U.S. Environmental Protection Agency
Pacific Southwest/Region 9
EPA-909-R-10-002
EPA Progress Report 2010
    Pacific Southwest Region

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From the Regional Administrator
                                  Dear Readers,
                                  This year, EPA is celebrating the fortieth anniversary of both Earth Day and the founding of our federal agency in 1970.
                                  As you'll see by reviewing the timeline that runs through this report, EPA, together with our states, Native American tribes, and
                                  island territories, have made a great deal of progress in cleaning up the environment and improving human health.
                                  In 1970, Americans were angry at the lack of attention being paid to critical issues of clean air, water and land. Congress re-
                                  sponded to the ongoing crisis of smog and polluted water by passing the Clean Air Act (1970) and the Clean Water Act (1972).
                                  In 1980, after the toxic tragedy of Love Canal in New York, the Superfund law was enacted to clean up toxic dumps and hold
                                  the responsible parties accountable.
                                  Our region is host to the nation's second largest city, Los Angeles, where smog-causing pollution has been reduced in the past
                                  40 years by 70%, thanks to sustained effort at the federal, state and local levels. Ninety-seven percent of the Pacific South-
                                  west's population is now served by community water systems supplying water that meets all applicable health-based drinking
                                  water standards.  EPA has completed cleanup at more than half of the 128 Superfund sites in the Pacific Southwest. We have a
                                  lot to be proud of and much work still to be done.
                                  One thing is clearer today than ever:  What's good for the environment is also good for the economy. President Obama's Re-
                                  covery Act funding aided much-needed infrastructure renewal while helping the nation come back from its worst recession since
                                  the 1930s. In the next decade, a green innovation revolution will keep our nation competitive and help us tackle complex new
                                  environmental challenges.
                                  Climate change is such a challenge. We can start today to reduce our dependency on foreign oil by deploying  cutting-edge
                                  renewable energy systems, by developing the next generation of electric vehicles, and by purchasing Energy Star appliances.
                                  This march towards green  innovation must lift all boats. We need to meet the needs of our most vulnerable communities first.
                                  Across America today, poor and minority communities remain at greatest risk from exposure to environmental health hazards.
                                  Green collar jobs are now going to communities that need employment and a cleaner neighborhood.
                                  Earth  Day and EPA were both created 40 years ago by individuals who saw the power of simple actions to transform our lives
                                  and communities. In this regard, much has remained the same. Everyone still needs do their part. To make it a little easier, we've
                                  compiled a list of 40 things we can all do to lighten our footprint on the planet and save a little money—at home, at school, at
                                  work, on the road, or anywhere.
                                  We hope you will join us in our commitment to protect the health of our environment, our communities and our families. I look
                                  forward to working with you and EPA's many partners, from state governments to remote tribal communities to small busi-
                                  nesses, to embrace these  challenges and leave the world a better place for our children.
                                  Jared Blumenfeld
                                  Regional Administrator
                                  EPA Pacific Southwest Region

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                                                                                                     Table of Contents
SPECIAL FEATURES IN OUR 40iH ANNIVERSARY EDITION
                                                                           Clean Air.
                                                                           Clean Water...,,,,	,,,,.. 10
                                                                           Clean Land..,.,,,.,,,.,,,.,,.,,,,. 16
                                                                           Communities
                                                                           and Ecosystems.
26
                                                                           Compliance
                                                                           and Stewardship
34
I
                                                                           40 Things You Can Do to Save the Planet... Centerfold

                                                                           Contact Information..,,,.,,,.,,,.,.,,,.,,,..Inside Back Cover

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1971
Two Standard Oil tankers
collide in heavy fog
beneath Golden Gate
Bridge, 2:00 a.m. January
19, spilling 840,000 gallons
of oil, fouling Bay Area
shorelines.
40 things.
      AT HOME
      Adjust your thermostat
      —up in summer, down
      in winter
Everyone wants clean air, but theres no
simple way to achieve it across a vast
region with differing sources of air pollu-
tion, topography and weather patterns.
EPA works with states, local air districts
and communities to develop state and lo-
cal regulations that are tailored  to local
air issues while ensuring that air quality
will meet federal health standards.
In recent years, EPA's Pacific Southwest
Region has  partnered  with scores of
stakeholder groups on innovative  non-
regulatory approaches to reduce air pol-
lution in communities that are dispropor-
tionately affected.
This chapter looks at the results of coop-
erative efforts to reduce diesel emissions
generated by the ports of Oakland,  Long
Beach and Los Angeles, which affect the
health of people living near the ports and
freeways used to move freight inland.
Responding to the concerns of parents
of school-age children, EPA has initiated
rooftop monitoring of toxic air pollutants
at 40 schools across the nation, includ-
ing four in California. EPA has also part-
nered with several agencies to create the
California Air Response Planning Alliance
to help protect people's health during air
quality emergencies caused by fires.
 > See the complete list of "40 things you can do to save the planet" in the centerfold

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                                                                                                        Clean Air
West Oakland  CARE Grant,
Toxics Reduction Collaborative Get Results
EPA has a long history of involvement in West
Oakland, Calif., a community surrounded by
three freeways, the 4th largest container port
in the U.S., a large postal facility and numer-
ous industries.  Starting  in 2002, with the
release of a report from the West  Oakland
Environmental  Indicators  Project   entitled
"Neighborhood  Knowledge  for Change,"
EPA's West Oakland Toxics Reduction Team
focused  on  addressing the  toxics issues
raised in the report.
After the EIP  report was released in 2002,
EPA issued a small  grant to a  local nonprofit
to  begin addressing toxics issues. The EPA
team  began working  closely with the com-
munity and other stakeholders on specific
issues,  including  toxic  emissions from  a
large yeast  manufacturer and diesel emis-
sions  from trucks on  the streets. The EPA
team  and its  partners  provided scientific
and regulatory expertise and improved the
community's access to government decision
making processes. Early successes includ-
ed the voluntary, permanent  closure of the
yeast facility when its owners could not meet
emissions standards;  and the City of Oak-
land creating alternate truck routes to keep
idling diesel trucks off  residential streets.
Encouraged  by these results,  EIP  applied
for  and received an  EPA Communities for
a Renewed Environment (CARE) grant. The
CARE program is designed to pull together
the community, EPA and other stakeholders
to  assess the toxic impacts in a local area,
and then prioritize  mitigation  efforts for re-
ducing toxics, while working to develop the
community's long-term capacity to address
environmental issues.
EPA's team worked  closely with EIP to de-
velop a collaborative approach  to further
reduce toxics: the West Oakland Toxics Re-
duction Collaborative (WOTRC).  Co-led by
EPA and the EIP, the collaborative  included
diverse  stakeholders, including concerned
citizens, state and local agencies, business-
es, independent diesel truckers and the Port
of Oakland.
The collaborative divided into workgroups to
address toxic reduction issues, then brought
options to the full group. Results include:
•  Providing alternative fuels (biodiesel,
   compressed natural gas) and a new
   truck information  and service center to
   assist 2,000 truckers in complying with
   stringent truck standards.
•  Training dozens of households on
   asthma prevention measures, institu-
   tionalizing the program through local
   agencies and organizations, and using
   an innovative Health Impact Assessment
   to get mitigation measures for a senior
   center and other facilities.
•  Developing  a "roadmap" for community
   engagement in Brownfields site cleanup
   and redevelopment processes.
•  Working with industrial recyclers to move
   out of residential areas while staying in
   West Oakland.
•  Encouraging the Port of Oakland to
   develop a Maritime Air Quality Improve-
   ment Plan. The plan set a goal of reduc-
   ing toxic risks in West Oakland 85% by
   2020.
•  Building leadership and capacity: One of
   the EIP members was named to the Port
   Commission, and a local independent
   truck operator established the Truck
   Information Center.
In a new phase of the collaboration, now un-
derway, the community continues to engage
with local stakeholders to reduce toxics.
The effort is now a national model for com-
munity collaboration. EPA Administrator Lisa
Jackson even attended  one of the collab-
orative meetings in 2009 on her first visit to
California.
EPA's West Oakland team includes  Richard
Grow, John Brock, Karen Henry, Mike Band-
rowski and Amy Zimpfer. The  team's work
in the community wrapped  up in  October
2009, but the community's work continues.
1972
Congress passes Clean
Water Act. California
legislature passes Wild
and Scenic Rivers Act.
California voters pass
Coastal Conservation
Initiative. EPA bans DDT.
                                       Mary Nichols, Chairman of the California Air Resources
                                     Board, Jack Broadbent, Executive Officer of the Bay Area
                                     Air Quality Management District, and Margaret Gordon of
                                           the West Oakland Toxics Reduction Collaborative.

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                            4       Clean Air
1973
Congress, President Nixon
approve Endangered
Species Act. EPA begins
enforcement action
against eight ore smelters
in Arizona and Nevada for
excessive sulfur dioxide
pollution.
                            Recovery Act Fulfills  Promise
                            of Reducing  Diesel  Emissions
Above: EPA Regional
Administrator Jared
Blumenfeld and Nevada Gov.
Jim Gibbons in Sparks, Nev.,
to announce EPA funding for
new, cleaner school buses
to reduce kids' exposure to
diesel emissions.
Below: EPA Administrator
Lisa Jackson meets the press
at the Port of Long Beach,
October 2009.
             When  you're  behind  a  big
             truck  or  bus,  you can usu-
             ally smell diesel emissions in
             the air. That's because, while
             stricter emissions  standards
for  cars took effect  in  1975—phasing  out
dirty pre-1975 models  by the 1990s—die-
sel  emissions from heavy-duty trucks, bus-
es,  bulldozers, tractors and  other vehicles
stayed the same.
In the late 1990s, after a thorough review of
scientific studies  on  the subject, EPA found
diesel emissions to  be a significant health
threat, and set stricter standards for new
diesel engines. The standards took effect for
engines built starting in 2007.
Air  quality gains  from these  cleaner diesel
engines will be slow in coming, since the old
ones usually last  25 to 30 years. That's why
EPA's Pacific Southwest and Pacific North-
west regions started the West Coast Diesel
Collaborative  in  2003—to get  cleaner air
quicker, by uniting a variety of stakeholders
to replace and retrofit diesel engines sooner.
The ongoing effort got a major boost in 2009
with  $300  million that  Congress appropri-
ated for the purpose nationwide under the
American Recovery and Reinvestment Act.

Diesel Emissions Threaten Health
The scientific data on the health effects of
diesel emissions is unequivocal. Diesel emis-
sions contribute  to unhealthy levels of fine
particles, ozone and air toxics. Fine particles
have been associated with an increased risk
of premature death, hospital admissions for
heart  and lung disease,  respiratory symp-
toms  such as asthma,  and  other  adverse
health effects. Long-term exposure to diesel
exhaust may pose a lung cancer hazard.
The  collaborative is  a public-private part-
nership working to reduce diesel emissions
along the West Coast. It  was the first pilot
project of EPA's national Clean Diesel Cam-
paign, and has brought together more than
1,000 partners across seven states in EPA's
Pacific Southwest  and Northwest regions,
plus  Canada and Mexico.
EPA  began  awarding funds for innovative
technologies and practices to  reduce die-
sel emissions in 2004. By the end of 2008,
EPA  had provided $19 million in funding to
collaborative  partners, leveraging an  ad-
ditional $28  million and affecting 1,600  en-
gines. Some engines were replaced,  others
retrofitted with pollution controls. Then came
the Recovery Act, bringing $33 million to
the region for this purpose in just one year.
This  leveraged  an additional $56 million from
project partners, for a total of $89 million.
To announce the new funding, EPA Adminis-
trator Lisa Jackson participated  in an event
in early  October 2009 at  the Port of Long
Beach with  Acting  Regional Administrator
Laura Yoshii, Gov.  Arnold Schwarzenegger
and  the mayors of Los Angeles and Long
Beach. Californians who  live or work near
the ports of  Los Angeles, Long  Beach and
Oakland are particularly affected by diesel

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                      Clean Air
    emissions, since diesel  trucks and equip-
    ment are constantly moving cargo to, from
    and within the ports.
    The fine particles in diesel
    emissions have been
    associated with asthma,
    hospital admissions for
    heart and lung disease,
    and other health effects.
    The two ports received a total of $6 million in
    Recovery Act funds to replace, repower, or
    retrofit 139 pieces of diesel-burning equip-
    ment,  including engines on  gantry cranes
    and harbor craft. California, Nevada, Hawaii
    and Arizona each  received $1.7 million for
    projects to reduce diesel emissions. The first
    three of these states are  using the money to
    replace, repower, or retrofit  school buses.
    Arizona is installing electrical outlets at truck
    stops near the U.S.-Mexico  Border to re-
    duce idling when truckers stop for a meal or
    overnight.
    In most of the U.S., it may still be a few years
    before you can breathe clean  air if you're
    stuck behind a big rig  in heavy traffic, but
    millions of people  who  live near the ports
    of Los Angeles, Long Beach and Oakland
    are already  benefiting from  cleaner diesel
    engines.
                                Learn more:
       www.westcoastcollaborative.org/arra-dera-grants.htm
   Sherwood Rowland
  blish study showing
  lorofluorocarbons
  rCs) used in
spraycans, Styrofoam
and refrigeration damage
          Right: EPA Administrator Lisa Jackson and
Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger take a look at new, cleaner
 diesel equipment to be used at the Port of Long Beach.

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                           6      Clean Air
1975
To comply with Clean
Air Act, auto makers put
catalytic converters on
all new 1975 model cars,
which use unleaded gas
only. Smog and lead levels
start declining.
EPA's  School Air Toxics
Monitoring Program

It's a well-established fact that children are
more vulnerable to the health hazards of air
pollution than adults; their lungs are still de-
veloping and they play hard, breathing more
air for their size than adults.  Yet schools are
often located  near major air  pollution sourc-
es like freeways,  factories and airports. To
get a more accurate estimate  of exposure
and the risk to our children  in schools, EPA
started a School Air Toxics  Monitoring Pro-
gram  in 2009, involving 63  schools around
the nation.
In the Pacific  Southwest, air monitoring be-
gan in August 2009  at three Southern Cali-
fornia schools, and in June at one Northern
California school. EPA is working closely with
the local air quality districts, who operate the
monitoring equipment. The schools were
chosen  due to their proximity to sources
of  air toxics:  Felton  Elementary is close to
the 1-405 freeway and Los Angeles Interna-
tional  Airport. Soto Street Elementary is at
the intersection of four major LA freeways.
Santa Anita Christian Academy is near the El
Monte Airport, where leaded aviation gas is
used by aircraft.  Stevens Creek Elementary
in Silicon Valley's  Cupertino is near a large
cement plant.
At  the Cupertino  school, the  Bay Area  Air
Quality Management District has been moni-
toring for hexavalent chromium (Cr6+), since
that substance had  recently been found in
the air near  two  cement plants  elsewhere
in California.  Inhalation of Cr6+ at high lev-
els can damage the respiratory system and
cause cancer. So far, the levels of Cr6+ at
the school have been well below risk-based
                                                                       tffjMij*                Jin
                                                                                                           ^^
                                                                      screening levels, but the district will continue
                                                                      monitoring until there is data for a full year,
                                                                      to ensure that all seasonal air patterns have
                                                                      been monitored.
                                                                      For  the three Southern California schools,
                                                                      the initial data indicate  that the air is typical
                                                                      for the Los Angeles area.  The good news is
                                                                      that the schools do not appear to be "hot
                                                                      spots" for pollution, but air pollution levels
                                                                      throughout the LA area are still too high and
                                                                      need be reduced.
                                                                      Once EPA finishes the  monitoring, EPA will
                                                                      review that data in terms of exposure and
                                                                      risk  and  report results  to the communities.
                                                                      EPA will work with the local school districts,
                                                                      air districts and communities to find ways to
                                                                      reduce levels of air pollution where needed.
                                                                      Additional information,  including monitoring
                                                                      data, are posted at www.epa.gov/schoolair.

                                                                      Indoor Air also a Focus
                                                                      EPA is also working with many schools to
                                                                      ensure that indoor air  is  healthy. This is a
priority because we all spend, on the aver-
age, 90% of our time indoors. At the Pacific
Southwest  Regional Office, the Indoor En-
vironments  Team  of Barbara Spark, Shelly
Rosenblum and Katie Stewart brings EPA's
Tools for Schools to  classrooms  through
grants and via the team's own efforts.
In 2009, the team funded partners working
with schools in the San Francisco Bay Area,
the  Los Angeles Unified School District and
Yuma, Arizona. The team is directly involved
with several school districts from the Sacra-
mento area to Napa, and works directly with
students and teachers through Earthteam, a
coalition of  Bay Area science teachers and
students. Earthteam provides  lecturers to
high school classes to educate students on
the  effects  of both indoor and outdoor air
pollution on asthma and other health issues.
                Air Quality Tools for Schools:
                        www.epa.gov/schools w

                  More on Indoor Air Quality:
                           www.epa.gov/iaq w
                                                                                                                            Above: EPA has been monitoring air toxics at Felton
                                                                                                                          Elementary School, which is close to the I-405 Freeway
                                                                                                                                       and Los Angeles International Airport.

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                                                                                                          Clean Air      7
Enforcement:
Cement  Plants  Initiative  Reduces Air Pollution
EPA has prioritized the investigation of ce-
ment manufacturing plants across the na-
tion, since they are among the largest sta-
tionary sources  of smog-forming nitrogen
oxides (NOx) and sulfur dioxide. This Clean
Air Act enforcement effort will achieve sig-
nificant emission  reductions at dozens of ce-
ment plants, including two near Victorville in
San  Bernardino County, Calif.
The  latest actions, against LaFarge North
America, require  a $5.1 million penalty and
pollution control  upgrades at 13 of its  U.S.
plants. These  include  the nation's first se-
lective catalytic reduction  system to control
NOx emissions at a cement plant.
The  law's new source  review provisions re-
quire that the largest emission sources ob-
tain  permits and install  stringent pollution
controls when  initially built or making major
modifications. EPA found that some cement
plants failed to comply. Because NOx emis-
sions and resulting smog can cause respi-
ratory  problems, compliance will provide
health benefits, especially in areas that fail
to meet federal health standards for ozone
(smog).
In the largest single-facility settlement yet in
EPA's initiative, CEMEX  California Cement
LLC paid a $2 million fine and is taking steps
to reduce smog-causing pollution by 40% at
the company's Victorville, Calif., manufactur-
ing plant, one of  the nation's largest cement
producers. Air quality in this area, near the
eastern border of Los Angeles County, fails
to meet the national ozone standard.
An  EPA investigation found  that the plant
had  been  releasing nitrogen oxides (NOx),
sulfur dioxide and carbon monoxide, without
permits setting emission limits, which  are
required under the  Clean Air Act. Under the
settlement, the facility must meet new limits
for these pollutants, including stringent limits
for NOx that will reduce emissions by  up-
wards of 1,890 tons per year.
According  to 2007 emissions data main-
tained by the California Air Resources Board,
the CEMEX Victorville plant, along with eight
other cement plants in California, are among
the state's 25  largest stationary sources of
NOx. EPA is investigating most of these ce-
ment plants, and settled another  case in-
volving excessive NOx  emissions  in 2008.
This one, the TXI Oro Grande/Riverside Ce-
ment facility, just 10 miles from CEMEX, paid
a $394,000 penalty.
EPA also  issued Clean  Air Act notices of
violation to CalPortland  Company's Mojave,
Calif., plant in August 2008 and March 2010
and  its  Rillito,  Ariz., plant in August 2003,
and  Lehigh Cement Company's Cupertino,
Calif., plant in  March 2010. A notice of vi-
olation presents preliminary findings to a
company and gives it an opportunity to sub-
mit information to EPA  or begin settlement
discussions.
"These  enforcement actions  will  result in
cleaner air in  areas where the plants  are
located," said  Deborah Jordan, director of
EPA's Pacific Southwest Air Division. "The
CEMEX Victorville cement plant is  the larg-
est stationary source of NOx in California, so
the state-of-the-art air pollution controls that
                                                      Right: A cement manufacturing plant.
CEMEX is installing should have a significant
positive impact."
The  CEMEX  settlement  resolved  EPA's
claims that CEMEX violated the Clean Air Act
by making plant modifications to its Victor-
ville plant resulting  in significant increases in
its capacity to pollute, without first undergo-
ing required  regulatory review, obtaining re-
quired permits, and installing state-of-the-art
emission controls to reduce emissions such
as NOx.
1976
Congress passes
Resource Conservation
and Recovery Act,
regulating hazardous
waste and phasing
out PCBs. California
legislature restricts new
nuclear power plants.

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                          8      Clean Air
1977
Congress and President
Jimmy Carter pass Clean
Air Act Amendments,
strengthening air quality
standards.
When  Smoke Gets in
Your Eyes, Call CARPA

Air quality  emergencies have been increas-
ing  in the  Pacific Southwest over the past
several  years,  especially wildfires,  which
have grown in  size and destructiveness to
life and  property. One of the challenges to
timely, effective responses to these  emer-
gencies  is  the number of government agen-
cies that respond to them. Dozens of state,
local,  federal and tribal agencies may get
involved.
Air pollution control and public health agen-
cies are now developing the emergency re-
sponse  capability to use  portable air moni-
tors and public exposure health guidelines
to determine the health  impacts of harmful
air  pollutants to downwind communities.
Typically, first responders such  as local fire
and hazardous materials  agencies conduct
air monitoring around fires and  other harm-
ful releases of smoke and toxic fumes. They
use  "occupational" health  guideline  limits
to determine health impacts to firefighters
and nearby residents. But a new model was
needed  to  bring air quality and health agen-
cies together to develop their capabilities to
address broader  health  impacts during  air
quality emergencies.
Following the disastrous 2003 wildfires in
Southern California, EPA's regional  Home-
land  Security Coordinator John  Kennedy
formed a partnership with the California Air
Resources Board  (GARB) and the state's
Emergency Management Agency to bring
together agencies involved  at  the federal,
state and local levels in air quality manage-
                                                                    CARPA tackles the
                                                                    challenge of coordinating
                                                                    the many agencies
                                                                    that respond to air
                                                                    quality emergencies.
                                                                    ment,  emergency  response, public health
                                                                    and public information. In 2006, John  co-
                                                                    founded the California Air Response Plan-
                                                                    ning Alliance (CARPA).
                                                                    CARPA's mission is to promote a compre-
                                                                    hensive response to air emergencies, and to
                                                                    improve the ability of air agencies to provide
                                                                    public health officials with data and informa-
                                                                    tion they can act on immediately. A voluntary
                                                                    organization, CARPA focuses on building a
                                                                    collaborative network at all levels of govern-
                                                                    ment in California to develop tools and train-
                                                                    ing to help agencies gather  data effectively,
                                                                    to  interpret the data into  a  clear message
                                                                    for the public,  and to get  the message out
                                                                    quickly during emergencies.
CARPA's  three-step response  model  in-
volves collecting data,  crafting a message
based on the data, and communicating it.
The CARPA Steering Committee's member
agencies now include EPA, GARB, the Cali-
fornia Emergency Management Agency, and
representatives from other federal, state and
local air quality, public and  environmental
health, and emergency response agencies.
CARPA held its inaugural Summit Meeting in
October 2008 and convened experts from
around the country to present their best
practices  in data collection,  data interpre-
tation and communication. More than 200
people attended. In March 2009, John and
CARPA co-chair Jeff Cook of GARB received
the Government Innovation Award from the
American Society for Public  Administration
for their work in forming  and leading CARPA.
The next CARPA conference is planned  for
October 2010 in Sacramento.
                                                                                                            CARPA Web site:
                                                                                                   www.arb.ca.gov/carpa/carpa.htm
                      tf        >
                                                                            Left, right, above: Different views of the
                                                                        Station Fire in Los Angeles, September 2009.
                                                                             Smoke from wildfires can be a greater
                                                                               short-term health threat than smog.

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                                                                                                       Clean Air      9
Sona Chilingaryan:
Reducing  Agriculture's Air Quality Impacts
The  San Joaquin Valley has some of the
worst air quality in the nation. Valley resi-
dents have high rates of asthma, which is
aggravated by particulate pollution. Several
sources, including agriculture, contribute to
this pollution.
Reliable information about  how to  control
dust from farm fields is essential for effective
regulation of this particulate pollution. EPA's
Sona Chilingaryan, working with the U.S.
Department of Agriculture (USDA) on an in-
novative project for assessing agricultural
particulate controls, traveled to farm fields
near Hanford and Los Banos.

Project assessing dust
controls will help make
regulations more effective.
Sona is a native of Armenia who immigrated
to Southern California with her family when
she was eight years old, in 1989. After ten
years in Glendale,  she  earned  degrees at
the University of California at Berkeley and
joined EPA in 2005.
Sona's job in the regional Air Division's Rule-
making Office is to review state and local air
quality regulations to see if they're stringent
enough to meet the federal Clean Air Act's
standards. For the past six years, the San
Joaquin Valley Air District has had a Conser-
vation Management Practices rule in effect,
requiring farmers to reduce  PM10,  particu-
late matter that includes particles up to  10
micrometers in  diameter—1/7 the width of
a human hair—emitted by field tillage and
harvesting.
One way to do this is by leaving dead plant
stalks on the ground, rather than plowing
them under, which also saves time and mon-
ey for farmers. Another way is by a "com-
bined operation," which  similarly  reduces
the number of times a  tractor must drag
dust-raising equipment through a field. The
Conservation  Management  Practices rule
has helped the valley attain federal health
standards for PM10, and ongoing research
is helping provide data that can help make
these regulations more effective.
Sona was part of a joint effort by USDA sci-
entists, the San  Joaquin Valleywide Study
Agency, the California Air Resources Board,
the local air pollution control district and the
agricultural  community  to gather data on
how effective conservation  management
practices are  for  reducing PM10. In addition
to setting up traditional air sampling devices
that use filters to measure PM emissions in
the field, EPA and USDA contracted with
Utah State  University's  Space  Dynamics
Laboratory to bring in LIDAR, a light detec-
tion and ranging instrument.
LIDAR directs a light beam through the dust
plume.  The signal  that bounces back can
help measure properties of the  plume.  For
comparison, the  experiment was  repeated
without  any control  measures  being  em-
ployed, and was done in spring and fall at
different farms to  capture different parts of
the annual routine of farm operations. While
the data had  not yet been published when
this story  went to press, Sona says she
                                                                   Sona Chilingaryan
could see that  the  conservation  manage-
ment practices  were effective at  reducing
emissions.
The  results are relevant to  agricultural ar-
eas with unhealthy levels of  particulate pol-
lution throughout the Western states. Over
the past year, Sona  has also been working
with  state and local air agencies to develop
effective rules to  control  particulates from
sand and gravel mining and  volatile organic
compounds (VOCs) from facilities that make
fiberglass boat hulls  and fake marble coun-
tertops. "We work with state and local agen-
cies to make these rules more effective over
time," Sona says. For people with asthma,
that's welcome news.
1978
Stringfellow Acid Pits
hazardous waste dump
in Riverside County, Calif.
threaten to overflow. CFCs
banned in spraycans.
Toxic waste seeps into
homes in Love Canal, NY.

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    Clean Water


                                                                                                                                    if,   A



1979
EPA Pacific Southwest
Region awards more than
$750 million in grants
to local governments to
build sewage treatment
facilities.
40 things.
      AT SCHOOL
      Help students volunteer
      for local habitat
      restoration projects
Water quality is something many  of us
take for granted.  For the  vast majority
of Americans, healthful drinking water is
available at the turn  of a tap. However,
thousands of miles of water and sewer
lines, and drinking water and wastewater
treatment facilities, must be built,  main-
tained, upgraded and  ultimately replaced.
Today, most of this infrastructure  in ur-
ban areas is more than half a century old,
and  long overdue for renewal. In  2009,
EPA provided substantial  new  funding
through the American Recovery and Re-
investment Act to help all 50 states make
inroads on this growing backlog, while
putting people back to work during the
nation's worst economic downturn since
                                                                       the 1930s.
The  biggest  funding increases  came
where they were most needed—on Pa-
cific Island territories, where tap water is
not always drinkable (see p. 27).
EPA has also been involved in ongoing
efforts to restore the ecological health
of the San  Francisco Bay Delta  Estu-
ary, the West Coast's largest estuary. In
2009, EPA used the enforcement tools of
the Clean Water Act to require infrastruc-
ture renewal, provided partial funding for
it through State Revolving Funds, and
made targeted grants to reduce polluted
runoff from cities and agriculture.
 > See the complete list of "40 things you can do to save the planet" in the centerfold

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                                                                                                               Clean Water     11
            Restoring the San Francisco Bay-Delta  Estuary
            EPA and other federal agencies have com-
            mitted to a robust re-engagement in restor-
            ing the San Francisco Bay-Delta ecosystem
            and addressing California's water needs. In
            2009,  six federal agencies signed a Memo-
            randum of Understanding and produced  a
            plan to achieve on-the-ground results and
            complement  the state government's ongo-
            ing work.
            EPA's Bay-Delta role includes a wide range of
            activities to address critical issues through-
            out this vitally important ecosystem, which
            stretches from Red Bluff to Bakersfield, and
            from the Napa Valley to San Francisco to
            Silicon Valley. Included in these activities is
            EPA's competitive grant program to support
            partnerships that protect  and restore San
            Francisco Bay watersheds.
            Through the San Francisco Bay Water Qual-
            ity Improvement Fund, EPA has supported
            projects to  reduce  polluted runoff from ur-
            ban areas and agriculture; limit specific pol-
            lutants to restore water quality; and protect
            and restore fish and wildlife habitat including
            riparian corridors, floodplains,  wetlands and
Above: Children at San Francisco's Aquatic Park,
on San Francisco Bay.
open waters of the Bay. By early 2010, EPA
had selected projects  involving nearly  40
partner agencies and nonprofits throughout
the San Francisco Bay Area, totaling $14.7
million in federal grants that  are leveraging
another $11.7 million from other sources.
These projects include:
Estuary 2100—Resilient Watersheds for
a Changing Climate (San  Francisco Es-
tuary Partnership/Association of Bay Area
Governments)  $11.4 million  (Federal:  $5
million)
This includes 19 projects  in four program
areas: wetland  and watershed restoration;
monitoring changes in the  Bay; low impact
development and stormwater best manage-
ment practices;  and public outreach.
Cesar  Chavez Street  Headwaters Pilot
Low Impact Development Project (San
Francisco Planning  Department) $2.2 million
(Federal: $1.2 million)
This project will implement  a  green  infra-
structure design on a mile-long corridor of
Cesar Chavez Street in San Francisco,  in-
cluding installation  of stormwater planters,
run-off reducing improvements, and  perme-
able concrete. The goal is to reduce runoff to
the city's combined sewer/stormwater sys-
tem, reducing the amount of partially-treated
sewage that flows  into  the bay when rain-
storms overwhelm sewage system capacity.
Clean Watersheds for a Clean Bay (Bay
Area Stormwater  Management Agencies
Association)  $6.9 million (Federal: $5 million)
This is a multi-year regional effort to reduce
sediment-bound pollutants in the bay and
                    Right: San Francisco Bay
      Facing page: Klamath River photo courtesy
      of the Yurok Tribe of the Yurok Reservation.
restore water quality by limiting the amount
of toxic PCBs and mercury  in stormwater
that reaches the bay.
Estuary  2100 Phase  2-Building Part-
nerships for Resilient Watersheds (San
Francisco Estuary Partnership/Association
of Bay Area Governments) $6 million (Fed-
eral: $3.6 million)
This includes seven projects to reduce  pol-
luted urban and agricultural runoff, take ac-
tions to limit specific pollutants in the North
Bay, and  protect and restore vital San Fran-
cisco Bay fish and wildlife habitats.
                                                                                                                                                1980
                                                                                                                                                President Carter signs
                                                                                                                                                Superfund law, making
                                                                                                                                                polluters liable for toxic
                                                                                                                                                cleanups, just before
                                                                                                                                                President Ronald Reagan
                                                                                                                                                takes office.

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                            12    Clean Water
1981
National Research
Council reports acid rain
in northeastern U.S.,
Canada making lakes too
acidic for frogs, fish. Calif.
Gov. Jerry Brown allows
malathion spraying to
combat medflies.
                           Recovery Act Generates Green Jobs,
                           Renews Water,  Wastewater Systems
              America's aging water infra-
              structure is in need of major
              renovation.  EPA  estimates
              that it will cost approximately
              $500 billion over the next 20
years to meet America's drinking water and
wastewater infrastructure needs. On  top of
that, water agencies face great challenges in
maintaining their operations as affected by
drought, severe storm events, coastline ero-
sion, saltwater intrusion and reduced water
storage capacity.
Congress  typically provides  State Revolv-
ing  Fund appropriations each year for EPA
to distribute to states, tribes and territories
for  drinking water and  wastewater  infra-
structure. The  American  Reinvestment and
Recovery Act in 2009 significantly increased
the funds available (see also SRF Team story,
p. 15).
The  Recovery Act requires at least 20% of
water funding go to innovative projects that
promote energy efficiency,  water efficiency
or innovative stormwater management. In
the Pacific Southwest, all four states have
exceeded this requirement. Energy efficiency
is vital as approximately one-fifth of Califor-
nia's entire electricity production,  and one-
third of its natural gas, is used to transport
and treat water.

Innovative Water and Wastewater
Projects Funded By the Recovery Act
•  Arizona is using $1 million to design
   water system improvements that in-
   corporate energy and water efficiency,
   renewable energy use and production,
   and/or green stormwater infrastructure.
•  The Southern Nevada Water Agency is
   conducting energy audits of the Alfred
   Merritt Smith and River Mountain water
   treatment facilities to identify and imple-
   ment improvements that yield energy
   and water conservation benefits, while
   reducing operation and maintenance
   costs.
•  The Eastern Municipal Water District's
   Anaerobic Digester will allow the Moreno
   Valley (Calif.) sewage treatment facil-
   ity to produce 40% of its energy needs
   through anaerobic digestion of sludge,
   producing methane that is burned to
   generate electricity, and reducing the
   volume of sludge for disposal.
•  Peoria, Ariz., has built a 50-kilowatt solar
   power facility at a wastewater treatment
   plant to reduce fossil fuel use and mini-
   mize its carbon footprint.
•  The Inland Empire Utilities Agency's
   Dewatering Facility Expansion Project is
   reducing greenhouse gas emissions and
   energy needed for sludge dewatering by
   30% while increasing capacity, reducing
   hauling costs and fuel use, and creating
   nearly 200 jobs in Southern California
•  In El Cerrito, Calif., the Green Streets
   Rain Gardens Project is building gardens
   within sidewalks and street parking ar-
   eas to filter stormwater runoff, removing
   sediment, pesticides and other toxics
   that would otherwise flow into San Fran-
   cisco Bay. The rain gardens also provide
   a green buffer to the asphalt and cement
   in a high-density urban area.
•  Oakland's Rainwater Harvesting Project
   is providing rain barrels, rebates and
   guidance for residents to reduce storm-
   water impacts and re-use rainwater for
   irrigating gardens.
•  Oahu County, Hawaii,  is using more than
   $5 million to replace corroded cast iron
   drinking water pipes installed 55 to 70
   years ago. New PVC pipes save water
   by having fewer leaks and save energy
   by being smoother.
                                                                      Left: Peoria, Ariz., used Recovery Act funds to
                                                                      build a solar array to provide power to its water
                                                                      reclamation facility.
                                                                                                    Above: This new rain garden in El Cerrito, Calif.
                                                                                                        reduces polluted runoff entering the city's
                                                                                                       storm drain system and San Francisco Bay.

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                                                        Clean Water    13
Regional  Lab Goes on  the Road with
New Technology, Out to Sea on the Bold
Since 1994, EPA's Pacific Southwest Re-
gion's laboratory has focused on analyzing
samples brought to its Richmond  site, as
well as gathering data at remote locations,
thanks to new technology and  an  unusual
West Coast voyage of EPA's ocean research
vessel Bold, which normally operates on the
Atlantic and Gulf Coasts.

Remote Monitoring and Mobile Lab
At the Leviathan Mine Superfund Site, high
in the Sierra Nevada about 200 miles east
of San Francisco, water tainted with sulfuric
acid  emanates from a former mine. Treat-
ment  systems  on the  site  do not  operate
year round,  and it's difficult to monitor water
quality in nearby creeks  that receive mine
site drainage in  winter, when deep  snow
covers the  landscape. EPA has set up a
satellite telemetry system that monitors the
water continuously for pH, conductivity and
other  parameters, and transmits the  data
hourly to  a  database  provider that  posts it
on the Internet. The system works entirely off
solar-charged 12-volt battery power.
In 2008, the lab acquired a new cargo van
that's  been  outfitted as a mobile lab. In a
water supply emergency—such  as a ma-
jor earthquake that breaches water mains
in an urban area—the van can  be rapidly
re-configured to perform drinking water mi-
crobiological analyses to answer  the urgent
question  of whether it's safe  to  drink. The
mobile lab has its own 8 KW generator, and
can be used to analyze up to 400 samples
for pathogens.

Voyage of the Bold
The  Regional Lab staff  supported ocean
survey work aboard the  EPA vessel Bold,
deployed  to the West Coast for  the first
time. The Bold provided support to  conduct
critical ocean disposal site monitoring work
that is otherwise impossible for EPA's Pacific
Southwest Office.
The Bold's California voyage  began with a
side  scan sonar survey and sediment sam-
pling at an ocean disposal site off  San Di-
ego.  Similar survey work was  conducted at
other California sites. The Regional Lab ana-
lyzed the  chemical make-up of the sediment
samples.  Off the  Southern California coast,
the U.S. Geological Survey also profiled the
ocean  floor to locate  offshore earthquake
faults in the vicinity of other EPA-approved
ocean disposal sites.
In the  Northern California port of  Eureka,
the  EPA  science  crew collected sediment
samples  from the Humboldt  Open Ocean
Disposal  Site, where dredged material from
Eureka's  harbor  is deposited.  In addition to
sediment chemistry, the sediment samples
yielded marine invertebrates that live in the
mud  and  sand—from polychaete  worms up
                                          Left: EPA's Mobile Lab
                                          Above and right: EPA ocean survey vessel Bold
                                          made its first West Coast voyage in 2009.
to 8 inches long, to tiny amphipods barely
visible to the naked eye. These marine or-
ganisms  were identified and  counted  to
see if their numbers and diversity indicate a
healthy bottom habitat.
          EPA Blog on the Voyage of the Bold:
         blog.epa.gov/blog/category/bold/autumn09
1982
Toxics found in Silicon
Valley groundwater. Dioxin
discovered in soil in Times
Beach, Mo. Pesticide
found in Hawaii's milk.
Selenium poisons wildlife
at Kesterson refuge, Calif.

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                          14     Clean Water
                          Wastewater Infrastructure:
                          Building a Better East Bay MUD
1983
EPA's Super-fund Program
investigates groundwater
contamination from
aerospace industry in
Southern California's San
Fernando and San Gabriel
Valleys.
Our  wastewater infrastructure  is  aging,
causing sewage spills and overflows. Sew-
age and stormwater from six communities
and one sanitary sewer district on the east-
ern shore of San Francisco Bay flow through
sewer pipes to East Bay Municipal Utility Dis-
trict's (EBMUD) wastewater treatment plant
near the Bay Bridge Toll Plaza. The average
age of these sewer pipes is 50 years, with
some pipes as old as 130!
Pipe breaks, blockages caused by tree roots
or grease,  and  even too much  rainwater
seeping  into the pipes through joints and
cracks can lead to overflows of untreated
sewage  into streets,  homes, creeks and
the Bay.  Regular maintenance and  replace-
ment of pipes is key to preventing spills and
overflows.  However, communities often find
it difficult to continuously assess, repair and
replace this unseen asset.
As many aging  sewer pipes have cracks,
misconnections and other flaws, stormwater
and groundwater can infiltrate the sewers
when  it rains. The increased flow can lead
to a tenfold increase in the volume of waste-
water  reaching the treatment plant. To pre-
vent overflows, EBMUD diverts some  of the
flow to its three wet weather facilities,  which
discharge partially-treated wastewater to the
Bay on occasion.
Aging sewer pipes
can lead to overflows
of untreated sewage
into streets, homes
and water bodies.
                                                                   Through cooperative enforcement actions,
                                                                   EPA and the San Francisco Bay Regional
                                                                   Water Quality Control Board  have  tasked
                                                                   EBMUD and its seven communities to re-
                                                                   duce infiltration into the sewers through in-
                                                                   frastructure renewal and improved mainte-
                                                                   nance.  The goal  is to eliminate discharges
                                                                   from the wet weather facilities. Through a
                                                                   strategy of long-term investment by EBMUD
                                                                   and its communities, primarily through user
                                                                   fees, to achieve sustainable infrastructure.
                                                                   EPA and the Regional Board entered into a
                                                                   binding agreement with EBMUD in January
                                                                   2009. EBMUD agreed to identify areas with
                                                                   the highest flows, require repair and/or re-
                                                                   placement of damaged private sewer pipes
                                                                   that extend from  homes and businesses to
                                                                   The Oakport Wet Weather Facility processes
                                                                   excess sewage diverted from EBMUD's
                                                                   wastewater collection system.
community  sewers,  and  improve  mainte-
nance programs.
In addition,  EPA inspected the sewer sys-
tems of the seven communities. Based on
those findings, EPA took enforcement ac-
tion against all seven communities in No-
vember 2009. As a result, the communities
are  required to do similar work to reduce
infiltration.
EPA actions aimed at infrastructure renew-
al and  maintenance  in Southern California
over the past few years proves this strategy
works.  Legal settlements  with the  cities of
Los Angeles and San Diego have greatly re-
duced sewage spills. Both cities have invest-
ed hundreds of millions of dollars  in repair
and replacement of sewer pipes as well as
improved cleaning and maintenance.
Los Angeles reduced sewer overflows from
444 in 2004 to just 159 in 2009. San Diego's
sewer overflows dropped from 365 in 2000
to just 38 in 2009. Over the past five years,
Los Angeles has rehabilitated or replaced 54
miles of sewers and completed nine sewer
capacity expansion projects. Over  the past
decade, San Diego has rehabilitated or re-
placed  240 miles of sewers.
In each case, EPA has worked  in concert
with  local agencies to find lasting solutions
that  protect public health and the  environ-
ment in the San  Francisco Bay Area and
Southern California, to  benefit over 30 mil-
lion people.

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                                                                                                  Clean Water     15
The SRF Team:
Speeding Recovery Act Funding to Shovel-Ready Projects
             Thanks to the American Rein-
             vestment and Recovery Act,
             Wsome EPA staff had greatly
             increased workloads over the
             past year. Among them were
the regional Water Division's State Revolv-
ing Fund (SRF) Team of Jose Caratini and
Juanita Licata in San Francisco, and Susan
Polanco in Hawaii.
There were  no complaints, however, be-
cause the Recovery Act made  $610 million
available for new loans and grants to cash-
strapped  states, tribes and local water sys-
tems in the  Pacific Southwest to build or
replace aging drinking water and wastewa-
ter facilities—treatment plants and pipelines
that ensure our drinking water is safe and
our beaches and waterways are healthy for
recreation, fish and wildlife.
After the  Recovery Act passed in February
2009, the Drinking Water  Program in Cali-
fornia alone received applications for more
than 2,100 projects that would have cost a
combined total of $6 billion. The state's fis-
cal crisis had dried up bond money normally
used for many of these projects. In the end,
EPA provided $159 million for drinking wa-
ter projects and more than $269 million for
wastewater projects in California.
The new  money funded 252  long-planned,
shovel-ready projects in the Pacific South-
west. Most of the money was  disbursed
through the State Revolving Funds to local
governments, who  repay  loans  after their
new facilities are built. Then the money can
be loaned again, and  repaid again, and it
keeps revolving. This year, every federal dol-
lar was matched by about $2 in state and
local funds.
Jose, Juanita and Susan reviewed applica-
tions, worked with the states to develop use
plans,  and processed  approved funding.
They also oversaw the projects  to ensure
funds are spent according to  Recovery Act
rules. For example, American-made iron and
steel must be used,  and 20% of the funds
must go to "Green Infrastructure" projects,
such as installation of water meters on un-
metered properties to prevent water waste,
installation of low-friction pipes and efficient
pumps to save energy, and use of solar
power to  run treatment plants.
                                                               Above: Susan Polanco
                                                   Right: Jose Caratini and Juanita Licata
Nevada's SRF had financed 54 drinking wa-
ter and wastewater projects in 1999-2008.
In 2009 alone, the Recovery Act funded 29
more Nevada projects.
In just one year, the SRF Team approved
funds for 146 wastewater projects and 106
drinking water projects in California, Arizona,
Hawaii and Nevada. State and local agen-
cies put projects out for bid and  awarded
contracts. Due to tight deadlines mandated
by Recovery Act and state  rules, work that
usually took months was done in just a few
weeks. By February 17, 2010, a year after
the Act became law, most of the projects
were under construction.
1984
Catastrophic leak at
chemical plant in Bhopal,
India kills 2,500 people.
Congress strengthens
1976 law regulating
hazardous waste, creating
stricter standards for
disposal sites.

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    Clean  Land

1985
Scientists report hole in
stratospheric ozone over
Antarctica getting larger
each Spring. Santa Cruz
voters ban facilities for
offshore oil, inspiring other
coastal localities to do
likewise.
40 things.
      ON THE ROAD
      Walk, bike, carpool or
      take transit as much as
      possible
Congress passed the Superfund law in
1980, giving EPA responsibility for clean-
ing up abandoned hazardous waste sites,
enforcement authority to get responsible
parties to pay for cleanups, and funding
to get the job done quickly when there's
an imminent threat to human health or the
environment. Cleanup sites range  from
abandoned mines to schools where stu-
dents have spread mercury contamina-
tion by playing with the toxic liquid metal.
In 2009, funding from the American Rein-
vestment and Recovery Act accelerated
the ongoing cleanup work at Iron Moun-
tain Mine near Redding, Calif., and doz-
ens of short-term cleanups of soil con-
taminated by leaking underground  fuel
tanks at abandoned gas stations (pages
18-19).
In the last few years, EPA's Pacific South-
west office has pioneered "cleaner clean-
ups," where environmental impacts are
minimized by, for instance,  using  solar
power generated on-site, as at the Aero-
jet site near Sacramento, Calif, (see fac-
ing page, p. 39).
Disasters like wildfires,  floods and tsu-
namis can leave containers  of fuel and
other toxics scattered over a wide  area.
EPA responds quickly, sending On-Scene
Coordinators to organize collection and
safe disposal of such toxic debris (see p.
24-25).
 > See the complete list of "40 things you can do to save the planet" in the centerfold

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                                                         Clean Land     17
Solar-Powered Cleanup

at Aerojet Superfund Site

The Aerojet General Corp. Superfund site is
a contaminated groundwater site near Ran-
cho Cordova, Calif., east of Sacramento.
The plume of contaminated groundwater
is  nearly 27 square miles  in size, includ-
ing a  portion  beneath  the American River.
Since  1953 Aerojet and its subsidiaries have
manufactured liquid and solid fuel rocket en-
gines  on the site.  About 1,200  people are
employed there.
In  the 1950s through the 1970s, the facil-
ity dumped  hazardous wastes  in  surface
ponds,  landfills,  deep  injection  wells, and
leach fields, polluting the groundwater, which
ultimately reached the  river. Today, a new
solar-powered system is pumping and treat-
ing the contaminated groundwater, gradually
restoring it to drinking water quality.
Since  the site was listed on EPA's Superfund
National Priorities List in 1983, the company
has investigated the extent of the ground-
water  contamination,  and  built treatment
systems to restore the aquifer. This effort re-
quires pumping and treating millions of gal-
lons of water every day, and will continue for
decades.
Cleanups like this have  a significant indi-
rect environmental impact that wasn't con-
sidered when the pump-and-treat systems
were built: The electricity to run them 24/7
year  after year comes from remote  power
plants, either burning fossil  fuels like coal
and natural gas, or from hydroelectric dams.
Contaminated
groundwater is gradually
being restored to
drinking water quality.
To mitigate some of these environmental im-
pacts, Aerojet partnered with their electric-
ity provider, the  Sacramento Municipal Util-
ity District (SMUD)  and a solar development
company, Solar  Power, Inc. to commission
and build a 40-acre photovoltaic power ar-
ray, which converts sunlight into electricity.
The first phase broke ground in June 2009,
and was completed in November. The array
uses a single-axis tracking system to follow
the sun through the day to maximize elec-
tricity  production. The array is made  up of
more than 11,000  panels with a capacity to
generate 3.6 megawatts.
A second phase of the solar "farm" will be
completed by summer 2010. Its final gen-
erating capacity  will be 6.0 megawatts, us-
ing almost 30,000 panels,  making this the
largest single-site  industrial solar-powered
                                          Left: Groundwater treatment facility at Aerojet
                                          Superfund site.
                                          Above: EPA's Kevin Mayer at the new solar power
                                          facility at the Aerojet Superfund Site.
                                   SMUD

              SOLAR^POWER

            Partnership  For
              Sustainability
system in California, and  the  largest at a
Superfund site in the country.  The system
will  provide more than 20% of the electric-
ity required to operate the groundwater re-
mediation system at Aerojet. It sits on land
that was otherwise considered difficult to sell
or develop  due to  the ongoing Superfund
cleanup. EPA and state officials worked with
Aerojet to build the solar facility in a location
that minimized environmental impacts and
doesn't hinder ongoing cleanup activities.
During its first year at full power, the system
will  generate enough clean power to offset
enormous amounts of  greenhouse  gases
and  smog-forming  pollutants  that  would
have been emitted using power from gener-
ating plants burning fossil fuel.  EPA's online
Power  Profiler  estimates the annual emis-
sions prevented for power used in the Ran-
cho Cordova area at 6,000 tons of carbon
dioxide, 4 tons of sulfur dioxide and 5 tons of
nitrogen oxide.  With a life expectancy of 25
years for the new solar array, it adds up to
a significant environmental benefit while pro-
tecting the valuable groundwater resources.
1986
California voters
approve Proposition 65,
requiring disclosure of
toxics. Congress passes
Emergency Planning/
Right-to-Know Act. Los
Angeles agrees to upgrade
sewage treatment.
                                                                                                          Estimate emissions reductions with the Power Profiler:
                                                                                                             www.epa.gov/cleanenergy/energy-and-you/how-clean.html
                                                                Facing page: Photo courtesy of the Bishop Paiute Tribe.

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18     Clean  Land
Iron Mountain  Mine:
Recovery Act Funding Advances Cleanup
             Mining was a mainstay of the
             California economy for a cen-
             Wtury, starting with the  Gold
             Rush of 1849.  But the envi-
             ronmental  costs  of  historic
mining have come due at places  like the
Iron Mountain Mine near Redding, California,
where EPA's ongoing efforts to  protect the
Sacramento River from the mine's toxic run-
off accelerated in 2009 thanks to new fed-
eral funding.
In April 2009, EPA received $20.7 million in
funding  from the  American  Reinvestment
and Recovery Act to speed the long-term
cleanup of zinc and  copper-contaminated
sediments from the  Iron  Mountain  Mine
Superfund Site. Rick Sugarek,  EPA's proj-
ect  manager for more than 20 years, and
Cynthia Wetmore, construction manager for
the site for 17 years,  put the money to work
almost immediately,  building  a system  to
dredge and remove contaminated sediment
from the bottom of the Spring Creek Arm of
Keswick Reservoir on the Sacramento River,
which received the mine's toxic runoff for
more than 40 years.
The Recovery Act funds, along with anoth-
er $23 million provided by EPA, are paying
workers to build and operate a system  of
dredges,  pumping stations and pipelines to
remove the toxic sludge and transport it  to
12-acre, plastic-lined pits for permanent dis-
posal. When  the removal is finished in 2011,
18 months ahead  of the original schedule,
the  filled  pit  will be  capped with  clay, soil
and plants, to keep the contaminated soil in
place. Construction was completed in Sep-
tember 2009, a year ahead of schedule. By
December, dredging had already  removed
about one third of the sludge.
Seven-square-mile  Iron  Mountain,  mined
for iron, silver, gold, copper, zinc and  pyrite
from the  1860s to 1963,  is honeycombed
with tunnels  and pits. By 1940, the mine's
toxic runoff was dumping a ton of toxic dis-
solved metals a day into local creeks and the
Sacramento  River, polluting a drinking wa-
ter supply used by thousands of people and
sometimes killing the river's prized salmon.

World's Most Acidic Water
Pyrite, exposed  to water and  air, produces
sulfuric acid. This acid  seeps through the
mountain and leaches out copper, cadmium,
zinc and other heavy metals.  The resulting
toxic brew—the most acidic water naturally
found on earth—once flowed into sections
of three creeks before reaching the river, vir-
tually eliminating aquatic life.
In the 1950s, Keswick  Dam  was built on
the  Sacramento,  downstream  from  these
creeks.  Fish kills  were  reduced, but not
eliminated. In 1983, EPA designated the Iron
Mountain Mine as a Superfund site.  Since
1986, EPA has overseen many actions at the
site to reduce the toxic runoff, and treat the
remaining flows to remove contaminants. Af-
ter completion of a treatment plant in  1994,
these actions now capture 98% of the toxics
coming out of the mine.
Before the treatment plant was  built,  heavy
metals precipitated into a sludge and  fell  to
the bottom of the  Spring Creek Arm of the
reservoir, accumulating 200,000 cubic yards
of toxic sludge that could threaten salmon
if a major storm were to erode  the bottom
sediment.
                                          Left: Dam and water treatment plant at the Iron Mountain Mine
                                          prevent toxic dissolved metals from polluting the Sacramento River.
                                          Above: Bulldozers preparing storage site for contaminated sludge
                                          dredged from Keswick Reservoir.

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                                                          Clean  Land     19
Recovery Act Accelerates
UST Cleanups, Protects Groundwater
             Throughout the Pacific South-
             west, groundwater is an im-
             Wportant drinking water source.
             In many places, it's threatened
             by hydrocarbon fuels  seep-
ing from leaking underground storage tanks
(USTs) at abandoned gas stations and other
fuel tank sites. The American Recovery and
Reinvestment Act has provided $200 million
nationwide, and more than $21 million in the
Pacific  Southwest, to clean  up these sites.
This vitally important work is also delivering
on the  promise of stimulating the slumping
economy and employing people throughout
the region.
For example, a former bulk fuel storage site
was left vacant for years in Ashland Park,
near San  Leandro,  Calif.  Redevelopment
was hampered by the need for site assess-
ment and cleanup. There was no responsi-
ble party capable of funding  the cleanup. In
2009 the California State Water Resources
Control Board granted Recovery Act funds
to the Hayward Area Recreation and Park
District to clean up the site. The cleanup has
cleared the way for redevelopment. Plans
call for construction of a youth center, a two-
acre park and a school gymnasium.
In 2010, California  plans to  use more than
$15 million in Recovery Act funds to assess
and clean up at least 10 additional UST sites.
Investing  in these cleanups will jump-start
other jobs and investments in communities
throughout California.
Throughout the country, Recovery Act funds
are being used  by  EPA in partnership with
states, tribes and territories to finance UST
cleanups. In the Pacific Southwest, clean-
ups are underway in Arizona, California and
on tribal lands,  and are about to  begin in
Nevada, Hawaii  and island territories in the
Pacific. Through the Recovery Act, EPA is
putting people to work and protecting the
environment.
Watch a Video about the Ashland Park Site:
 www.epa.gov/region9/eparecovery/video/ashland

            More about UST Cleanups in
             Pacific Southwest Region:
            www.epa.gov/region9/waste/ust
1988
Congress bans ocean
dumping of sewage sludge
and industrial wastes,
after medical waste
washes up on NJ beaches.
Shell Oil refinery spills
365,000 gallons oil into
Carquinez Strait.
UST Recovery Act Funding Allocations
to Pacific Southwest States & Territories
Arizona
California
Hawaii
Nevada
Guam
Commonwealth of the
Northern Mariana Islands
$3,219,000
$15,577,000
$1,317,000
$1,266,000
$138,000
$57,000
                                                                                     Above and left: Cleanup of a former bulk fuel storage site in
                                                                                     San Leandro, Calif, has cleared the way for redevelopment,
                                                                                     including future Ashland Youth Campus.

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                        20    40 Things You Can Do to Save the Planet
THINGS
you  can  do to  save  the  planet
EPA's mission is to protect human health and the environment. To honor
the 40th anniversary of Earth Day, we invite you to join us by taking indi-
vidual action—here are 40 things we can each  do to reduce greenhouse
gases and help save the planet:
                                                               AT SCHOOL
                                                                                                     t
                                                                             ON THE ROAD
 1989
 Exxon Valdez oil tanker
 runs aground in Alaska's
 Prince William Sound,
 spilling 11 million gallons
 of oil, fouling hundreds of
 miles of shoreline, killing
 fish and wildlife.
    Stop junk mail (opt out)

    Replace incandescent bulbs with
    compact fluorescent lights—and turn
    them off when not in use

    Buy local, sustainably produced food,
    and eat less meat

4   Adjust your thermostat—up in
    summer, down in winter

5   Install water saving fixtures in bath
    and kitchen

    Buy Energy Star certified appliances
    (www.energystar.gov)

7   Install solar panels or switch to
    renewable energy sources

    Shop at thrift stores and buy used or
    refurbished products
9  Perform an energy audit of school
   buildings

1O Teach students how to make eco-
   friendly choices

11 Start a recycled materials art program

12 Create a compost bin for food
   scraps—and recycle cans, bottles
   and paper

13 Create an organic vegetable garden

14 Reduce or recycle toxic chemicals in
   school laboratories

15 Help students volunteer for local
   habitat restoration projects

16 Rent college textbooks instead of
   buying them
17 Drive a more fuel efficient car, or join
   a car share

18 Walk, bike, carpool or take transit as
   much as possible

19 Reduce your air travel and use
   e-tickets instead of paper

2O Go easy on the accelerator, use
   cruise control, and keep your car
   tuned up and tires well inflated

21 Make sure your mechanic recycles
   used automotive oil and coolant

22 Choose a green hotel, eco-tours and
   other earth-friendly travel choices

23 Ask hotel staff not to  replace your
   towels and sheets every day

24 Bring a reusable water bottle

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                                                         40 Things You Can Do to Save the Planet   21
if  everyone did  just one thing...
    25 Print less, use 100% recycled paper
        and print double sided

    26 Reduce commuting by working from
        home when possible

    27 Use environment-friendly cleaning
        supplies (e.g. Green Seal approved)

    28 Buy EPEAT certified computers and
        monitors (www.epeat.net)
                                             EVERYWHERE!
   Get involved—exercise your rights to
   promote sustainable choices

34 Switch to reusable items, such as
   bags and lunch containers

35 Turn off lights, appliances and
   electronics when not in use

36 Bring your own reusable mug when
   you go out for coffee or tea
                                                                                    DO JUST ONE THING FOR
                                                                                    A YEAR... AND IT ADDS UP
If one person drinks tap water
instead of one liter of bottled
water each day, it would save
the energy equivalent 1.6 Kilo-
watt-hours per day, 46 gallons
of gas per year, or 0.41 metric
tons of CO2.
If all 49 million people in the Pa-
cific Southwest Region did the
same, it would save the equiva-
lent of 2.3 billion gallons of gas
per year—the amount used by
3.8 million cars, or 20 million
metric tons of CO2.
If everyone in the USA did the
same, it would save the equiva-
lent of 14.2 billion gallons of gas
per year—the amount used by
24.1 million cars, or 126 million
metric tons of CO *
                                                                                                                     THINGS
1990
Congress and President
George H.W. Bush approve
Oil Pollution Act, Clean
Air Act Amendments to
reduce hazardous air
pollutants and industrial
emissions, require cleaner
gasoline in smoggy areas.
    29 Use video and telephone conferences
        to reduce travel

    3O Green your meetings—replace paper
        handouts with e-documents, recycle
        waste

    31 Start a composting program and set
        a goal of zero waste

    32 Organize co-workers to carpool or
        bike to work
    Buy recycled and recyclable
    products, eliminate plastic and
    styrofoam

38  Compost your food/organic waste

39  Recycle paper, glass, plastics,
    electronics

4O  Keep reusable shopping bags handy
    and use everywhere you shop

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                           22    Clean Land
1991
Train derailment near
Dunsmuir, Calif., spills
toxic fumigant metam
sodium into Upper
Sacramento River, wiping
out all life in the river for
more than 40 miles.
                           EPA Funds Los Angeles Conservation
                           Corps'  Green Building Job  Training
EPA awarded the Los Angeles Conservation
Corps (LACC) a total of $700,000 in Brown-
fields job training  grants in 2009 to recruit
and train residents from  the city's impover-
ished Empowerment Zone for environmental
careers.
With this funding,  LACC  is training 160 par-
ticipants, and hopes to  place at least 130
graduates in environmental technician jobs.
The  training  program  includes  254-hour
and 400-hour training cycles in hazardous
waste operations,  environmental technolo-
gies, lead and asbestos abatement, refinery
safety overview, forklift training  and general
industry standards. Four certifications will be
offered.
As part of the program, LACC is collaborat-
ing with the LA Housing  Partnership (LAMP)
to provide skilled  workers to help revitalize
low-income housing areas across the city.
The inner city  neighborhood where work
started on the first construction project has
significant populations of Mexican,  Central
American, Filipino, Armenian, Korean, Thai,
Cambodian,  African and Chinese  immi-
grants. More  than 80% of the residents of
the district are renters, with 40% of children
living in low-income households below the
federal poverty threshold.

Green Senior Housing
The development, Rosewood Gardens, will
be a 100% affordable senior housing devel-
opment. The builders are pursuing the Lead-
ership  in Energy and Environmental Design
(LEED) silver certification for mid-rise homes.
The building on  Rosewood Avenue will have
54  one-bedroom apartments,  a  learning
center, library, laundry rooms, a central land-
scaped courtyard,   private "porches"  and
balconies and a large community center at
street level. A large open space and "prom-
enade" visually  joins the new development
with the  adjacent  Rosewood  Methodist
church in a landscaped buffer between the
two buildings. The new building draws inspi-
ration from the existing church architecture.
Rooftop solar  panels will provide  on-site
energy generation and solar thermal water
heating. When  complete, the development
is  expected to  be  the first certified LEED
for  Homes mid-size building in southern
California.
The LAMP plans to educate residents to use
the "green" features  and live sustainably. Ev-
ery resident will  attend a "green orientation"
when they move in, to learn about the impor-
tance of recycling and how to do it, how to
                                                                      Left: Trainees learning asbestos abatement
                                                                      techniques.
dispose of toxic trash so that it does not end
up in the city's landfills, and how to conserve
energy and  water. The  residents  will  also
learn how to buy and use non-toxic cleaners
and  household materials,  and  to  optimize
ventilation.
One of the building's green features is the
location: it's  an urban  infill  site in a densely
developed  area,  reducing the residents'
need  for cars. It  has  a  partial green roof,
drought-tolerant landscaping,  on-site solar
power and solar hot water; individual heat-
ing, ventilation and cooling for each unit,
on-site filtration of storm water, designated
recycling and bicycle storage rooms, natural
ventilation  in entrance  lobby and stairs, En-
ergy Star appliances and electrical fixtures,
dual flush  toilets and water-saving fixtures.
Builders are  using  no tropical wood, reduc-
ing construction waste and recycling 90% of
the  remainder.
                                                                                                        Above: EPA Acting RA Laura Yoshii (right)
                                                                                                      presents $700,000 green building job training
                                                                                                     grant to LACC Executive Director Bruce Saito
                                                                                                                and trainee Brunny Maria Smith.

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                                                                                                  Clean Land    23
EPA Adds  B.F. Goodrich Site
to Superfund List to Expedite  Cleanup
In January 2010, after adding the site to the
Superfund National Priorities List,  EPA re-
leased a proposal for an initial groundwater
cleanup project at the B.F. Goodrich site. EPA
placed the site on the list after contaminated
groundwater forced the closure of drinking
water wells  in the western San Bernardino
County, Calif., community of Rialto. Super-
fund is the EPA program that cleans up the
nation's uncontrolled hazardous waste sites
while pursuing reimbursement from respon-
sible parties.
"Adding  the B.F. Goodrich site to the Su-
perfund list  gives EPA the needed tools to
clean it up," says Keith Takata, EPA Deputy
Regional Administrator in the Pacific South-
west. "EPA is committed  to  making sure
that the cost of cleanup is borne by those
responsible  for the contamination."
Since the 1940s, the B.F. Goodrich site was
used to store, test and manufacture muni-
tions, rocket fuel and fireworks by the gov-
ernment and businesses. The area's ground-
water is contaminated with trichloroethylene
(TCE) and perchlorate, forcing the closure of
public drinking water supply wells.
Work done  at the  site  by  EPA in 2009 in-
cludes  installation  of  six 900-foot  deep
groundwater monitoring wells, testing  of 14
existing groundwater wells, and soil and soil
gas testing at a disposal pit used by the B.F.
Goodrich Corp. in the late 1950s and early
1960s.
The 160-acre site was  part of a larger area
acquired by the  U.S. Army in 1942 for an
inspection and storage facility for  rail cars
hauling munitions to the Port  of Los  An-
geles. After the Rialto property was sold in
1946, it was used by munitions manufactur-
ers, fireworks manufacturers and other busi-
nesses that used perchlorate. In 1956  and
1957, West Coast Loading Corp. manufac-
tured  two products containing potassium
perchlorate. From about 1957 to 1962,  B.F.
Goodrich Corp. produced rocket fuel there
containing  ammonium  perchlorate,   and
used TCE in the manufacturing  process. Af-
ter that, the site was used by companies that
manufactured or sold fireworks.
TCE and perchlorate
contamination has
resulted in the closure
of public drinking
water wells.
Beginning  in 2002, the California Regional
Water Quality Control Board worked to in-
vestigate and clean up the site. Since then,
EPA  has spent approximately $6 million to
complete soil and groundwater testing, de-
velop a  cleanup plan and pursue enforce-
ment efforts at the site.
Trichloroethylene, or TCE, is a metal clean-
ing solvent. Drinking or breathing high levels
of trichloroethylene can damage the nervous
system,  liver  and lungs. Perchlorate is an in-
gredient in solid rocket fuel and many pyro-
technics, and can affect the thyroid gland.
                                         Right: EPA contractors constructing a groundwater
                                           monitoring well at B.F. Goodrich Superfund Site.
Nationwide, 1,607 sites have been placed
on the National Priorities List, of which 105
are in California. Construction of cleanup fa-
cilities and infrastructure has been complet-
ed at about 2/3 of the 1,607 sites.
                 More on the Goodrich Site:
                www.epa.gov/region9/bfgoodrich

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                          24    Clean  Land

1993
Heavy winter rain and
snow ends six-year
California drought. EPA
sets salinity standard for
Sacramento-San Joaquin
Delta, to protect salmon
and other fish harmed by
water diversions.
                          Emergency Response:
                          Earthquake,  Tsunami Hit American Samoa
At 6:48  on  the morning of September 29,
2009, a  massive magnitude 8.1 earthquake
shook American Samoa, with an epicenter
about 120 miles southwest of the islands.
Twenty minutes later, a tsunami followed,
striking American Samoa with a series of
four to five waves of 15 to 20 feet. Damage
was widespread. Local authorities reported
33 people killed.
American Samoa, a territory of the U.S., is in
the South Pacific, almost 5,000 miles from
the EPA's Pacific Southwest Regional Office.
The territory consists of five rugged, volcanic
islands and  two coral atolls, with  a popula-
tion of about 60,000 people,  mostly indig-
enous Samoans.
Within five hours  of  the incident, EPA de-
ployed Lance Richman to the FEMA Region-
al Response Coordination Center in Oakland
to coordinate  EPA's part  in the federal re-
sponse.  EPA's Regional Emergency Opera-
tions Center was activated. Soon afterward,
FEMA tasked  EPA with assessing the tsu-
nami's impacts on oil storage facilities and
                                                                    toxic hazardous materials,  and collecting
                                                                    and stabilizing the "hazmat."
                                                                    EPA sent On-Scene-Coordinator Chris Rein-
                                                                    er to American Samoa to start the work.
                                                                    Reiner worked with American  Samoa EPA
                                                                    (A.S. EPA) on the assessment and collection
                                                                    of containers holding toxics and  household
                                                                    hazardous waste. Reiner and Duane Newell
                                                                    EPA responders collect
                                                                    hazardous waste after a
                                                                    devastating tsunami.
from EPA's  Environmental Response Team
assembled a hazardous materials task force
with  the  U.S. Coast  Guard Pacific Strike
Team, the Hawaii National Guard Civil Sup-
port Team, and contractors. They responded
to oil spills, collected household chemicals in
devastated villages, pulled 55-gallon drums
off beaches and  sidewalks, and rounded up
many other containers of toxics. They took
everything to a staging area for identification
and storage.
In three weeks,  the hazmat team collected
50 drums of hazardous chemicals (about 35
of which were waste oil); 165 car and boat
batteries;  20 gallons of acids; 300 gallons of
paint-related wastes;  50 compressed  gas
tanks and cylinders; and hundreds of smaller
containers of hazardous wastes.
Reiner and A.S.  EPA  met with  local village
chiefs and advised them on separating haz-
ardous materials from other debris. They
                                                                    Left and above: U.S. Coast Guard helps remove
                                                                    drums of oil and chemicals scattered by tsunami
                                                                    in American Samoa.
visited each village affected by the tsunami,
and set up household hazardous waste col-
lection sites.
There were many challenges. A week after
the first earthquake, a severe aftershock oc-
curred,  triggering a tsunami watch. All EPA
operations ceased  while crews moved to
high ground for safety. The American Samoa
Power Authority was concerned about the
structural integrity of a dam, and wanted to
lower the reservoir level by releasing water
into a stream. But the stream was full of trash
and debris from the tsunami. Reiner and his
team assessed the stream to see what this
new  flow might wash into Pago Pago Har-
bor. They located  an oil leak coming from
a  damaged  shipping  container that had
been thrown about 1/4 mile inland, ending
up wedged against a tree and  bridging the
stream. A.S. EPA built a series of small rock
dams and placed absorbent pads,  which
stopped the oil spill until the  USCG Pacific
Strike Team could remove its source.
EPA returned to American Samoa in January
2010 to complete the sorting, packing and
shipment of the collected hazardous materi-
als for recycling and disposal off-island.
                                                                                                                    Watch the video of EPA's cleanup effort:
                                                                                                                     www.youtube.com/watch?v=VaOPWBbMNho V

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                                                         Clean  Land    25
Michelle Rogow:
Managing Urgent Toxic Cleanups
For the past 11 years, Michelle Rogow has
been  an  On-Scene  Coordinator for EPA's
Superfund Program. She oversees  clean-
ups at sites where toxics pose an imminent
threat to human health  and the environ-
ment—like the abandoned Altoona Mercury
Mine  in Northern California's Trinity Alps,
near Mount Shasta. During 2008 and 2009,
Michelle directed  a crew of up to 50 people
who removed 143,000 cubic yards of mer-
cury-laden waste from a creekbed and the
surrounding area.
From July through November 2008, Michelle
lived at the isolated site in the Shasta-Trinity
National Forest along with the crew, in mod-
ular housing units that were trucked  to the
site.  In addition to overseeing the cleanup,
she oversaw the construction and mainte-
nance of the camp,  including cooking  and
cleaning staff, water  supply and waste dis-
posal. The nearest neighbor was eight miles
away.
The crew worked six days a week,  giving
them  only one day to go into town, or to
stay in the national forest and hike around
Mt. Shasta to a nearby lake, as Michelle of-
ten did. "It was a good balance to my city
life the rest of the year," she says. "I enjoyed
that area, every day experiencing the reason
why we work at EPA—a natural and beautiful
ecosystem."
Mercury cleanup
sites can  range from
abandoned mines to
busy high schools.
Michelle started her EPA career in the Mid-
Atlantic Regional Office in Philadelphia, while
she was a civil engineering student at Drexel
University. Drexel is a co-op university, where
students  work  at full-time jobs in their field
for  half  of each  year. After graduation  in
1994, she traveled across America and de-
cided to  stay in San Francisco, where she
began working  as a Superfund enforcement
investigator in EPA's Pacific Southwest Re-
gional Office.
Michelle became an On-Scene Coordinator
in 1999, and since then  she has led numer-
ous  emergency responses and cleanups.
At these  sites she has directed a wide va-
riety of activities, from oil spill response and
cleanup to landfill firefighting to creek resto-
ration. In  2009  she responded to Avondale,
near Phoenix,  Ariz., to  oversee a cleanup
of mercury  that high  school students had
spread around their school and community.
As in many of the mercury spill cleanups Mi-
chelle has led, students had contaminated
their clothing, personal items, and, in some
cases, their homes. In addition to decontam-
inating the school, Michelle's team tested the
clothing of approximately 500 students and
faculty, and also tested 62 homes. Three of
them had to be evacuated due to high levels
of mercury contamination.
When she's not on-site on the U.S. mainland,
Michelle coordinates emergency cleanups in
the  Pacific Islands,  including American Sa-
moa, Guam  and Saipan. As a  result of her
experience on Saipan cleaning up 25 sites
contaminated with toxic polychlorinated bi-
phenyls (PCBs) using  a thermal desorption
unit, she travelled to China last year to ad-
vise the Ministry of Environmental Protection
on their plans to clean up PCS waste. With
Michelle's help, the Chinese agency bought
their own desorption unit and will begin op-
erations this year.

                                          Left: Heavy equipment prepares disposal site for mercury-
                                          contaminated mining waste removed from creekbed.
                                          Above: Michelle Rogow, On-Scene Coordinator, at a cleanup
                                          site on Saipan.
1994
President Clinton signs
Environmental Justice
Executive Order, requiring
agencies to prevent
disproportionate impacts
in communities. EPA
launches Brownfields
Program.

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   Communities  and  Ecosystems
                                                            I


1995
EPA launches market-
based program to reduce
sulfur dioxide pollution
that causes acid rain. EPA
requires municipal waste
incinerators to reduce
toxic emissions 90% from
1990 levels.
40 things.
     AT WORK
     Start a composting
     program and set a goal
     of zero waste
The Pacific Southwest Region is extraor-
dinarily diverse, both in ecosystems and
human communities. Landscapes range
from the arid Navajo Nation to the rain
forests of Kauai and coral reefs of Saipan.
Cultures include 147 Native American
tribes and communities, Hawaiians, Sa-
moans, Guamanians, and ethnic groups
from around the world who have migrat-
ed to Hawaii and North America over the
last three centuries.
Indian Country and Pacific island ter-
ritories have received  federal  funding
through EPA to help build, improve and
maintain safe drinking water and waste-
water facilities.  In 2009, EPA celebrated
25 years of partnership with tribes on en-
vironmental issues. In addition, the pace
of improvements accelerated with the
American Reinvestment  and  Recovery
Act, and a more generous funding formu-
la for Pacific islands and tribes.
EPA  also  works with  disadvantaged
communities  where  residents  experi-
ence disproportionate impacts of pollu-
tion and waste disposal, and often lack
the resources and tools to address these
impacts. EPA has partnered with these
communities  to  provide technical sup-
port and grants to build local capacity to
pursue long-term solutions.
> See the complete list of "40 things you can do to save the planet" in the centerfold

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                               Communities and  Ecosystems    27
Recovery Act Brings Water Infrastructure
to Tribes, Islands, Border Communities
             Many Native American tribes,
             Pacific island territories  and
             U.S.-Mexico border commu-
             nities still lack access to basic
             water  and wastewater  ser-
vice. While some improvements have been
made in recent years, the pace greatly ac-
celerated in 2009 thanks to funding from the
American Recovery and Reinvestment  Act,
and  a  separate,  major  increase in annual
EPA funding for water facilities on tribal lands
and Pacific islands.
The projects chosen for Recovery Act grants
were "shovel  ready"—already planned  but
just awaiting funding. EPA worked coopera-
tively with tribal, island, and federal and state
governments  to award the grants. By  Oc-
tober, EPA staff shifted their focus to over-
sight—monitoring expenditures and tracking
progress of Recovery Act-funded projects.
About 13% of homes in  Indian Country  lack
access to safe water, compared with 0.6%
of homes in the U.S. as a whole. More than
30% of Navajo  Nation  residents  lack ac-
cess to safe running water in their homes.
In 2009 and 2010, work funded by the Re-
covery Act is underway to bring safe, piped
drinking water to a total of more than 10,000
tribal homes for the first time. Another 8,000
homes will get wastewater services—flush
toilets,  sewers and sewage treatment. EPA
is overseeing  this work  in partnership with
the Indian Health Service.
The Recovery Act is
funding safe, piped
drinking water for
10,000 tribal homes.
In  the  Pacific  island  territories of Guam,
American Samoa and  the Commonwealth
of  the Northern Mariana Islands (which in-
cludes Saipan), 27% of people lack access
to  safe drinking water. The island of Saipan,
with a population of 70,000, is the only U.S.
municipality of its size without 24-hour water
service. Guam is preparing for a U.S. military
base expansion which will increase the terri-
tory's population 25% by 2014.
In 2009 EPA issued 11  Recovery Act grants
for these territories, totaling $12 million for
improvements to drinking water and waste-
water infrastructure. This year (2010),  $50
million has been allocated.
Along the U.S.-Mexico Border, one of the
biggest challenges is upgrading wastewater
                                          Left: New storage tanks make it possible to pipe
                                          safe drinking water to homes on tribal lands. Photo
                                          courtesy of Big Pine Paiute Tribe.
facilities to handle the vastly-increased pop-
ulation that has settled on the Mexican side
in recent  years,  drawn  by jobs at factories
known  as "maquiladoras." More  than 14.6
million people live in the border area, mostly
in 15 pairs of sister cities that straddle the
border. In one of these cities last year, No-
gales, EPA funding helped complete a $65
million upgrade of the Nogales International
Wastewater  Treatment   Plant,   benefiting
more than 200,000 residents and improving
water quality in the Santa Cruz River, which
flows from Mexico into Arizona.
In another border city, Mexicali, EPA funding
through the Border Environment Coopera-
tion Commission is being used to construct
124 acres of wetlands to further  clean efflu-
ent from the  Las Arenitas wastewater treat-
ment plant.
                                                                                    Watch a Video on Border Environmental Issues:
                                                                                      www.epa.gov/usmexicoborder/features/border-video
                                                                                                                                 Safe Drinking Water Act
                                                                                                                                 Amendments require
                                                                                                                                 water suppliers to
                                                                                                                                 inform customers about
                                                                                                                                 contaminants; Food
                                                                                                                                 Quality Protection Act
                                                                                                                                 tightens standards for
                                                                                                                                 agricultural pesticides.
                                                             Above: The Nogales Wastewater Treatment Plant expansion,
                                                                completed in 2009, has cleaned up the Santa Cruz River.
                                                               Facing page: Photo courtesy of the Quechan Indian Tribe.

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28    Communities  and Ecosystems
Getting Results Through Tribal/EPA
Partnerships: 25 Years of  Progress
The year 2009 marked the 25th anniversary
of EPA's Indian Policy, which set forth the
Agency's trust responsibility to federally-rec-
ognized tribes and directed EPA staff to work
with tribes on a government-to-government
basis to protect the environment and human
health. Since then, the policy has been re-
affirmed  by  every new administrator. With
funding by EPA grants growing steadily over
the years, more than 80% of the 147 federal-
ly-recognized tribes in the Pacific Southwest
Region now have their own environmental
protection programs.
The combined  area of these tribes' lands
is  more than 27 million acres, with a total
population of 315,000 tribal members. This
timeline shows some of the major milestones
of  the  past three  decades in the Pacific
Southwest's Indian Country.
1981: EPA's first grant to a tribe in the Pa-
cific Southwest funds a FIFRA (Federal In-
secticide, Fungicide,  and  Rotenticide  Act)
program at the Gila River Indian Community.
1982: EPA issues first grant to the Intertribal
Council of Arizona.
1984: EPA Administrator John Ruckelshaus
adopts EPA Indian Policy (still in effect);  EPA
issues grant to fund environmental programs
at Navajo Nation.
1985: First EPA grant for a tribal air program
goes to Navajo Nation.
1991: EPA Region 9 receives $205,000 for
grants to all qualifying tribes  in the Pacific
Southwest.
1992: Congress approves Indian Environ-
mental General  Assistance Program (GAP),
providing ongoing grants to tribes.
1995: EPA forms the Regional Tribal Opera-
tions Committee (RTOC)  to provide guid-
ance from tribes for EPA's budget, programs,
regulations and  priorities affecting tribes.
1996: Safe Drinking Water Act Amendments
authorizes  Drinking Water Tribal Setaside
Program.
1998: Washoe Tribe of Nevada and Califor-
nia establishes Washoe Environmental  Pro-
tection Department. Since then, the tribe
has recycled more than 600 abandoned ve-
hicles and thousands of white goods (such
as washers and dryers) and tires.
                                        Left: Jean Gamache, manager of EPA's
                                        Tribal Program Office, addresses tribe
                                        members at the dedication of a new
                                        drinking water storage tank at the
                                        Campo Band of Kumeyaay Indians in
                                        Southern California.
SHARED SUCCESS
                                                                                The Pacific Southwest is
                                                                                home to about 315,000
                                                                                tribal members.

                                                                                1999: Gila  River Indian Community starts
                                                                                curbside trash  collection to end backyard
                                                                                waste burning;  Kaibab Tribe starts Environ-
                                                                                mental Youth Outreach Program.
                                                                                2000: First Tribal Border Infrastructure proj-
                                                                                ect  completed:  Cocopah  Tribe's  sewer
                                                                                construction.
                                                  Above: Members of the Reno-Sparks Indian Colony
                                                start with a ritual blessing at an event with EPA and the
                                               Nevada Department of Environmental Protection. Photo
                                                        courtesy of the Reno Sparks Indian Colony.

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                                Communities and  Ecosystems    29
2001: Throughout the Pacific Southwest,
33  tribes  implement  hazardous  waste
programs.
2004: Navajo Nation gains authority to  run
air permit programs.
2007: The Gila River Indian Community sub-
mits a Tribal Implementation Plan (similar to
a state's Clean Air Act regulatory plan), later
approved by EPA.
2009: The Ramona Band of Cahuilla Indians
of Southern California became the first fully
"off-grid" reservation, with 100% renewable
electric power generated by sun and wind.

Cumulative and 2009 Results
The pace of  environmental  progress  in In-
dian Country has been accelerating in recent
years. The following  are among  the  many
goals  achieved last year.
•  In 2009, 130 tribes and tribal consortia
   in the Pacific Southwest received a total
   of $15.6 million in GAP grants.
•  As of 2009, 93 tribes in the region had
   implemented their own solid and hazard-
   ous waste programs.
•  Since 1987, in partnership with tribes
   and the Indian Health Service, EPA's
   Clean Water and Drinking Water Tribal
   Set-Aside  programs in the region have
   provided $112 million for 450 projects to
   improve infrastructure for 65,000 tribal
   homes.
•  The Water Pollution Control Program
   has grown from five tribes eligible to
   receive funding in 1989 to 98 tribes in
   2009, of which 93 received funding. The
   Nonpoint Source Pollution Control Pro-
   gram has grown from  11 tribes eligible in
   1997 to more than 77 tribes in 2009, of
   which 67 received funding.
•  EPA's Tribal Border Infrastructure Pro-
   gram has provided $34 million to tribes
   for 47 water infrastructure projects serv-
   ing nearly 10,000 tribal homes near the
   U.S.-Mexico Border.
•  EPA has awarded more than $4 million
   to tribes for source water assessment
   and protection for more than 60% of
   tribal drinking  water systems in the Pa-
   cific Southwest. The Navajo Nation  has
   its own program to ensure that 161  tribal
   water systems meet federal drinking
   water standards.
•  Between 2004 and 2007, the Tohono
   O'odham Nation cleaned up illegal
   migrant camps along the U.S.-Mexico
   Border, removing 13 tons of garbage
   filling 1,231 large trash bags, plus 109
   abandoned vehicles  and 235 bicycles.
•  Since  1997, EPA has worked with 12
   tribes and spent more than $7 million
   to investigate  more than 120 Leaking
   Underground  Storage Tank sites, and
   clean up and close 21 of them. In 2009,
   EPA credentialed two Navajo Nation
   inspectors, the first tribal tank inspectors
   in the U.S., enabling  the tribe to enforce
   underground tank regulations.
•  By 2009, EPA's regional Pesticides Office
   funds  10 tribal pesticide programs and
   one tribal consortium. The Pala Band
   of Mission Indians and the Blue Lake
   Rancheria fund their own pesticide regu-
   latory programs. The Tohono O'odham
   Nation uses GAP funds to monitor pes-
   ticide use. Tribes were responsible for
   57% of pesticide enforcement actions in
   Indian Country nationwide.
•  The Colorado River Indian Tribes have
   collected, cleaned and recycled 24 tons
   of plastic pesticide containers used by
   farmers on 85,000 acres of agricultural
   land.
•  Between 2000 and 2008, 15 tribes
   received grants to abate lead (Pb)  haz-
   ards. Projects funded included aware-
   ness programs, soil testing  and blood
   lead screening for children and pregnant
   women.
•  In 2009, EPA awarded 30 tribal air
   grants totaling  more than $3 million, plus
   a radon grant to the Navajo Nation. With
   this funding, 26 tribes are monitoring air
   for particulate matter,  ozone (smog), or
   air toxics.
•  Since 1982, EPA has  conducted 61
   Emergency Response actions on tribal
   lands in the region.  Most were  cleanups
   of abandoned hazardous waste and
   contaminated soil. EPA has worked with
   20 tribes to support tribal Emergency
   Response programs.
   More on preventing lead
poisoning in Indian Country:
www.epa.gov/region9/toxic/lead/
      lead-child-indiancountry
   1998
   New national leak
   detection and prevention
   standards for underground
   fuel storage tanks take
   effect December 22,
   spurring replacement of
   leaky tanks.
                                                                                                                   Above: Tribe members planting trees as part of a
                                                                                                                  wetlands restoration project funded by EPA. Photo
                                                                                                                       courtesy of the Gila River Indian Community.

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                           30     Communities and Ecosystems
1999
Visibility improved at
Grand Canyon, thanks to
EPA/federal plan requiring
scrubbers to reduce sulfur
dioxide emissions at coal-
fired Navajo Generating
Station.
Environmental  Justice
in the Pacific Southwest

"The color of your skin or size of your wal-
let should not determine the quality of your
environment," says EPA Regional Adminis-
trator Jared Blumenfeld, who is making en-
vironmental justice one of his top priorities.
Environmental justice (EJ) is part of EPA's
routine work at the Pacific  Southwest Of-
fice. In addition, EPA's EJ Program supports
the regional office in integrating environmen-
tal justice considerations into  its programs
and decision-making. "Environmental justice
isn't an afterthought in EPA's Pacific South-
west Region," Blumenfeld says. "It's the first
thought."
In  Southern California,  EPA  is  collaborating
with  community groups  and  government
agencies to address the health concerns of
people living near the 1-710  freeway, where
cargo from the Ports  of Los  Angeles  and
Long Beach moves inland by diesel  truck.
Due to constant truck and  rail traffic, resi-
dents of the densely-populated area are
exposed  to  more air  pollution than other
Southland residents. EPA designated the
area one of the nation's 10  "EJ Showcase
Communities" —places where EPA  enhanc-
es the agency's technical  support  of com-
munity efforts.
A  three-year,  $160,000 EPA  grant to the
state Department of Toxic Substances Con-
trol is helping that agency partner with com-
munities  to  "ground  truth" environmental
issues and target enforcement and compli-
ance efforts. Just north of the 1-710 corridor,
the Center for Community Action and  Envi-
ronmental Justice is using an EPA EJ grant
to  educate residents about air pollution risks
from heavy truck and locomotive traffic. The
group hopes to ensure  that  future  policy
decisions protect the communities from in-
creased pollution.
In 2009, collaboratives in the Pacific South-
west received  two of five nationwide En-
vironmental Justice  Achievement  Awards,
recognizing the successes of multi-stake-
holder  partnerships.  The Fish  Contami-
nation  Education  Collaborative  was
recognized for  raising awareness about the
dangers of eating fish caught near the Palos
Verdes Shelf Superfund site off the coast of
Los Angeles. The  Clean Trucks  Program
was recognized for its effort to reduce big-rig
pollution from the Ports of Los Angeles and
Long Beach by 80 percent by 2012.
Other successful projects are underway:
•  In Richmond, Calif., the Asian Pacific
   Environmental Network received an
   EPA EJ grant to build the Laotian refu-
   gee community's capacity to address
   environmental justice and public health
   issues associated with local planning,
   development and land use.
•  In East Oakland, Calif., Communities
   for a Better  Environment received an
   EPA EJ grant to work with youth and
   volunteers to conduct a diesel truck
   counting study in the heavily trafficked
   Hegenberger Corridor, with the goal of
   changing truck routes to reduce impacts
   on residents.
•  In San Diego, the Environmental Health
   Coalition helped low-income residents in
   Barrio Logan work with the Port of San
   Diego to introduce clean plug-in electric
   power for docked ships, to replace the
   ships' engines as generators. The group
   received a $300,000 Community Action
   for a Renewed Environment (CARE)
   grant to continue its work.
•  The small San Joaquin Valley city of
   Arvin, which has 25% unemployment
   and an 88% Hispanic population, has
   the nation's highest number of days with
   unhealthy smog  levels. A $20,000 EPA
   grant is helping the Committee for a
   Better Arvin bring stakeholders together
   to understand and  address a variety of
   environmental hazards.
•  On the Wai'anaee Coast of Oahu,
   Hawaii, the Pacific American Founda-
   tion is using a CARE (Communities for
   a Renewed Environment) grant to work
   with low-income, mostly native residents
   to address polluted runoff, mercury-
   contaminated fish,  illegal dumping in
   streams, proximity  to polluting facilities
   and other concerns.
•  In Black Falls, on  the Navajo Nation,
   the nonprofit Forgotten People used a
   $20,000 EPA grant to help families af-
   fected by uranium  contamination of well
   water by providing  clean, safe drinking
   water systems for 10 families while also
   building community capacity to address
   environmental problems.
                                                                                                                              Above: EPA's Pacific Southwest Environmental
                                                                                                                           Justice Team: (Standing) Karen Henry, Deldi Reyes,
                                                                                                                             Sharon Bowen; (below) Debbie Lowe, Zoe Heller.

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                                                                          Communities and  Ecosystems     31
Reducing Impacts
Through Environmental  Review
From  dams to highways to permits for gi-
gantic open-pit mines,  federal  agency ac-
tions  and  federal funding often have  huge
environmental impacts. Under the  1969 Na-
tional  Environmental Policy Act (NEPA), fed-
eral agencies must prepare a detailed  Envi-
ronmental  Impact  Statement  (EIS) before
making any decision that has a significant
impact on the  environment.  EPA's role is to
review the  draft EISs, comment on  them and
make  sure they identify all reasonable mitiga-
tion measures  that could alleviate the  envi-
ronmental  impacts.
Last year,  EPA's  Pacific Southwest Region
received 130 EISs for review—27% of the
national total. The formidable task of review-
ing  them falls to  the Environmental Review
Office, a group  of 17 EPA staff and  one  man-
ager, Kathy Goforth. This behind-the-scenes
work  resulted  in  significant environmental
improvements in many of the proposed proj-
ects and permits.
For example, the U.S. Forest Service planned
a logging  operation in  California's Shasta-
Trinity National Forest to thin  dense forest
stands to  reduce fire danger  and improve
forest health. As a result of EIS comments
by  EPA and the  public, the Forest  Service
chose an  alternative plan that avoids con-
struction of new roads, removes fire-prone
piles of slash (dead branches usually left on
the ground after logging), and  retains exist-
ing  forest canopy in riparian areas.

Protecting Vernal Pool Wetlands
At the newest  University of California cam-
pus in  Merced, in  the San  Joaquin Valley,
EPA has been involved for several years, as
the campus was developed on rolling grass-
lands that included numerous vernal pool
wetlands.  These wetlands provide  habitat
for waterfowl, wildflowers and endangered
fairy shrimp. EPA's comments on the draft
EIS and throughout the planning process led
to preservation of 95% of the wetlands origi-
nally proposed to  be  filled, and mitigation
for the rest through preservation, restoration
and creation of similar wetlands.
In another case in the Southern California city
of Hemet, the Federal  Highway Administra-
tion, Caltrans, and Riverside County Trans-
portation Commission (RCTC) proposed  a
new alignment for State Route 79 that would
have  impacted  a  1,000-acre alkali vernal
pool  complex.  EPA's extensive early inter-
agency coordination on this project focused
on the  need to  avoid  impacts to vernal
pools. In response, Hemet's city government
updated  their general  plan to remove  this
alignment as the locally preferred alternative,
and the draft EIS will  no  longer include this
alignment. EPA's coordination on this proj-
ect prior to the release of the draft EIS led to
avoidance of the vernal pool complex.
In response to community concerns as  well
as EPA's comments  on  the  Port  of Long
Beach's  proposed Middle Harbor  expan-
sion, the  port committed  $15 million to miti-
gate the  impacts of increased air  pollution
and greenhouse  gas emissions on schools
and day care centers,  and  medical and se-
nior centers. The funding  will be available for
projects like installing air filtration systems in
schools, replacing or retrofitting school bus-
es to  reduce diesel emissions, and mobile
asthma testing  and treatment  stations for
children.
                                                                                      Left: EPA's review of the draft EIS for State Route
                                                                                      79 near Hemet, Calif., caused highway planners
                                                                                      to avoid paving this 1,000-acre vernal pool/
                                                                                      grassland complex.
                                                                                                                                    2000
                                                                                                                                    U.S. Army incinerates the
                                                                                                                                    last of 400,000 obsolete
                                                                                                                                    chemical weapons,
                                                                                                                                    destroying their extremely
                                                                                                                                    toxic nerve agent, under
                                                                                                                                    EPA oversight at Johnston
                                                                                                                                    Island in Central Pacific.

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2001
Under agreement between
EPA, Los Angeles, Indian
tribes, and air district, Los
Angeles begins irrigating
dry Owens Valley lakebed
to end nation's worst
participate air pollution.
                           32    Communities and..
Looking  Back:

The Six Originals

Their ranks have thinned in recent years as
colleagues retired. Yet six "originals"  remain,
employees who are still working after 39, 40,
even 43 years with EPA and its predecessor,
the Federal Water Pollution Control  Admin-
istration (FWPCA). They could have retired
years ago, but they say they still enjoy the
work.
PHIL WOODS, civil engineer and now Water
Quality  Standards  Coordinator  Emeritus,
started in 1967, when the FWPCA regional
office had only 40  employees and was  lo-
cated in a small building near Crown Beach
in Alameda.
Phil retired in 2000, but took only six weeks
off  before returning on a  part-time basis.
Water Quality Standards are  limits on each
of more than a hundred chemicals and con-
taminants where EPA draws the lines be-
tween drinkable, swimmable, clean  enough
for fish and wildlife, or too polluted for these
uses, for all surface waters in the region. Phil
knows how,  when and why each standard
was set.
MELANIE BLAHA was hired as a writer and
editor in January 1970 by FWPCA Regional
Administrator Paul DeFalco. Her first job was
translating dense technical  reports  written
by agency engineers into  plain English,  so
they could be released to the  public.
Melanie wrote the Agency's  first  brochure.
"Our roles as employees were not yet clear,
so we had the freedom to identify a need, fill
it creatively, and make a lasting difference—
unlike other  federal agencies, where every-
thing went by long-standing procedures."
Today Melanie coordinates international ac-
tivities, like planning and directing visits by
delegations of foreign visitors who come to
learn how EPA works.
ARNOLD  DEN  came to EPA on  June 21,
1971, "right out of grad school." Arnold had
Bachelor's and Master's  degrees in  envi-
ronmental health, physiology, and industrial
hygiene from the UCLA School  of Public
Health.
Arnold recalls two jobs as high points  in his
career. In  1985, helping conduct  EPA's na-
tional lake survey for acid  rain, he flew by
helicopter to 100 lakes in the Sierra Nevada
to take water samples.  More recently, he
has taught risk assessment and  risk  com-
munication workshops to federal  and  state
employees.  He's taken  the  workshop on
the road to Australia, Hong Kong, Saipan,
American Samoa, and  even Switzerland, by
request of their governments.
RICH HENNECKE had just  graduated  from
Sacramento State University  with a degree
in Mechanical  Engineering when he started
in the  Enforcement Division  in July 1971,
reviewing construction  projects planned for
wetlands and waters.
Rich now multi-tasks in the Accounting Of-
fice.  One of his tasks is overseeing the Se-
nior  Environmental  Employment  Program,
which hires people over 55 years of age to
work at EPA.
WENDELL SMITH came to EPA in November
1971. After the Clean Water Act passed  in
1972, he helped set up procedures to carry
it out. "It was like being an immigrant at El-
lis Island—everybody was trying to figure
out what to do next," he remembers. "It was
stressful but exciting."
When EPA began making grants directly to
Native American Tribes in the late 1980s, he
established the region's Tribal Water Quality
Program.  Many tribal  communities lacked
safe  drinking  water and sewage facilities.
"What an opportunity to help!" he says. He
began  an intensive effort  to  inform tribes
about EPA grants, and soon his desk over-
flowed  with grant  applications from tribes
who  began working with EPA.
WALLYWOO got his graduate degree in Envi-
ronmental Engineering from the University of
Massachusetts in December 1971, and was
hired by EPA's Boston regional office to re-
view environmental impact statements. For
25 years, he was a manager, first in Boston,
later  in San Francisco.
In 1996 Wally  became a coordinator of the
then-new  Brownfields  Program,  oversee-
ing grants in California, Arizona and  Hawaii.
"Being a Brownfields Coordinator is fun," he
says. "It's  like playing Santa—selecting and
overseeing grants to cities, to recycle indus-
trial lands and reduce urban sprawl."
                                                                                                                                     Above: The "Six Originals": Phil Woods,
                                                                                                                                  Arnold Den, Wendell Smith, Rich Hennecke,
                                                                                                                                                Melanie Blaha, Wally Woo

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                                                                          Communities and  Ecosystems     33
Russ Frazer:
Enforcement Officer,  Toxics  Release Inventory Team
A native of Bishop, in California's Owens Val-
ley, Russ Frazer grew up  in the shadow of
the Union Carbide Tungsten mine.
Perhaps  it's no surprise,  then,  that  Russ
feels right at home when inspecting mines as
the enforcement lead for Region 9's Toxics
Release Inventory (TRI) Program. He also in-
spects a wide range of other facilities—from
metal platers and chemical manufacturers,
to bullet making  factories and rendering
plants.
Under TRI, certain facilities that use  toxic
chemicals must report  to  EPA how  much
they release into the environment. EPA com-
piles that information into  a database that
anyone with a computer can access,  mak-
ing TRI a  powerful tool  for communities.
"The great thing about TRI is that it makes
the toxic chemical  release  information eas-
ily available to the public—with no logins or
password required," says Frazer.
In fact, TRI  is EPA's largest  public database,
with data on 23,000 facilities nationwide and
1,600  in Region 9. Anyone can  punch in
their zip code to find and  map TRI facilities
in  their area, or search for air, water,  land,
and  underground releases  by industry, city,
state and county, and by chemical. TRI even
includes the amounts of chemicals that were
recycled, treated, used for energy recovery,
and transported off-site for disposal.
"I've seen TRI work," he says. "We've seen
some facilities, whose TRI  data is available
for  public scrutiny,  voluntarily change their
practices to reduce pollution, for example
from trying out  lead-free solder, instead of
using lead-based solder. When they find it
works, they are willing to switch."
However, there  are facilities subject to TRI
that  have never reported or have under-re-
ported their chemical releases. On any given
day Russ may be researching targets, talk-
ing with facilities, analyzing  reams of data,
writing reports,  and working with Region 9
attorneys to resolve complicated  case is-
sues. He currently heads up TRI inspections
at gold mining facilities, which release more
mercury into the environment than any other
industry in the U.S. The releases occur pri-
marily from land disturbance of millions of
pounds of waste rock and  ore (both con-
taining naturally-occurring  mercury), fugitive
emissions  from  heap-leach piles, and stack
emissions from roasters.
Prior to his environmental career, Russ spent
three years on a  river patrol boat at the height
of the Viet Nam  war. These boats (depicted
in the film "Apocalypse Now") were easy tar-
gets for shooters hiding in the jungle. Russ
was hit with  shrapnel from  a rocket-pro-
pelled grenade, earning him a Purple Heart.
After the war and  engineering studies,  he
worked as industrial  waste inspector with
the Mountain View fire department. In 1976,
Mountain View started its Industrial Waste
Monitoring  Program  at a  new  secondary
sewage treatment plant, which used bacte-
ria to break down pollutants. To keep these
facilities operating  effectively  and prevent
toxics from reaching  the Bay,  cities had to
prevent Silicon Valley  industries from dump-
ing toxics down the drain.
While there he became impressed with the
potential power of the Emergency Planning
and Community Right to Know Act that cre-
ated TRI. Little did he know that, some two
decades later, he would be a key player in its
enforcement.
                 More on the Toxics Release
                               Inventory:
                  www.epa.gov/region9/toxic/tri
                              Russ Frazer
2002
EPA and its Mexican
counterpart SEMARNAT
launch Border 2012
Program to cooperate
on clean air, water,
wastewater, hazardous
waste and emergency
response in border area.

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                                   and  Stewardshi
2003
EPA, Los Angeles water
board enforcement
action requires three
major oil companies to
clean up Santa Monica's
groundwater, which had
been polluted with gas
additive MTBE.
40 things...
      EVERYWHERE!
      Bring your own
      reusable mug when you
      go out for coffee or tea
       andate of protecting public health
and the environment includes not just en-
forcing federal laws on waste manage-
ment and overseeing cleanups, but also
preventing waste from being generated
in  the first  place. EPA staff have part-
nered with  other government  agencies,
communities, nonprofits, tribes and in-
dustry to come up with creative solutions
to  push further down the road to "zero
waste."
Two innovative hazardous waste preven-
tion partnerships that EPA initiated in the
Pacific Southwest  showed remarkable
results across the  U.S.  and worldwide
in 2009. The U.S. Postal Service has be-
gun removing toxic lead weights from its
215,000 delivery vehicles (facing page).
And EPA's partnership with the computer
industry and  a nonprofit is driving de-
mand for "green" information technology
in the U.S. and 40 countries around the
world (see p. 36).
EPA has piloted a novel method of reduc-
ing the environmental footprint of hazard-
ous waste cleanups at a Silicon  Valley
site (see p. 39). And in California's Klam-
ath  River Watershed, three tribes teamed
up to remove and recycle 400 abandoned
vehicles,  along with the fuel and toxic
fluids that eventually would have leaked
and contaminated the soil (see p. 38).
 > See the complete list of "40 things you can do to save the planet" in the centerfold

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                                Compliance and Stewardship    35
U.S. Postal Service  "Gets The  Lead Out"
with Help from EPA Program
The complete fleet  of U.S. Postal Service
delivery vehicles will replace all their lead
wheel weights with lead-free ones because
of a voluntary partnership that started in the
Pacific Southwest with EPA's regional Waste
Management Division.
In February 2008, EPA recruited the Pacific
Area of the U.S. Postal Service (USPS) for
a partnership in the National Partnership for
Environmental Priorities (NPEP) to "get the
lead out." The USPS Pacific Area has a fleet
of over 30,000 vehicles in  34  maintenance
facilities in California and Hawaii. The part-
nership has eliminated a total of 5.5 tons of
lead from USPS vehicles.
The successful West  Coast effort served
as the catalyst to switch the  entire USPS
delivery fleet of 215,000  vehicles nation-
wide to lead-free wheel weights. When the
national  partnership  is completed,  USPS
will have eliminated as much as 30 tons of
lead from entering the environment and the
workplace.
Lead is a toxic chemical of concern for EPA
because it bio-accumulates in the food chain,
damages ecosystems, and can cause brain
damage in humans, especially children. Na-
tionally, an estimated 1.6  million pounds of
lead fall off vehicle wheels every year. These
lead weights are ground into  dust on high-
ways, which can be breathed, or ultimately
enter waterways as polluted runoff.
The EPA-Postal Service
Partnership will prevent
30 tons of lead from
entering the environment.
An average of 4.5 ounces of lead is clipped
to the wheel  rims of every automobile in
the United States. Every car owner can do
something to get the lead out. When tires are
rotated or balanced, consumers should ask
their mechanics to replace the old lead ones
with new steel ones.
Part of EPA's partnership with the USPS in-
cluded raising public awareness by creating
a video to promote this partnership and also
encourage consumers to ask for lead-free
wheel weights at their car shops. The  "Get
the Lead Out" video was featured on EPA's
YouTube channel and was so successful
that more than 10 public and private  fleet
managers in the Pacific Southwest Region
also signed up as NPEP partners.
All of these voluntary toxic reduction partner-
ships are part of NPEP, which has a national
goal to partner with industries, municipalities
and federal  facilities to reduce the  use or
release of highly toxic chemicals,  including
lead.
                                                                                                                              2004
                                                                                                                              EPA launches West Coast
                                                                                                                              Diesel Collaborative with
                                                                                                                              300 agencies, groups to
                                                                                                                              reduce air pollution from
                                                                                                                              diesel engines in Pacific
                                                                                                                              Coast states, northern
                                                                                                                              Mexico. British Columbia.
                                                                                  Above: Old lead wheel weights (top) are replaced
                                                                                  with new steel weights (bottom).
                                                                                  Left: EPA representatives recognized the
                                                                                  U.S. Postal Service team's effort in "getting the lead out."

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                          36    Compliance and Stewardship
                          It  Bears rEPEATing: The Electronic
                          Product Environmental Assessment Tool
New national health
standard for fine
participate pollution—
PM26-takes effect. EPA
Pacific Southwest Office
begins helping China
set up hazardous waste
cleanup programs.
In 2003, EPA's Northwest and Pacific South-
west Offices initiated a dialogue with the
electronics industry and state and local gov-
ernments on e-waste: how to reduce the
impact  of the millions of computers that are
sold, used and disposed of every year. The
result of that collaboration is the Electronic
Product  Environmental  Assessment  Tool
(EPEAT).
Today,  hundreds of large purchasers,  from
local governments  to  corporations,   use
EPEAT  for  all their computer purchases.
EPEAT  has become one of the world's  most
extensive and influential green IT product
rating  systems, used in 40 countries.  Its
registry has more than 1,000 products and
more than 30 participating manufacturers.

Minimizing Environmental Impacts
Participants wrestled with  a fundamental
topic—how to encourage the design, manu-
facture  and purchase of new computers with
the least environmental impact. The solution,
rolled out by EPA and the  nonprofit Green
Electronics  Council nationally  in 2006, is
EPEAT  (www.epeat.net). It  has proven  so
successful that EPEAT has driven  green
innovation  by  electronics  manufacturers
worldwide.
A  personal computer,  like a light  bulb,
doesn't use much electric power—but mil-
lions of them add up to a significant share of
electrical energy use, with its environmental
impacts:  Greenhouse gas  emissions  from
fossil fuel-burning  power plants; coal, ura-
nium and copper mines (for copper power
lines); and dams. Computers have additional
                                                                  environmental impacts through the  metals
                                                                  and other materials they're made of (includ-
                                                                  ing toxics like cadmium, lead and mercury),
                                                                  and their packaging and end-of-life manage-
                                                                  ment. As recently as 2005, however,  buyers
                                                                  had little ability to buy—and manufacturers
                                                                  little incentive to  make—more environmen-
                                                                  tally-friendly models, because there was no
                                                                  common yardstick to demonstrate what was
                                                                  "green."
                                                                  In EPEAT's first year of
                                                                  operation, registered
                                                                  products helped save 42.2
                                                                  billion  kilowatt-hours of
                                                                  electricity and  prevented
                                                                  124,000 metric tons of
                                                                  hazardous waste.
From 2003 to 2005, EPA helped lead a group
of stakeholders to  establish that yardstick.
Working together, they defined what makes
a computer greener and set up a system to
ensure  products actually  met those claims.
The EPA provided seed funding in 2006 to
the Green Electronics Council to launch the
EPEAT  registry—a reliable way for buyers to
compare the environmental performance of
computers and monitors. The registry pub-
lished comparative ratings  of 60 products
from  three manufacturers,  and  it's  been
growing ever since.
                                        Naturally, EPA was one of the first electronics
                                        buyers to use EPEAT in purchasing comput-
                                        ers for EPA offices. But EPEAT harnessed
                                        the purchasing power of the  entire federal
                                        government—probably the world's largest
                                        buyer—with the President's January 2007
                                        Executive Order, and  later, Federal Acquisi-
                                        tions Regulations, requiring federal agencies
                                        to buy EPEAT-registered products for at least
                                        95% of their electronics. By mid-2007, the
                                        EPEAT registry included 500 products from
                                        20 manufacturers,  including industry giants
                                        Hewlett-Packard and  Dell,  which registered
                                        the first EPEAT Gold products—the top rat-
                                        ing for environmental performance.

                                        How Products Are Rated
                                        Products that meet 23 required environmen-
                                        tal performance criteria may be registered at
                                        the EPEAT Bronze  level. Depending on the
                                        number of 28 additional optional criteria the
                                        product meets, it can be rated EPEAT Silver
                                        or EPEAT Gold, the highest level. Products
                                        are rewarded with additional points as they

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Compliance  and Stewardship    37
          meet additional environmental performance
          criteria related to every phase of the product
          lifecycle, including  recycling and disposal.
          In 2007, EPEAT's first full year of operation,
          EPEAT-registered  products  helped  reduce
          use of toxic materials,  resulting in the elimi-
          nation of 124,000  metric tons of hazardous
          waste.  EPEAT products also helped  save
          approximately 42.2 billion kilowatt-hours of
          electricity—enough to power 3.7 million U.S.
          homes for a year.
          EPA's Pacific  Southwest  Regional  Office
          has played an  ongoing  role in the gover-
          nance and management of EPEAT, includ-
          ing  cross-agency  coordination, expansion
          into the consumer market,  and expansion
          internationally.
          In August  2009, prompted by the demand
          from  information  technology  purchasers
          around the world, EPEAT  launched  its  in-
          ternational registry, enabling  manufacturers
          to  list 'green'  computers and  monitors in
          40 countries across the  globe. Purchasers
          in the U.S., Canada, Europe, China, Japan,
          Taiwan, Australia,  New Zealand, Brazil and
          Mexico can now evaluate, compare and se-
          lect electronics based on the products' envi-
          ronmental  performance in their country.

          Expanding EPEAT's Scope
          Today, EPA is  funding the development of
          standards  for additional products to  be  in-
          cluded in EPEAT, such as televisions, print-
          ers, copiers, multifunction devices and serv-
          ers. EPEAT also has partnered with major
          tech-info platforms Channel Intelligence and
                                                                                                                                            Lightly
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   www.epeat.net
Electronic Product Environmental Assessment Tool
CNET, putting the EPEAT marks and ratings
onto retail websites such  as Ingram  Micro,
Buy.com and others.
"HP offers EPEAT registered products in 36
of the 40 countries included  in the  global
expansion and  supports  EPEAT  because
of its comprehensive, unbiased  approach
to evaluating the environmental attributes of
products," says Steve Hoffman,  Director of
Strategic Marketing and Sustainability Initia-
tives for Hewlett  Packard's Personal Sys-
tems Group.
         "We recognized early on that EPEAT pro-
         vided an  effective, credible tool  to  identify
         computer hardware solutions for  our clients
         that help reduce greenhouse gas  emissions,
         eliminate  toxic substances, increase recy-
         cled content and reduce energy usage, at
         no added cost and with no restrictions on
         product or supplier choice," says Tashweka
         Anderson, Sustainable IT Business Manager
         at ComputaCenter in England.
                                                                                                                          More on EPEAT:
                                                                                                                             www.epeat.net
2006
Construction of cleanup
facilities is complete
at 1,000 Super-fund
hazardous waste sites
across the nation,
including half of the
125 sites in the Pacific
Southwest.
                                                                                                                                    Above: How EPEAT rates a computer's
                                                                                                                                            environmental performance.

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38     Compliance and Stewardship
North  Coast Dump Cleanups:
Tribes  Partner to Clean Klamath Watershed
One of the most difficult challenges on ru-
ral tribal lands is waste management. Na-
tionally, hundreds of open dumps on tribal
lands have been cleaned up and closed, but
thousands remain, along with thousands of
abandoned vehicles.
In 2008 and 2009, the neighboring Yurok,
Karukand Hoopa Tribes in California's Klam-
ath  River Watershed joined forces with fed-
eral, state and local agencies to tackle waste
issues on their lands. Together they removed
and recycled more  than 400 junk vehicles,
and removed  200 tons of trash from three
dump sites affecting  two creeks and the
Klamath River.
The three tribes have worked for over a de-
cade on solid  and hazardous waste  issues,
with funding and other support from federal,
state, county and Native American organiza-
tions. Efforts to clean up major illegal dumps
in the region gained momentum  in August
2008, when the California Department of
Resources Recycling and Recovery (CalRe-
cycle) approved $800,000 to clean up three
large dump sites on the Yurok Reservation.
The dumps posed significant health threats
to residents as well as to fish and wildlife on
the  Klamath River, a crucial habitat and mi-
gration route for salmon. The federal Indian
Health Service (IMS) contributed an addition-
al $30,000 to fund outreach efforts and train
a tribal workforce for the project. EPA, United
Indian Health  Services, the California  Rural
Indian Health  Board, and Humboldt Waste
Management Authority also participated.
By September 2008,  18 Yurok tribal mem-
bers were HAZWOPER (Hazardous Waste
Operations   and  Emergency  Response)
certified to  work on  sites with hazardous
materials. Dump cleanups began in Octo-
ber. Steep terrain required the use of heavy
equipment,  including  a Sikorsky helicopter
to airlift dumpsters filled with waste from the
Klamath River Gorge. Over 200 tons of solid
and hazardous waste were collected and re-
moved, including tires, appliances, batteries,
flammable and toxic solids, and electronic
wastes—some of it from a steep slope that
spilled trash directly into the Klamath River.
While waiting to begin the second phase of
dump cleanups, the Yurok Tribe and  Gal-
Recycle teamed with the Hoopa and Karuk
Tribes,  EPA, and other partners to plan and
carry out other waste removal projects. In
June 2009, the three tribes removed  400
abandoned vehicles from their lands, elimi-
nating the potential for leaks of oil, antifreeze
and other  toxic fluids. The tribes also co-
operated on holding household hazardous
waste collection events in October 2009.
In late 2009, EPA awarded $86,350 in grants
to the Yurok and Karuk Tribes to  help them
reduce  illegal  dumping, increase  reuse
and  recycling,  and move their  communi-
ties toward sustainable waste management
practices.
The three tribes, working in cooperation with
EPA and the other agencies, have restored
the natural  beauty of their lands while remov-
ing about 500 tons of junk vehicles and trash
that posed threats to public health and the
environment.
                                                                                                                Learn More:
                                                                                         www.epa.gov/region9/waste/features/yurok-karuk
                                                                                    Left: Staging area for removal of abandoned vehicles
                                                                                    on the Yurok Reservation (photo courtesy of the
                                                                                    Yurok Tribe).
                                                                                    Above: Excavator moves down a steep slope to
                                                                                    remove trash from an illegal roadside dump (photo
                                                                                    courtesy of CalRecycle).

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                                 Compliance and Stewardship    39
"Green Remediation" Makes
Hazardous  Waste Cleanups  Cleaner
Cleanups  of  hazardous waste  sites can
cause pollution, in the form of air emissions
from fuel-burning bulldozers and trucks,  as
well as from power plants or generators that
run electric pumps  drawing contaminated
groundwater through treatment systems.
EPA's Pacific  Southwest  Regional  Office
has developed an innovative Green Reme-
diation policy to measure  and  reduce the
environmental  footprint of cleanups. The
policy requires analysis and  efforts to reduce
air emissions, conserve water and  energy,
and minimize the use of toxics in materials
and products. In a pilot study at the former
Romic East Palo Alto hazardous waste man-
agement facility in Silicon Valley,  EPA used
some of the principles  of a Life-Cycle As-
sessment approach to compare the environ-
mental footprints of three alternative cleanup
methods.
Romic East Palo Alto, which closed in 2007,
was a 13-acre site on the southern edge of
San  Francisco Bay.  Groundwater  beneath
the site is contaminated with volatile organic
compounds (VOCs, which include paint thin-
ners,  metal cleaners, and  chemicals  used
in  dry cleaning  and  computer manufac-
ture). Here, EPA chose  enhanced bioreme-
diation—in this case, injecting a  mixture of
cheese whey and molasses into the ground-
water, to fortify the existing population of mi-
croorganisms that consume and biodegrade
VOCs.
The  pilot  study compared  bioremediation
with two equally effective alternative cleanup
methods to determine which had the small-
est environmental  footprint. One  alternative
was a traditional "pump and treat" remedy:
pumping groundwater to the surface, treat-
ing  it, and discharging the treated water to
the  local wastewater treatment plant. The
other was a hybrid  of  bioremediation and
"pump and treat."
Bioremediation  had  the smallest  environ-
mental footprint in terms of fresh water use,
air toxics emissions and CO2 emissions. Tra-
ditional pump and  treat had the largest envi-
ronmental footprint.

Calculating the Footprint
The  pilot study included off-site activities
such as  manufacturing  and  transportation,
in addition to on-site  cleanup activities. First,
the  study estimated  resources used,  waste
generated, and air emissions  from on-site
activities. These included construction ma-
terials, fuel, water, and electricity used, and
CO2 emitted. Also included were resources
used and air emissions from transportation
of people and materials to and from the site.
Plus, the study estimated the magnitudes of
15 environmental parameters, including the
water needed to manufacture materials used
on-site and in transportation, as well  as re-
sulting air toxics and CO2 emissions—includ-
ing refinery emissions from fuel  production.
EPA is now conducting similar pilot studies
at two more cleanup sites to further  devel-
op a methodology for this type of analysis.
This methodology  could ultimately be widely
used in EPA's decision-making process on
cleanup plans. For cleanups plans already
approved, it can help reduce  environmen-
tal footprints. For example, at Romic  about
80% of the diesel fuel used in bioremediation
will  be used  on-site.  To help reduce the ef-
fects of diesel fuel used on-site, EPA staff are
working with Romic to select diesel equip-
ment with particulate filters, and to minimize
idling time.
           More on EPA's Green Site Cleanups
                   in the Pacific Southwest:
  www.epa.gov/region9/climatechange/green-sites.html
2008
EPA and Navajo Nation
launch five-year plan
to address uranium
contamination of land and
water from more than 500
abandoned uranium mines
on Navajo land.
                                                                                                                              Above: EPA contractor injecting
                                                                                                                              cheese whey and molasses into
                                                                                                                               contaminated groundwater to
                                                                                                                            enhance biodegradation of VOCs.

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                         40    Compliance and  Stewardship
American Reinvestment
and Recovery Act
allocates $710 million
in Pacific Southwest for
clean air and clean water
projects, plus speeding
up hazardous waste
cleanups.
                         Carmen  Santos:
                         Keeping Communities Safe from  Hazardous Waste
                                                                 water and leachate treatment systems, and
                                                                 buffer  property. Carmen  chaired  the BKK
                                                                 Landfill multiagency Steering Committee for
                                                                 about 13 years, working with other regula-
                                                                 tory agencies plus the City of West Covina.
                                                                 During  her  tenure,  Carmen finalized the
                                                                 ground water cleanup plan for the BKK site
                                                                 in  collaboration with  others  and  required
                                                                 BKK to conduct additional investigations to
                                                                 reduce releases of landfill gas from the site
                                                                 into outside air.
                                                                 Redevelopment of
                                                                 former BKK property in
                                                                 West Covina, Calif.,
                                                                 made possible the
                                                                 award-winning  Big League
                                                                 Dreams sports  complex.
In her role as the EPA project manager for
the  BKK  site,  Carmen helped  negotiate a
Prospective  Purchaser Agreement to allow
a buyer, the City of West Covina, to rede-
velop certain portions of the site. The agree-
ment  made  possible  the  award-winning
Big  League  Dreams baseball sports com-
plex and a major retail  center, West  Covina
Heights,  anchored by Target  and  Home
Depot.
With  development   underway,  Carmen
worked in partnership with other parties to
require  environmental  monitoring and engi-
neering controls to limit the emission of va-
Carmen  Santos has been with  EPA since
1989. Carmen spent much  of  her career
managing the air, soil and groundwater sam-
pling and preliminary cleanup work at  the
BKK Landfill site in West Covina, Calif. In the
last two years, however, she's been oversee-
ing cleanups of toxic polychlorinated biphe-
nyls (PCBs).
"I enjoy my job," she says. "I love my work
protecting the environment."
BKK is a 583-acre  (nearly a square mile)
site with  a closed  hazardous waste landfill,
a closed municipal solid waste landfill, gas
collection and treatment  systems, ground
pors from the BKK site. When methane gas
was found to be migrating from the Landfill
site, she required BKK to increase gas col-
lection so it won't affect anyone at the sports
complex. The California Department of Toxic
Substances  Control (DTSC) now  manages
the former hazardous waste landfill.
Two years ago, Carmen  turned  her atten-
tion to EPA's PCS cleanup program. PCBs
were used in electrical transformers, paint,
caulk,  and many other applications before
manufacture in the United States of PCBs
was banned  in 1979. Carmen oversees PCS
cleanups  all  over the Pacific Southwest—
about a dozen at any given time. If PCBs are
found in a property, the PCBs must be man-
aged following the regulatory requirements
promulgated  under the Toxic Substances
Control Act (TSCA).
Sometimes,   PCB-contaminated  materials
such as soils must be removed to an ap-
proved  hazardous waste  landfill.  In other
cases, Carmen  can work with the owners
to manage PCB-contaminated  surfaces in
place where  there's little chance for the pub-
lic or workers to be exposed to  it, or find
other solutions  acceptable and  consistent
with the TSCA regulations.
"Each  PCS  site  is  different,  and  we have
some discretion about cleanup options, de-
pending on the size of the site and the risk
to human health and the environment," Car-
men says. "Once cleaned up,  these sites
can be redeveloped."

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                                                                                                                  Contact Information
U.S. Environmental Protection Agency
Pacific Southwest/Region 9 Contacts
Offices
EPA Pacific Southwest Region
75 Hawthorne Street
San Francisco, CA94105
EPA Pacific Islands Contact Office
300 Ala Moana Blvd., Room 5124
Honolulu, HI 96850
  3.541.2710
EPA San Diego Border Office
610 West Ash St., Suite 905
San Diego, CA92101
619.235.4765
EPA Southern California Field Office
600 Wilshire Blvd., Suite 1460
Los Angeles, CA90017
213.244.1800
Phone Inquiries
415.947.8000
or 866.EPA.WEST (toll-free)
Email Inquiries
r9.info@epa.gov
EPA Web Site
www.epa.gov
For Pacific Southwest Issues
www.epa.gov/region9
To Obtain This Report
Order from EPA's Environmental
Information Center at
866.EPA.WEST (toll-free),
email r9.info@epa.gov
or view and print from the Internet at
www.epa.gov/region9/annualreport
                                                                                         EPA
                                                                       Printed on 100% recycled paper, 50% post-
                                                                       consumer content—process chlorine-free
                                                                                                     U.S. GOVERNMENT PRINTING OFFICE:
                                                                                                     2010-671-348

-------
EPA Pacific  Southwest/Region  9
Offices and  Divisions
Environmental Information Center
Web: www.epa.gov/region9
Email: r9.info@epa.gov
Phone: 866.EPA.WEST (toll-free)
       415.947.8000
Office of the Regional Administrator
415.947.8702
Jared Blumenfeld, Regional Administrator
Keith Takata, Deputy Regional Administrator
Bridget Coyle, Civil Rights Director
Steven John, Southern California Field Office
           Director

Office of Public Affairs
415.947.8700
Kathleen Johnson, Director
Public Information/Web Communications
Media Relations/Congressional Liaison
Enforcement and Compliance Coordination

Office of Regional Counsel
415.947.8705
Nancy Marvel, Regional Counsel
Legal Counsel
Civil and Criminal Enforcement
Defensive Litigation, Ethics
Air Division
415.947.8715
Deborah Jordan, Director
Air Quality Plans and Rules
Permits, Enforcement, Monitoring
Air Toxics, Radiation, Indoor Air
West Coast Collaborative, Grants

Superfund Division
415.947.8709
Jane Diamond, Director
Site Cleanup, Brownfields, Oil Pollution
Federal Facilities and Base Closures
Emergency Response & Planning
Community Involvement, Site Assessment

Waste Management Division
415.947.8708
Jeff Scott, Director
Pollution Prevention, Solid Waste
RCRA Permits/Corrective Action
RCRA Inspections & Enforcement
RCRA State Program Development
Underground Storage Tank Program
Water Division
415.947.8707
Alexis Strauss, Director
Clean Water Act
Safe Drinking Water Act
Marine Sanctuaries Act

Communities and Ecosystems Division
415.947.8704
Enrique Manzanilla, Director
Agriculture Program, Environmental Justice
Pesticides, Toxics, TRI
Environmental Review/NEPA
Tribal Program, Pacific Islands
U.S.-Mexico Border Program
Environmental Stewardship

Management and Technical Services Division
415.947.8706
Nancy Lindsay, Acting Director
Budget, Finance/Grants/Contracts
Strategic Planning,  Science Policy
Laboratory & QA/QC, Facilities
Information Resource Management
Health & Safety, Human Resources
                                                  Southern California Field Office (Los Angeles)
                                                  Pacific Islands Contact Office (Honolulu)
                                                  San Diego Border Office (San Diego)
                                                                               213.244.1800
                                                                               808.541.2710
                                                                               619.235.4765

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