous, mixed and buried transuranic waste.
Future needs of the Laboratory's Environmental Restoration Project include remedial action
subcontractors who have experience with the Environmental Protection Agency, specifically Region 6;
experience In soil removal, shrapnel removal, soil treatment, septic system removal, inhibition of
migration, capping and monitoring material disposal areas, drilling and instrumenting monitoring wells
and building decontamination and decommissioning.
60

-------
Cleanup Opportunities at Federal Facilities
Thomas E. Blejwas, Ph.D.
Sandia National Laboratories, New Mexico
The Environmental Restoration (ER) Project at Sandia National Laboratories was recently re-
engineered. The re-engineering began with a review of our project by a team of cleanup experts from
around the country. Based on plans that grew out of this review, we are able to project significant
cost reductions by reducing the size of our base program and cleaning up our many small ER Project
sites as quickly as practical. The review team suggested a de-emphasis on new technologies
because adequate technologies for our sites already exist. Although ongoing budget-reduction
exercises may affect our life-cycle cost reductions, we hope to save $100M or more by acting quickly
with voluntary corrective measures and assertive negotiations with our regulators for "no further
actions."
Our ER Project is presently funded at about a $30M-per-year level. In addition to a staff of about
35 Sandia employees, we have support through over a dozen contractors. The contractual
arrangements include personnel contracts, task-order contracts, and task-specific contracts, some of
which are performance based. As our site-investigation efforts come to completion over the next few
years, we expect to see a shift toward task-specific contracts and away from the use of in-house staff.
Because, in part, of our re-engineering effort, we will require the services of one or more remediation
contractors within the next one or two years. One area that is highly uncertain fs the management of
wastes generated by our cleanup activities. Volumes and types of wastes are very difficult to estimate
prior to site characterization and, therefore, our needs, which may include the application of new
technologies, are difficult to predict.
61

-------
List of Attendees
Charles Adams
President
Walsh Environmental Scientists &
Engineers, Inc.
4888 Pearl East Circle
Boulder, CO 80301
303-443-3282
303-443-0367 (Fax)
Mike Allen
Hydrogeologist
PRC Environmental Management, Inc.
1099 18th Street
Denver, CO 80202
303-295-1101
303-295-2818 (Fax)
Mark P. Allen
Vice President
Metcalf & Eddy, Inc.
555 Twin Dolphin #400
Redwood City, CA 94065
415-591-9300
415-591-3917 (Fax)
Dirk Applegate
Chemist
PRC Environmental Management, Inc.
1099 18th Street
Denver, CO 80202
303-295-1101
303-295-2818 (Fax)
Steven R. Archabal
Senior Technical Specialist
Engineering Science, Inc.
1700 Broadway
Suite 900
Denver, CO 80290
303-831-8100
303-831-8208 (Fax)
Kathy Armstrong
Training Specialist
Los Alamos Nat'l Laboratory
P.O. Box 1663 MSM992
Los Alamos, NM 87545
505-665-0405
505-665-4747 (Fax)
Doug Arnett
President
Summer Rain Ltd.
1720 10th St. SW
Calgary, Alberta CANADA T2T-3E8
403-245-3004
403-245-3120 (Fax)
Mark T. Atwood, Ph.D.
Sales Representative
Evergreen Analytical, Inc.
4036 Youngfield Street
Wheat Ridge, CO 80033-3862
303-425-6021
303-425-6854 (Fax)
Jim Austreng
Project Manager
Cal/EPA
10151 Croydon Way
Sacramento, CA 95827
916-255-3702
916-255-3697
Charlie Bachman
Dir. of Sales/Account Manager
Remote Power Inc.
12301 N. Grant
#230
Denver, CO 80241-3130
303-452-9383
303-452-9519 (Fax)
62

-------
Teri Bahrych
Environmental Engineer
U.S. EPA-Region VIII
999 18th Street
Suite 500
Denver, CO 80202
303-293-1484
303-293-1488 (Fax)
Ted Ball
Geochemist
PRC Environmental Management
1099 18th Street
Suite 1960
Denver, CO 80202
303-295-1101
303-295-2818 (Fax)
Stephen W. Ballou
Argonne National Laboratory
1075 S. Yukon
Lakewood, CO 80226
303-986-1140
303-986-1311 (Fax)
Steven Barela
Marketing Specialist
EG&G Rocky Flats
P.O. Box 464
Golden, CO 80402-0464
303-966-2085
303-966-4589 (Fax)
Jerry Barnard
Owner
BPS Bioremediation
P.O. Box 1539
Lovington, NM 88260-1539
505-396-3431
505-396-4895 (Fax)
Betty Barton
Policy Analyst
Patton Boggs
1662 Lincoln
Denver, CO
303-830-1776
Don Baum
Project Manager
Burlington Environmental, Inc.
210 West Sandbank
Columbia, IL 62236
618-281-7173
618-281-5120 (Fax)
Daniel M. Benecke
Regional Manager
ATC Environmental Inc.
5031 S. Ulster
#100
Denver, CO 80237
303-793-9939
303-793-0609 (Fax)
Paul Bergman
U.S. Dept. of Commerce
International Trade Administration
World Trade Center
1625 Broadway, Suite 680
Denver, CO 80202
303-844-6622
303-844-5651 (Fax)
Thomas E. Blejwas, Ph.D.
Director, Environmental Operations Centet
Sandia National Labs
P.O. Box 5800
Albuquerque, NM 87185-1315
505-848-0905
505-848-0304 (Fax)
Peter Bloomer
President
Colorado Venture Mgmt. Inc.
4845 Pearl East Circle #300
Boulder, CO 80301
303-440-4055
303-440-4636 (Fax)
Mike Boeck
EMS
8601 Georgia Drive
Suite 500
Silver Spring, MD 20910
301-589-5318
301-589-8487 (Fax)
63

-------
Tom Boehnke
Business Manager
Rust E&I
6143 S. Willow Drive
#200
Englewood, CO 80111
303-694-6660
303-694-4410 (Fax)
Greg J. Bosserman
Business Development Specialist
Source One Management, Inc.
1290 Broadway
#910
Denver, CO 80203
303-832-8600
303-832-1910 (Fax)
Eldon W. Brickie
Director of Marketing
Harrison Western Environmental Services
1208 Quail St.
Lakewood, CO 80215
303-234-0273
303-237-9868 (Fax)
Joe Bridwell
CEO
GeoComp
8400 Menaol
Albuquerque, NM 87112
505-293-6886
505-293-6525 (Fax)
John R. Brooks
Vice President-Industrial & Technical Operations
USPCI, Inc.
5665 Flatiron Parkway
Boulder, CO 80301
303-938-5501
303-938-5520 (Fax)
Cliff Brown
Waste & Environmental Programs
ORNL @ Rocky Flats
P.O. Box 928
Golden, CO 80402-0928
303-966-3667
303-966-2256 (Fax)
Louis Bulger
Senior Project Manager
ICF Kaiser
160 S. Union, Ste. 850
Englewood, CO 80228
303-980-2115
303-980-2030 (Fax)
Jim Burnell
Vice President
International Engineering Corp.
P.O. Box 19950
Boulder, CO 80401
303-494-7773
303-494-3601 (Fax)
Dennis Burris
Business Development
Geocore Services, Inc.
P.O. Box 386
Salina, KS 67402-0386
913-826-1616
913-826-9508 (Fax)
David G. Byro
Environmental Scientist
U.S. EPA
841 Chestnut Building
Philadelphia, PA 19107
215-597-8309
215-597-9896 (Fax)
Caren S. Caldwell
Sales/Marketing Manager
Pintail Systems, Inc.
11801 E. 33rd Avenue
Suite C
Aurora, CO 80010
303-367-8443
303-364-2120 (Fax)
Suzanne Campbell
Registration Coordinator
JACA Corporation
550 Pinetown Road
Fort Washington, PA 19034
215-643-5466
215-643-2772 (Fax)
64

-------
John A. Campbell
Wilson Clayton
Service Engineer
Remediation Engineer
SAIC
Groundwater Technology, Inc.
P.O. Box 464; T124A
643 S. Racine Circle
Golden, CO 80021
Suite 200
303-966-3250
Englewood, CO 80111
303-966-2256 (Fax)
303-799-4241

303-799-4274 (Fax)
Larry Cerrillo

Senior Associate
Roy Cockwell
Louis Berger and Associates, Inc.
Regional Sales Manager
P.O. Box 2125
ORS Environmental Systems
Evergreen, CO 80439
6860 S. Yosemite Ct., Ste. 200
303-674-6484
Englewood, CO 80112
303-670-1410 (Fax)
303-694-4990

303-694-6699 (Fax)
Ken Chasteen

Regional Sales ManagerYWest
David Coss
SL7 North America, Inc.
Director of Environmental Protection Division
390 N. Union Blvd.
New Mexico Environment Department
Lakewood, CO 80228
1190 St. Francis Drive
303-763-8655
Santa Fe, NM 87503
303-763-8727 (Fax)
505-827-2834

505-827-2836 (Fax)
Matthew F. Christian

Environmental Scientist
Pat Costin
Brown & Root Environmental
Consultant
2300 Buena Vista S.E.
MRS Inc.
Albuquerque, NM 87114
1850 Aquila Avenue
505-247-4933
Reno, NV 89509
505-247-8151 (Fax)
202-322-2231

202-322-2231 (Fax)
Gary Clapp

Director of Chemistry
Glenn Coury
Hauser
President
5555 Airport Blvd.
Coury & Associates Inc.
Boulder, CO 80301
P.O. Box #666
303-443-4662
Wheatridge, CO 80034
303-441-5803 (Fax)
303-232-3823

303-234-1813 (Fax)
Lidia Clarksean

Senior Tech Transfer Specialist
Jim Cummings
Idaho National Engineering Lab
U.S. EPA-TIO
P.O. Box 4000
401 M St., S.W.
Idaho Falls, ID 83415-3428
Washington, DC 20460
208-526-0012
202-260-3354
208-526-0953 (Fax)
202-260-5732 (Fax)
65

-------
Jerome J. Cuzella
Vice President
ENSOL, Environmental Solutions International,
Inc.
95 Yarrow Street
Lakewood, CO 80226
303-232-6453
(Fax)
Carl W. Dalrymple
Vice President
Hydrologies, Inc.
3101 S. Platte River Drive
Englewood, CO 80110
303-761-6960
303-761-0146 (Fax)
Jerry Daub
Principal Scientist
RUST Geotech
P.O. Box 14000
Grand Junction, CO 81502
303-248-6566
303-248-6040 (Fax)
Gordon M. Davidson
President
Capital Environmental
1299 Pennsylvania Avenue, NW
Washington, DC 20004
202-383-7446
202-383-6610 (Fax)
George P. Davis
Vice President of Sales
Environmental Sales & Marketing Network
245 S. Benton St.
Lakewood, CO 80226
303-274-9789
303-274-9902 (Fax)
Brian Dellett
Project Engineer
Layne Environmental Services
8301 E. Iliff
Denver, CO 80231
303-755-1281
303-755-1236 (Fax)
Michael Dennis
President
C.D. Biosystems, Inc.
3419 West Mohawk
Phoenix, AZ 85027
602-582-5179
Peter Deusen
SBA-Regional
633 17th 7 F.
Denver, Co 80202-3607
303-294-7606
303-294-7115 (Fax)
Kathryn Dickerson
ORNL
757 20th St. Apt. 2
Boulder, CO 80302
303-966-3430
303-966-4933 (Fax)
Tina Cecilie Diehold
Remedial Project Manager
U.S. EPA
75 Hawthorne St.
San Francisco, CA 94105
415-744-2398
415-744-1917 (Fax)
Joel Dispenza
Vice President
Environmental Protection Systems, Inc.
444 E. Huntington Dr., Suite 200
Arcadia, CA 91006
818-574-7442
818-574-7867 (Fax)
David Dovidis
Regional Manager
Environmental Inst.
14 Inverness E.
Englewood, CO 80112
303-779-3898
303-799-3893 (Fax)
Mail DuBois
President
Consolidated Industrial Services
15323 W. 95th
Lenexa, KS 66210
913-888-0027
913-888-4859 (Fax)
66

-------
Richard Dunkel
Paul Emery
Vice President
CEO
ETUS
USE, Inc.
1511 Kastner PI.
924 Incline Way #H
Sanford, FL 32771
Incline Village, NV 89451
407-321-7910
702-831-9243
407-321-3098 (Fax)
702-831-9266 (Fax)
Arturo Duran
Dave Emilia
Remedial Project Manager
Scientist Fellow
EPA-EPA Region VIII
RUST Geotech
999 18th St., Ste. 500
Box 14000
Denver, CO 80202
Grand Junction, CO 81502
303-294-1080
303-248-6417
303-294-7559 (Fax)
303-248-6040 (Fax)
Bob Easter
Caren Ewing
President
Public Affairs Specialist
A. R. Easter, Inc.
U.S. EPA
900 S. Quince Street
401 M Street, SW
Denver, CO 80231
Washington, DC 20008
303-388-3966
202-260-2556
303-696-9571 (Fax)
202-260-3150 (Fax)
Shaun Egan
Linda Fiedler
Senior Fellow
Environmental Engineer
Colorado Center for Environmental Management
U.S. EPA - TIO
999 18th St., Ste. 2750
MC-5102W
Denver, CO 80202
401 M Street., S.W.
303-297-0180
Washington, DC 20460
303-297-0188 (Fax)
703-308-8799

703-308-8528 (Fax)
Mike Elliot

Patton Boggs, L.L.P.
Hal Finegold
1660 Lincoln #1975
Secretary Treasurer
Denver, CO 80264
Hazwaste Corp.
303-830-1776
17524 East Caspian PI.
303-894-9239 (Fax)
Aurora, CO 80013

303-693-8791
Stephen Elliot
303-693-9749 (Fax)
Technical Director

Ogden Environmental
Lynn Fossum
3500 JFK Parking
Account Manager
Ft. Collins, CO 80525
IT Corporation
303-223-4445
5600 S. Quebec Street
303-223-4904 (Fax)
Suite 280-D

Greenwood Village, CO 80111

303-793-5200

303-793-5248 (Fax)
67

-------
Rene Foumier
Vice President
Condor
P.O. Box 149
Wheat Ridge, CO 80034
303-467-9744
303-467-1039 (Fax)
Butch Fries
PRC
1099 18th Street
Suite 1960
Denver, CO 80202
303-295-1101
303-295-2818 (Fax)
Mark Gallup
Division Director, Environmental Services
GEI Consultants, Inc.
5660 Greenwood Plaza Blvd.
Suite 202
Denver, CO 80111
303-779-5565
303-779-5653 (Fax)
Rick Garcia
Colorado Small Business Development Center
1625 Broadway
#1710
Denver, CO 80202
303-892-3840
303-892-3848 (Fax)
Bert Garcia
Section Chief
U.S. EPA
MC-8HWM-SR
999 18th Street
Suite 500
Denver, CO 80202-2466
303-293-1537
303-293-1238 (Fax)
Lisa Gard
Program Manager
PRC Environmental Management, Inc.
1099 18th Street
Denver, CO 80202
303-295-1101
303-295-2818 (Fax)
Bob Garvey
Marketing Specialist
EG&G Rocky Flats
P.O. Box 464
Golden, CO 80402-0464
303-966-2393
303-966-4589 (Fax)
Ed Gatliff
President
Applied Natural Sciences
7355 Eixon Dr.
Hamilton, OH 45011
513-887-6061
513-887-7061 (Fax)
Jeff German
Sales Manager
Flatirons Environmental Solutions, Inc.
7651 W. 41st Ave.
Wheat Ridge, CO 80033-4559
303*421 -4322
Lois Gero
U.S. Dept. of Commerce
International Trade Administration
World Trade Center
1625 Broadway, Suite 680
Denver, CO 80202
303-844-6622
303-844-5651 (Fax)
Tracy G. Glatzmaier
Project Leader-Environmental Mgmt. Program
Los Alamos National Lab
P.O. Box 1663, MS-J591
Los Alamos, NM 87545
505-665-2613
505-665-4747 (Fax)
Dirk Gombert, Ph.D.
Technical Program Manager
WINCO
P.O. Box 4000
MS-3428
Idaho Falls, ID 83415-3428
208-526-4624
208-526-9805 (Fax)
68

-------
Kent P. Gray
Director
Utah DEQ
Div. of Environmental Response and Remediation
P.O. Box 144840
Salt Lake City, UT 84114-4840
801-536-4128
801-359-8853 (Fax)
Martin Gray
Geologist
Utah Department of Environmental
Quality
P.O. Box 144880
Salt Lake City, UT 84114-4880
801-538-6170
801-538-6715 (Fax)
Dennis H. Green
Vice President
Harrison Western Environmental Services
1208 Quail St.
Lakewood, CO 80215
303-234-0273
303-237-9868 (Fax)
Tom Greengard
Program Manager
SAIC
14062 Denver West Parkway, Suite 202
Golden, CO 80401
303-966-3677
303-966-4871 (Fax)
Vicki Groves
Executive Administrator
Bio-Tec Inc.
5144 North Academy Blvd., #122
Colorado Springs, CO 80918
719-661-7630
719-522-0212 (Fax)
Paul Groves
President
Bio-Tec Inc.
5144 North Academy Blvd., #122
Colorado Springs, CO 80918
719-661-7630
719-522-0212 (Fax)
Rear Admiral Richard Guimond
Deputy Assistant Secretary-Environmental
Management
U.S. DOE
EM-1
1000 Independence Ave., S.W.
Washington, DC 20585
202-586-7710
202-586-7757 (Fax)
Terry Guin
Business Development
CURA, Inc.
2735 Villa Creek, #250
Dallas, TX 75234
214-620-7117
214-620-8219 (Fax)
Matt J. Haass
Project Development Engineer
Geosafe Corporation
2950 George Washington Way
Richland, WA 99352
509-375-0710
509-375-7721 (Fax)
Tim Hagen
Assistant Engineer
Natural Resources Research Institute
5013 Miller Trunk Highway
Duluth, MN 55811-1442
218-720-4325
218-720-4219 (Fax)
James E. Hansen
Director Business Development &
Communications
Geosafe Corporation
2950 George Washington Way
Richland, WA 99352
509-375-0710
509-375-7721 (Fax)
Rolfe G. Hartley
Director, Environment & Heritage
Department of Defense\Australia
Canberra ACT 2600 Australia
61 6 2663707
61 6 2664080 (Fax)
69

-------
Mark Harvey
Project Manager
Mile High Environmental
Box 4195
Park City, UT 84060
801-584-6361
801-584-7760 (Fax)
Virginia Hathaway
Conference Coordinator
J AC A Corporation
550 Pinetown Road
Fort Washington, PA 19034
215-643-5466
215-643-2772 (Fax)
Deborah Hathaway
Vice President
S.S. Papadopulos & Associates, Inc.
250 Arapahoe
Suite 102
Boulder, CO 80302
303-939-8880
303-939-8877 (Fax)
Jeff Havlena
Senior Hydrologist
Daniel B. Stephens & Associates
6020 Academy NE
Albuquerque, NM 87109
505-822-9400
505-822-8877 (Fax)
Goran Hedberg
Operations Manager
Energy Reclamation, Inc.
114 A River Road
Lyme, NH 03768
603-795-2403
603-795-4111 (Fax)
Walter Heinz
PM Remediation
CEES-Blackhawk Geosciences Div.
301 Commercial Rd.
Golden, CO 80228
303-278-8700
303-278-0789 (Fax)
Robert Henke
Division Manager
Science Applications International Corp.
14062 Denver West Parkway
#200
Golden, CO 80401
303-273-1262
303-273-1499 (Fax)
Robert Henke
Division Manager
Science Applications International Corp.
14062 Denver West Parkway #200
Golden, CO 80401
303-273-1262
303-273-1499 (Fax)
David Henson
Sr. Mkt. Rep.
PACE, Inc.
5930 Mclntyre
Golden, CO 80403
303-278-3400
303-278-2121 (Fax)
Jonathan Herrmann
Senior Technical Advisor
U.S. EPA - RREL
Office of Research and Development
26 W. Martin Luther King Drive
Cincinnati, OH 45268
513-569-7839
513-569-7787 (Fax)
Neil W. Hesse
District Director
U.S. Dept. of Commerce
International Trade Administration
World Trade Center
1625 Broadway, Suite 680
Denver, CO 80202
303-844-5651
303-844-6622 (Fax)
Daniel Higgins
Mechanical Engineer
Ogden Environmental
15630 Holbeen Dr.
Colorado Springs, CO 80921
719-488-1826
719-481-2138 (Fax)
70

-------
Richard Hill
Seth Hunt
Project Manager
President
Kvaerner Engineering
Foremost Solutions
4214 University
12265 W. Bayaud Ave.
Provo, UT 84601
Lakewood, CO 80228
801-224-4478
303-986-8011
801-224-4798 (Fax)
303-986-8227 (Fax)
D'Arcy M. Horner
Gary W. Hurst
International Manager
Vice President
In- Situ, Inc.
Environmental Control Division
210 S. 3rd Street
7060 E. 54th PI.
Laramie, WY 82070
Comm. City, CO 80022
307-742-8213
303-286-0311
307-721-7598 (Fax)
303-286-8941 (Fax)
Wayne F. Hosking, P.E.
John Jankousky
Project Manager
Environmental Engineer
Roy F. Weston, Inc.
S. M. Stoller Corp.
215 Union Blvd.
5700 Flatiron Parkway
Suite 550
Boulder, CO 80301
Lakewood, CO 80228
303-546-4412
303-980-6800
303-443-1408 (Fax)
303-980-1622 (Fax)

Eileen Jemison
Harold E. Howell
Rocky Flats
General Manager
P.O. Box 464, T130F
Vanguard Research, Inc.
Golden, CO 80402-0464
5050 Edison Drive
303-966-2302
Suite 102
303-966-6153 (Fax)
Colorado Springs, CO 80915

719-596-1174
Wayne Johnson
719-596-0183 (Fax)
Alliance Manager

Ecova Corporation
James Hudson, Ph.D.
130 E. Randolph Drive
Director, Lakewood SBDC
Chicago, IL 60601
CO Small Bus. Development Ctr.
312-856-7181
13300 West Sixth Street
312-856-3731 (Fax)
Lakewood, CO 80401
303-987-0710
Shirley Jones
303-987-1331 (Fax)
Marketing Director

MCA Environmental, Inc.
Jeffrey Hunker
747 Sheridan Blvd.
Senior Policy Advisor to the Secretary
Unit 8B
U.S. Dept. of Commerce
Lakewood, CO 80214
Washington, DC 20230
303-274-1211
202-482-6055
303-274-2981 (Fax)
202-482-4636 (Fax)
71

-------
Walter W. Kovalick, Jr., Ph.D.
Director-TIO
U.S. EPA - OSWER
MC-5102W
401 M Street, S.W.
Washington, DC 20460
703-308-8800
703-308-8528 (Fax)
Randy Juhlin
Staff Engineer
RUST Geotech
P.O. Box 14000
Grand Junction, CO 81502
303-248-6502
303-248-6060 (Fax)
Dawn Kaback
Deputy Director
Colorado Center for Environmental Management
999 18th St., Ste. 2750
Denver, CO 80202
303-297-0180, ext. Ill
303-297-0188 (Fax)
Dan Kazarian
Vice President
Greenfield Environmental
5964 La Place Ct.
Carlsbad, CA 92008
619-431-5500
619431-5698 (Fax)
Michael A. Keene, Ph.D.
Vice President
Intech One-Eighty Corp.
3760 S. Highland Dr., Ste. 500
Salt Lake City, UT 84106
801-273-3346
801-273-3951 (Fax)
Ellen Knights
President
Energy Reclamation, Inc.
114 A River Road
Lyme, NH 03768
603-795-2403
603-795-4111 (Fax)
Bob Koenig
Project Manager
In-Situ, Inc.
210 S. 3rd Street
Laramie, WY 82070
307-742-8213
307-721-7598 (Fax)
Daniel G. Krivitzky
Field Program Manager
U.S. DOE/AL
P.O. Box 5400
Albuquerque, NM 87185-5400
505-845-4852
505-845-4883 (Fax)
Charlie Krogh
Vice President
CH2M Hill
6060 S. Willow
Englewood, CO 80111
303-771-0900
303-690-6465
Dirk Lamprecht
Director of Marketing
RGF Environmental Systems of Colorado
2190 S. Lipan
Denver, CO 80223
303-922-1133
303-922-1682 (Fax)
Daniel Lane
Foster Wheeler Environmental Services
2 Inverness Drive, East
Suite 101
Englewood, CO 80112
303-790-7560
303-790-8452 (Fax)
Debra Larson
President
D.L. Larsen Associates
P.O. Box 280601
Lakewood, CO 80228-0601
303-275-9923
303-275-9926 (Fax)
72

-------
Sonny Lastrella
Coordinator, Office of Business Development
Defense Initiatives
1625 Broadway
Suite 1710
Denver, CO 80202
303-892-3840
303-892-3848 (Fax)
David Leavitt-Augustine
Asst. Regional Admin, for Economic Development
U.S. SBA
633 17th Street
Denver, CO 80202
303-294-7115
303-294-7153 (Fax)
Brent Lebl
Reg. Sales Mgr.
Envirocon, Inc.
239 S.W. 41st St.
Renton, WA 98055
206-251-5996
206-251-5919 (Fax)
Barbara Leichty
U.S. Dept. of Commerce
International Trade Administration
World Trade Center
1625 Broadway, Suite 680
Denver, CO 80202
303-844-6622
303-844-5651 (Fax)
Mel Lester
Business Development Manager
RETEC
23 Old Town Square
Suite 250
Fort Colins, CO 80525
303-493-3700
303-493-2328 (Fax)
Barry Levene
Chief, ND & CO Remedial Section
U.S. EPA-Region VIII
999 18th Street
Suite 500
Denver, CO 80202-2405
303-293-1843
303-293-1248 (Fax)
Douglas A. Linder
QA/QC Inspector
4661 Independence
Wheat Ridge, CO 80033
303-431-9507
Bill Lloyd
U.S. Department of Commerce
U.S. & Foreign Commercial Service
Denver District Office
Suite 680, World Trade Center
1625 Broadway
Denver, CO 80202
303-844-6622
303-844-5651 (Fax)
Thomas Looby
Director
CO Office of Environment
4300 Cherry Creek Drive, South
Denver, CO 80222-1530
303-692-3099
303-782-4969 (Fax)
Mark F. Loptien
Operations Manager
Rocky Mountain EnviroSupply
6840 S. Pennsylvania St.
Littleton, CO 80122
303-798-9751
Diane Lynne
Attorney
U.S. EPA
401 M Street, S.W.
Washington, DC 20460
202-260-9755
202-2609-9437 (Fax)
Carl Ma
Environmental Engineer
U.S. EPA/TIO
401 M Street, SW
Washington, DC 20460
703-308-8805
703-308-8528 (Fax)
73

-------
Mike MacLeod
Project Manager
Black & Veatch Waste Science, Inc.
1400 S. Potomac
Suite 200
Aurora, CO 80012
303-671-4207
303-671-4285 (Fax)
Mary Ellen Maly
Environmental Engineer
Army Environmental Center
Attn: S F1M-AEC-1RB
Aberdeen Proving Gr, MD 21010
410-671-1523
410-671-1548 (Fax)
John F. Martin
Chief, SDEB
U.S. EPA-RREL
26 W. Martin Luther King Drive
Cincinnati, OH 45268
513-567-7696
513-569-7620 (Fax)
Douglas Martin
Director Environmental Affairs
Vector Engineering Inc.
1601 Fairview Ave., Ste. H
Carson City, NV 89701
702-883-7065
702-883-7161 (Fax)
Gary McDannel
Westinghouse Idaho Nuclear Company
P.O. Box 4000
MS-3428
Idaho Falls, ID 83415-3428
208-526-0850
208-526-0953 (Fax)
Shelly McDill
Project Engineer
Centennial Engineering & Research
237 N. Main Street
Suite 1
Sheridan, WY 82801
307-672-1711
307-674-5014 (Fax)
Pat McDonald
Great Plains Rocky Mountain HSRC
Ward Hall 101
Kansas State University
Manhatten, KS 66506
913-532-6519
913-532-5985 (Fax)
Doug McFarling
Sr. Analyst
Ogden Environmental
510-B State St.
Santa Barbara, CA 93101
805-962-0992
805-966-1706 (Fax)
Fred McGehan
National Institute of Standards & Technology
MS 104
325 Broadway
Boulder, CO 80303
303-497-7038
303-497-5222 (Fax)
Carolyn McGill
Conference Coordinator
J AC A Corporation
550 Pinetown Road
Fort Washington, PA 19034
215-643-5466
215-643-2772 (Fax)
Allan D. McKelvie
President
Darala Investment & Development Corp.
888 16th Street, NW
Washington, DC 20006
202-835-8272
202-835-8278 (Fax)
Michael G. McMahon
Manager, Environmental Services
ATC Environmental Inc.
5031 S. Ulster
#100
Denver, CO 80237
303-793-9939
303-793-0609 (Fax)
74

-------
Tom McVeigh
Roy F. Weston, Inc.
215 Union Blvd.
Lakewood, CO 80228
303-980-6800
303-980-1622 (Fax)
Marina Miller
EMS
8601 Georgia Drive
Silver Spring, MD 20910
301-589-5318
301-589-8487 (Fax)
Thomas L. Miller
Manager, Technical Programs
Wasatch Environmental, Inc.
225IB West California Avenue
Salt Lake City, UT 94104-4109
801-972-8400
801-972-8459
William Mills
Program Manager
Gradient Corp.
3775 Iris Ave. #6
Boulder, CO 80301
303-442-4313
303-442-5180 (Fax)
Alistair H. Montgomery
Director
Canonie Environmental
94 Inderness Terr
Englewood, CO 80215
303-790-1747
303-799-0186 (Fax)
Cynthia Moomaw
Environmental Engineer
PTI Environmental Services
2995 Baseline Road
Suite 202
Boulder, CO 80303
303-444-7270
303-444-7528 (Fax)
Penny Morlen
Controller
Hydrologies, Inc.
3101 S. Platte River Drive
Englewood, CO 80110
303-761-6960
303-761-0146 (Fax)
Jim Nash
Sales Manager
ECO LOGIC INT'L
2385 Huron Pkwy
Ann Arbor, MI 48104
313-973-2780
313-677-0055 (Fax)
Christopher H. Nelson
Technology Development Manager
Groundwater Technology, Inc.
6436 S. Racine Circle
Suite 200
Englewood, CO 80111-6426
303-799-4241
303-799-4274 (Fax)
Noel Nelson
Director Client Relations
Growth Environmental
2757 S. 300 West
Salt Lake City, UT 84115
801-467-1800
801-262-9871 (Fax)
Rick Newman
President & CEO
Covenant Environmental Technologies
65 Germantown Court, Suite 210
Memphis, TN 38018
901-759-5874
901-759-5870 (Fax)
Joel Newman
Covenant Environmental Technologies
65 Germantown Court, Suite 210
Memphis, TN 38018
901-759-5874
901-759-5870 (Fax)
75

-------
Lance Nielsen
Remediation Bureau Chief
ID DEQ
1410 N. Hilton Street
Boise, ID 83706
208-334-5860
208-334-0576 (Fax)
David Nusz
Environmental Engineer
U.S. Army Corps of Engineers
12565 W. Center Road
Omaha, NE 68144-3869
402-221-7381
402-221-7403 (Fax)
Robert A. Nuttleman, Ph.D.
Research Scientist
Kaman Sciences Corporation
P.O. Box 7463
Colorado Springs, CO 80933
719-599-1954
719-599-1420 (Fax)
T. Peter O'Connor
Vice President
Solarchem Env. Syst., Inc.
7320 Smoke Ranch Rd.
Las Vegas, NV 89128
702-255-7055
702-255-7280 (Fax)
Deidre O'Dwyer
Chemical Engineer
PRC Environmental Management, Inc.
1099 18th Street
Denver, CO 80202
303-295-1101
303-295-2818 (Fax)
Robert N. Ogg
Vice President
CH2M Hill
6060 S. Willow Dr.
Englewood, CO 80111-5142
303-771-0100
303-741-0902 (Fax)
Marsha Oldakowski
NM Economic Development
1100 St. Francis Street
Santa Fe, NM 87505
505-827-0563
505-827-0588 (Fax)
Andrew Orrell
MTS
Sandia National Labs
115 N. Main
Carlsbad, NM 88220
505-234-0031
505-887-1691 (Fax)
Colonel James M. Owendoff
Office of Deputy Undersecretary of Defense
Environmental Security
3000 Defense
Pentagon
Washington, DC 20301-3000
703-697-9793
703-695-4981 (Fax)
Dean R. Parson
Project Manager
Woodward Clyde Federal Services
4582 S. Ulster St.
Denver, CO 80237
303-740-3947
303-740-2705 (Fax)
Denise D. Pass
Coley/Forrest, Inc.
1635 Blake Street
Suite #200
Denver, CO 80202-1323
303-573-9900
303-573-9903 (Fax)
Wayne D. Paulson
Director/Sales and Marketing
Environmental Construction Company
1701 East Main Street
Griffith, IN 46319
219-922-5500
219-922-5510 (Fax)
76

-------
Chad Paulson
Project Manager
Condor
P.O. Box 149
Wheat Ridge, CO 80034
303-467-9744
303-467-1039 (Fax)
Tom Pfeffer
U.S. Army Corps of Engineers
HTRW Center of Expertise
Attn: CEMPRO-ED-HS
P.O. Box 103 Downtown Station
Omaha, NE 68101-0103
402-221-7408
402-221-7561 (Fax)
John T. Pursley
President
Micro Sol-Denver, Inc.
925 W. Kenyon Ave., #6
Englewood, CO 80110
303-781-6343
303-781-6343 (Fax)
James R. Quin
President
Quin & Associates
1000 Green Oaks Drive
Littleton, CO 80121
303-794-9123
303-794-9123 (Fax)
Layne Randolph
Director of Legal Affairs
Soil Recycling Technologies
1200 17th Street
Suite 2100
Denver, CO 80202
303-573-8300
303-573-8332 (Fax)
Chris Rend a
Owner/Principal
Environmental Services Network
2112 S. Columbine Street
Denver, CO 80210
303-777-1187
303-777-2801 (Fax)
Faye Richendifer
Propsoal Coordinator
BNFL Inc.
5655 S. Yosemite #700
Englewood, CO 80111
303-694-0700
303-694-1816 (Fax)
Dennis Ripley
Manager, Processing
BDM-OKLA/NIPER
P.O. Box 2565
Bartlesville, OK 74005
918-337-4264
918-337-4365 (Fax)
Ed Roberson
Manager ER, Marketing
Global Environmental Solutions, Inc.
5000 S. 8400 W
Magna, UT 84094
801-251-3680
801-251-2027 (Fax)
Paul Robinson
Research Director
Southwest Research and Information Center
P.O. Box 4524
Albuquerque, NM 87106
505-262-1862
505-262-1864 (Fax)
Dale Robl
President
Geocore Services, Inc.
P.O. Box 386
Salina, KS 67402-0386
913-826-1616
913-826-9508 (Fax)
Tom Rogers
Manager, Business Development
LynnTech, Inc.
7610 Eastmark
College Station, TX 77840
409-690-1552
409-764-7479 (Fax)
77

-------
Jerry Rose
Environmental Analyst
JBR Environmental Consultants
8160 S. Highland Dr.
Sandy, UT 84093
801-943-4144
801-942-1852 (Fax)
Ken Rosser
President
Scientific Supply Source, Inc.
15201 E. Moncrieff Place
Aurora, CO 80011
303-375-1664
303-375-1706 (Fax)
Jim V. Rouse
Geohydrologist
Terra Vac, Geochem Division
12596 W. Bayard
Suite 2 05
Lakewood, CO 80228
303-988-8902
303-988-0288 (Fax)
Robert Sachs
Environmental Scientist
U.S. EPA
401 M St., S.W.
Washington, DC 20466
202-260-3354
202-260-5732 (Fax)
Connie Sasala
Environmental Scientist
U.S. EPA-OPPE
401 M St., S.W.
Washington, DC 20460
202-260-3354
202-260-5732 (Fax)
Phil Schemmel
Sales Manager
Optimum Systems, Inc
5238 E. Warren
Denver, CO 80222
303-758-7019
303-758-7019 (Fax)
Otto O. Schemmel
CEO
Optimum Systems, Inc.
5238 E. Warren
Denver, CO 80222
303-758-7019
303-758-7019 (Fax)
Charles J. Schick
Associate
CDM Federal Programs Corporation
1626 Cole Blvd., Suite 100
Golden, CO 80401
303-232-0131
303-232-0904 (Fax)
Jay Schneider
System Sales Manager
Geotech
7950 S. Wabash St.
Englewood, CO 80112
303-721-1342
Henry Schroeder
Remedial Project Manager
U.S. EPA-Region VIII
MC-H-FF
Suite 500
999 18th Street
Denver, CO 80202-2405
303-294-1981
303-294-7559 (Fax)
Michael D. Schuhen
Staff Engineer
RE\SPEC
4715 Indian School Road
Albuquerque, NM 87110
505-268-2661
505-268-0040 (Fax)
Sina Seyedian
Program Manager
Foster Wheeler Environmental Services
2 Inverness Drive, East
Suite 101
Englewood, CO 80112
303-790-7560
303-790-8452 (Fax)
78

-------
Arthur Shattuck
Environmental Engineer
SAIC
411 Hackensack Ave.
Hackensack, NJ 07610
201-489-5200
201-489-1592 (Fax)
Kirk D. Shellum
National Sales Manager
Advanced Soil Technologies, Inc.
4570 Churchill Street
Suite 3000
St. Paul, MN 55126-2222
612-486-7000
612-486-0859 (Fax)
David C. Shelton
CCEM
Colorado Ctr. for Environ. Mgmt.
999 18th Street
Suite 2750
Denver, CO 80202
303-297-0180
303-297-0188 (Fax)
Lowell Shifley
Nevada DEP
333 W. NYE Lane
Carson City, NV 89710
Jim Short
President
Sal Recycling Technologies
1200 17th St., Ste. 2100
Denver, CO 80202
303-573-8300
303-573-8332 (Fax)
Karl W. Shuler
Vice President-Construction Services
USPCI, Inc.
5665 Flatiron Parkway
Boulder, CO 80301
303-938-5503
303-938-5520 (Fax)
Joseph Simonetto
Vice President/Sales and Marketing
Environmental Construction Company
1701 East Main Street
Griffith, IN 46319
219-922-5500
219-922-5510 (Fax)
Thomas O. Singer
Director of Research
Western Governors' Association
600 17th Street
Suite 17055
Denver, CO 80202
303-623-9378
303-534-7309 (Fax)
Leanne Smith
Deputy Manager
DOE Rocky Flats
P.O. Box 928
Golden, CO 80402-0928
303-966-2025
303-966-6054 (Fax)
Collier Smith
National Institute of Standards & Technology
MS 104
325 Broadway
Boulder, CO 80303
303-497-7038
303-497-5222 (Fax)
Morgan Smith
Director
CO International Trade
1625 Broadway, Suite 680
Denver, CO 80202
303-892-3850
303-892-3820 (Fax)
William French Smith
President and CEO
William French Smith Consulting
102 S. Balsam St.
Lakewood, CO 80226-1344
303-233-3335
79

-------
James Souby
Tom Stauch
Executive Director
Environmental Protection Supervisor
Western Governors' Assoc.
Denver Public Health
600 17th Street
Environmental Protection Division
Denver, CO 80202-5442
605 Bannock Street
303-623-9378
Denver, CO 80204-4507
303-534-7309 (Fax)
303-436-7305

303-436-5074 (Fax)
Susan Spencer

Sales
Sandy Stavnes
Environmental Instruments
Environmental Engineer
14 Inverness Dr. East
U.S. EPA-Region VIII
Englewood, CO 80112
999 18th Street
303-799-3898
Suite 500
303-799-3893
Denver, CO 80202

303-293-1495
James "Skip" Spensley, Esquire
303-293-1488 (Fax)
Co-Chairman

CO Env. Business Alliance
Richard P. Steele
Holmes, Roberts & Owen LLC
General Manager
1700 Lincoln
Environmental Remediation Research Co.
Suite 4100
11246 S. Post Oak
Denver, CO 80203
mi
303-861-7000
Houston, TX 77035
303-866-0200 (Fax)
713-726-9596

713-726-9598 (Fax)
Karen L. Spray

Principal Hydrogeologist
Robert Steinberg
TRC Environmental Corp.
Partner
11 Inverness Drive, E.
Porter Wright
Englewood, CO 80112
131233 20th St. N.W.
303-792-5555
Washington, DC 20036
303-792-0122 (Fax)
202-778-3070

202-778-3063 (Fax)
Shad Sherman Springer

Graduate Student
Cathryn Stewart
University of Wyoming
Hydrogeologist
4321 Crow Dr.
Grant Environmental
Laramie, WY 82070
12150 E. Briarwood
307-742-8415
Englewood, CO 80112

303-790-7400
Tom Staible
303-799-6993 (Fax)
Vice President

URS Consultants, Inc.
Tim Stine
1099 18th Street
Project Engineer
Denver, CO 80202
Layne Environmental Services
303-296-9700
8301 E. 11 iff
303-296-6117 (Fax)
Denver, CO 80231

303-755-1281

303-755-1236 (Fax)
80

-------
John D. Student
Remedial Programs Manager
Denver Health-Environmental Protection
MC 2350
605 Bannock Street
Denver, CO 80204-4507
303-436-7305
303-436-5074 (Fax)
James C. Su
Director
Wangtec, Inc.
6804 Hobson Valley Drive
Unit 115
Woodbridge, IL 60517
708-852-0104
708-852-0670 (Fax)
Ahmet Suer
Principal Engineer
Westinghouse Savannah River Company
1995 S. Centennial Rd.
Aiken, SC 29803
803-644-6900
803-644-6922 (Fax)
Wayland R. Swain, Ph.D.
Vice President, U.S. Division
Eco Logic International, Inc.
2385 Huron Parkway
Ann Arbor, MI 48104
313-973-2780
313-677-0055 (Fax)
Vance Syphers
Vice President
Environmental Scientific, Inc.
P.O. Box 13486
Research Triangle Pk, NC 27709-3486
919-941-0847
919-941-0652 (Fax)
Marilyn Tanner
Business Manager
Wayne Gomez Demolition
401 N. Kuner Road
Brighton, CO 80601
303-659-4444
303-659-4402 (Fax)
Jo Taylor
EPS
U.S. EPA, Region VIII
999 18th Street
Suite 500
Denver, CO 80202
303-293-1511
303-293-1724 (Fax)
Laura Thomas
Client Services
Evergreen Analytical Laboratory
4036 Youngfield Street
Wheat Ridge, CO 80033
303-425-6021
303-425-6854 (Fax)
Stephen Thomas
Project Manager
Wayne Gomez Demolition & Excavating
401 N. Kuner Rd.
Brighton, CO 80601
303-659-4444
303-659-4402 (Fax)
Joanne Tischler
Project Manager
URS Consultants, Inc.
1099 18th Street
Denver, CO 80202
303-296-9700
303-296-6117 (Fax)
Jerri Town, Ph.D.
EMS
8601 Georgia Drive
Silver Spring, MO 20910
301-589-5318
301-589-8487 (Fax)
Jean C. Townsend
President
Coley/Forrest, Inc.
1635 Blake Street
#200
Denver, CO 80202-1323
303-573-9900
303-573-9903 (Fax)
81

-------
George Trezek
Vice President
Greenfield Environmental
5964 La Place Ct.
Carlsbad, CA 92008
619-431-5500
619-431-5698 (Fax)
Tai Truong
Development Engineer
Australian Defence Industries
77 Parramatta Road
Silverwater NSW 2141 AUSTRALIA
514-335-0057
514-335-8279 (Fax)
Allan L. Udin
Vice President
Engineering Science Inc.
1700 Broadway
#900
Denver, CO 80290
303-831-8100
303-831-8208 (Fax)
Nancy VanBurgel
Attorney
Elsevier Science
13701 W. Jewell
Lakewood, CO 80228
303-763-9300
Terry Varanese
Procurement Specialist
Small Business Development Center
1445 Market
Denver, CO 80202
303-620-8020
Kim Y. Vincent
Business Manger
IN-SITU Inc.
210 South Third Street
Laramie, WY 82070
307-742-8213
307-721-7598 (Fax)
David Waite
Vice President
CH2M Hill
777 108th Ave.
Bellevue, WA 98004
206-453-5000
206-462-5957 (Fax)
Thomas J.M. Weaver
President
Prosys Corporation
187 Billerica Road
Chelmsford, MA 01824
508-250-4940
508-250-4977 (Fax)
Tim Weaver
Microbiologist
PTI Environmental
2995 Baseline Rd.
Boulder, CO 80303
303-444-7270
303-444-7528 (Fax)
Barbara Wells
National Governors' Association
State Environmental Tech. Strategies &
444 North Capitol Street
Washington, DC 20001
202-624-5822
202-624-5313 (Fax)
Lacey L. Williams
Business Manager
Colog, Inc.
17301 W. Colfax
Suite 265
Golden, CO 80401
303-279-0171
303-279-2730 (Fax)
Gerry Willis
President
Ener-Tech Associates, Inc.
1641 California
Suite 302
Denver, CO 80202
303-620-9388
303-623-5062 (Fax)
82

-------
Gary R. Windolph
Randall R. Zombola, Ph.D.
Principal
Research Scientist
ESA Consultants Inc.
Kaman Sciences Corporation
2637 Midpoint Dr.
P.O. Box 7463
Ft. Collins, CO 80525
Colorado Springs, CO 80933
303-484-3611
719-599-1954
303-484-4118 (Fax)
719-599-1420 (Fax)
Robert A. Woellner
John Zupaneic
Senior Scientist
President
Converse Consultants MR
Soilquest International, Inc.
3084 South Linley Court
P.O. Box 1933
Denver, CO 80236
Dodge City, KS 67801
303-935-1573
316-225-6982
303-935-7955 (Fax)
316-225-7095 (Fax)
Todd P. Woloson

Director of Business Development

Sal Recycling Technologies (SRTI)

1200 17th St., Ste. 2100

Denver, CO 80202

303-573-8300

303-573-8332 (Fax)

Kon Wyatt

Project Engineer

Surtek, Inc.

1511 Washington

Golden, CO 80401

303-278-0877

303-278-2245 (Fax)

John A. Yellich

Director, Consulting Services

USPCI, Inc.

5665 Flatiron Parkway

Boulder, CO 80301

303-938-5553

303-938-5520 (Fax)

Wei Zhou

Staff Consultant

Intera Sciences

3609 S. Wadsworth Blvd.

5th Floor

Denver, CO 80235

303-985-0005

303-980-5900 (Fax)

83

-------

-------