Section 319
               NONPOINT SOORGE PROGRAM NICCES?  STORY
 Remediation Efforts Reduces Pollution Seeping into Waterbodies
Waterbody Improved
                               Petroleum and chemical seeps from contaminated soil, contaminated
                               groundwater and leaking storage tanks polluted several waterbodies
flowing through Alaska's King Salmon Air Station (KSAS), including Red Fox Creek, King Salmon Creek,
Eskimo Creek and Naknek River. Alaska placed these waterbodies on the Clean Water Act section 303(d)
list in 1994 (Red Fox Creek) and 1996 (King Salmon Creek, Eskimo Creek and the Naknek River) for impair-
ments by petroleum hydrocarbons and oil and grease. To address the problem, the U.S. Air Force imple-
mented various remedial actions, including removing leaking storage tanks, closing dry wells, removing or
capping contaminated soil, and installing  treatment systems. Water quality monitoring data indicate that
these actions are successfully preventing petroleum products from seeping into the waterbodies, allow-
ing them to meet water quality standards. Alaska removed the waterbodies from the impaired waters list
in 2003 (King Salmon and Eskimo creeks) and 2004 (Red Fox Creek and Naknek River).
 Problem
 Red Fox Creek, King Salmon Creek, Eskimo Creek
 and the Naknek River flow through KSAS property
 on the Alaska Peninsula. KSAS is approximately 280
 miles southwest of Anchorage (Figure 1). KSAS is
 on the poorly drained lowlands northwest of the
 Aleutian Range. Ground elevations range from 30 to
 68 feet above mean sea level. The Air Force built an
 air station at the beginning of World War II to serve
 as a fuel and support base for the Aleutian Islands.
 Alaska acquired the airfield in 1959, which now
 serves as a commercial airport. KSAS still supports
 some military activities of the Air Force, Army,
 Marines and Coast Guard.

 During the 1940s and 1950s, activities at KSAS
 released petroleum products and chemicals into the
 environment. In the 1980s and 1990s, seeps from
 this historically contaminated soil, contaminated
 groundwater and leaking storage tanks entered
 several waterbodies flowing through KSAS—
 Red Fox Creek, King Salmon Creek,  Eskimo Creek
 and the Naknek River. The pollutants created visible
 hydrocarbon sheens on the waterbodies, which
 violated Alaska's water quality standards. The Alaska
 Department of Environmental Conservation (ADEC)
 placed these waterbodies on the Clean Water Act
 section 303(d) list in 1994 (Red Fox Creek) and 1996
 (King Salmon Creek, Eskimo Creek, and Naknek
 River) for petroleum hydrocarbons and oil and
 grease. The Air Force is responsible for cleaning up
 the contamination  on KSAS.
                                                               Barrow
                                              NOT TO SCALE
                                                                              Juneau
                                                                             Ketchikan
                                             Figure 1. Contaminated soil and groundwater
                                             on King Salmon Air Station polluted several
                                             waterbodies in the Alaska Peninsula's lower Naknek
                                             River watershed.
                                             Project Highlights
                                             Since 1987 the Air Force has been engaged in
                                             cleanup operations at KSAS under the Installation
                                             Restoration Program (IRP)—the Air Force equiva-
                                             lent of the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency's
                                             Comprehensive Environmental Response,
                                             Compensation, and Liability Act program. The IRP
                                             provides guidelines and funding to  investigate and
                                             remediate potentially contaminated sites at Air
                                             Force installations. The Air Force delineated KSAS
                                             into seven groundwater zones for cleanup on the
                                             basis of similarities in groundwater and surface
                                             water movement, contaminants of  concern, geol-
                                             ogy,  and location.

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      Although the impaired waterbodies are in different
      areas of KSAS, similar pollution sources caused their
      impairments. For example, data show that Eskimo
      Creek was contaminated by petroleum and trichlo-
      roethylene (TCE) products seeping into the creek
      from a former tank farm, two former dry wells, and
      various individual sites.  In 1997 TCE levels in  Eskimo
      Creek reached 0.015 milligrams per liter (mg/L). In
      response, the Air Force  signed a Record of Decision
      for Final Remedial Action, which established  a
      0.005 mg/L Remedial Action Objective (RAO/cleanup
      level) for TCE in the groundwater zone. To address
      the pollution source, the Air Force installed a biovent-
      ing curtain and groundwater treatment system to
      remove the chemicals from the soil and groundwater
      and prevent them from reaching Eskimo Creek.

      Similarly, groundwater carried petroleum and TCE
      contamination from former training areas into Red
      Fox Creek. The Air Force launched numerous clean-
      up efforts, including removing and treating contami-
      nated soil and  installing a bioventing system.

      Buried and  partially exposed storage drums leaked
      petroleum hydrocarbons and oil and grease  into soil
      and groundwater, allowing free product to move
      into King Salmon Creek and its  adjacent wetlands.
      In response, the Air Force removed the exposed
      drums and then recontoured and capped the area to
      prevent movement of remaining contaminants.  The
      Air Force also installed a groundwater treatment
      system to prevent the polluted groundwater from
      flowing into the creek.

      Petroleum-contaminated groundwater from  a
      former tank farm seeped into the wetlands near
      the Naknek River and then into  the Naknek River
      itself. The Air Force removed 1,100 cubic yards  of
      contaminated soil and remediated the majority  of
      the petroleum-contaminated groundwater. The
      removed soil was treated in facility bioremediation
      cells, and the treated soil was reused as  landfill cap-
      ping material at the facility. The Air Force installed a
      passive remediation system that continues to treat
      residual contamination  before it enters the wetlands
      and Naknek River.

      The Air Force has an extensive monitoring network
      in place and will continue to monitor petroleum  lev-
      els in groundwater, surface water, upland sediments
      and creek sediments to evaluate remedial efforts
      and attenuation processes.
Results
                         Figure 2. Remediation efforts
                         removed petroleum seeps and
                         restored Alaska's King Salmon Creek.
                                                   Monitoring data indicate
                                                   that the Air Force's
                                                   remediation efforts
                                                   removed historical
                                                   petroleum sources and
                                                   are successfully treating
                                                   remaining contaminated
                                                   groundwater before it
                                                   can enter the waterbod-
                                                   ies. For example, data
                                                   from Eskimo Creek show
                                                   that TCE levels have
                                                   decreased from a high
                                                   of 0.015 mg/L before project implementation to
                                                   levels predominantly below the RAO of 0.005 mg/L
                                                   in recent years. Similarly, monitoring data collected
                                                   after project implementation along King Salmon
                                                   Creek (Figure 2), Red Fox Creek and the Naknek River
                                                   indicate that pollutant levels have declined or were
                                                   non-detectable. All four waterbodies met Alaska's
                                                   surface water quality standards, prompting ADEC to
                                                   remove the waterbodies from the state's impaired
                                                   waters list in 2003 (King Salmon and Eskimo creeks)
                                                   and 2004 (Red Fox Creek and Naknek River).

                                                   Although the Air Force's cleanup efforts have
                                                   restored the surface waters, some soil and ground-
                                                   water contamination remains on KSAS. Therefore,
                                                   restoration efforts at KSAS will continue beyond
                                                   2015. Because remaining pollution in the ground-
                                                   water could seep into adjacent surface waters, the
                                                   Air Force will continue monitoring  indefinitely until
                                                   groundwater levels fall below the cleanup criteria
                                                   outlined in the KSAS IRP.
Partners and Funding
To facilitate public involvement, the Air Force helped
to form the King Salmon Restoration Advisory
Board, which is made up of interested stakeholders,
including members of the King Salmon Tribe, and
serves as a communication link between the com-
munity, local government, the Air Force and regula-
tory agencies. ADEC has worked collaboratively with
the Air Force; the King Salmon Tribe; local com-
panies such as Paug-Vik, an Alaska native-owned
corporation; local residents; the advisory board;
and the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency
to improve the conditions at KSAS. The Air Force
is funding all remediation efforts at KSAS. ADEC
provides oversight of the cleanup programs through
a Defense State Memorandum of Agreement.
PR
,     U.S. Environmental Protection Agency
•fc   Office of Water
 2   Washington, DC
 CD

     EPA841-F-09-001G
     June 2009
                                                          For additional information contact:
                                                          Jonathan Schick
                                                          Alaska Department of Environmental Conservation
                                                          907-269-3077 • jonathan.schick@alaska.gov
Todd Fickel
U.S. Air Force
907-552-7439 •
                                                                        fickel.todd@elmendorf.af.mil

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