EPA Superfund
                                               Region 4
                       Annual  Report
FY  2015
Thirty-Five Years of Distinction
Protecting Public Health, Advancing Environmental Protection
   I U.S. Environmental Protection Agency
   | Region 4 Superfund

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                               *«««
1     Welcome
2     Region 4 Superfund in Action
3     Fiscal Year 2015: By the Numbers
4     35 Years of the Superfund Program: Healthier Families. Cleaner Communities. Making a Visible Difference
6     Region 4 Superfund Timeline: 35 Years of Excellence
TAKING ACTION, SAFEGUARDING HEALTHY COMMUNITIES
8     2015 Project Head lines
9     Children's Health and Environmental Education
10    Community Engagement and Cleanup
12    Superfund Redevelopment
13    Environmental Justice
A NEW ERA OF PARTNERSHIPS = COLLABORATION + EXPERIENCE + INNOVATION
14    Partnerships
16    Contracts and Training
18    Public Access to Environmental Information
ADVANCING ENVIRONMENTAL  PROTECTION
19    2015 Project Highlights
23    Superfund Enforcement
SCIENCE AND SUSTAINABILITY: PIONEERING FOR THE FUTURE
24    Green Remediation
26    Science, Research,Technological Innovation
28    Ecological Revitalization
29    FY 2015 Awards
33    FY 2016 Priorities

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                                                                      WELCOME
This year, the Region 4 Superfund program marked a major milestone,
celebrating the 35th anniversary of the  Comprehensive Environmental
Response, Compensation, and Liability Act, better known as Superfund. We
also transitioned to a new organizational structure, and are already seeing
increases in efficiency and effectiveness. We are proud to present this years
annual report; it showcases the program's achievements in 2015 and provides an opportunity to reflect on some remarkable
accomplishments over the past 35 years.

Region 4 continues to make a visible difference in communities - implementing innovative cleanups, supporting reuse of
once-contaminated sites, promoting green remediation, restoring pollinator habitat, and fostering sustainability efforts.
We respond rapidly to environmental emergencies, oil spills and natural disasters. Every day, we are on the ground across
the Southeast, protecting public health  and the environment.

Making sure communities have the resources they need to participate as informed partners in environmental discussions,
problem solving and decision making is at the heart of our work. We rely on a broad coalition of local, state, tribal and
federal partners to achieve our mission, even working internationally to share lessons learned and build capacities.
Together, we strive to deliver the best environmental enterprise in the world.

In Fiscal Year (FY) 2015, the Region 4 Superfund program:
    •   Maximized environmental and public health benefits at some of the nation's most complex sites.
    •   Protected communities from time-critical threats from releases of hazardous substances, pollutants and oil.
    •   Protected children's health.
    •   Worked for environmental justice and connected vulnerable communities with technical assistance.
    •   Took action against violators  of federal environmental laws, making sure governments, businesses and other
        parties meet their obligations.
    •   Advanced renewable energy opportunities, working toward a more sustainable future and increasing communities'
        resiliency to a changing climate.

These achievements are a direct result of the hard work and dedication of our staff. In the year ahead, we will continue to
meet program goals and work closely with our partners, empowering them to step up and get involved. We will continue
to promote the OneEPA standard in all that we do. Thank you for your time, interest and shared commitment to protect
and restore the environment. We look forward to another great year of partnership and public participation as we work
together to advance our cleanup mission at EPA.
Franklin E. Hill
Director
Superfund Division

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                                                                 (Sources: EPA Superfund site data,
                                                                 DeLorme, Esri, First American,
                                                                 Tele Atlas, United Nations World
                                                                 Conservation Monitoring Center,
                                                                 U.S. Geological Survey)
                  •   *)  •             •» •
                        TENNESSEE'
*  9     NORTH CAROLINA
   •— *qF* *     • -*
                                                       S.OUTH
                                                     CAROLINA
                                                                Legend
                                                                  •    Superfund Sites
                                                                       Tribal Lands
The  Comprehensive  Environmental  Response,
Compensation and  Liability Act (CERCLA), better
known as Superfund, mandates that EPA respond to
uncontrolled releases of hazardous substances that
pose an immediate or future threat to human health
and the environment. Superfund provides guidelines for
locating, investigating and cleaning up some of the most
hazardous and highly polluted areas in the country.
REGION 4 SUPERFUND  INACTION
EPA Region 4's Superfund program makes a visible difference in communities across the Southeast on
a daily basis. Recognized regionally and nationally for sustained excellence and innovation in protecting
human health and the environment, the program responds rapidly and comprehensively to address
environmental emergencies and clean up some of the nation's worst hazardous waste sites.

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       FISCAL YEAR 2015:  BYTHE  NUMBERS
   Region 4 is continuously seeking to improve the performance, protectiveness and cost efficiency of
   Superf und program activities in the southeastern United States, makingsure communities have access
   to transparent, meaningful information and holding those responsible for cleanup accountable.
         Government Performance and Results Act (GPRA) Performance Measure Accomplishments
                          Primary Measure
Percent of Superfund sites with settlement or enforcement action prior to remedial action start
Statute-of-limitation cases > $500,000 addressed
Superfund-lead and Responsible Party-lead removal completions with or without an
enforcement action
Remedial site assessment completions
Remedial action project completions
Superfund sites with human health protection achieved
Superfund sites with groundwater migration under control
Superfund sites ready for anticipated use
Construction completions
Oil storage facilities subject to Facility Response Plan (FRP) requirements in compliance
Facilities subject to Spill Prevention, Control and Countermeasure (SPCC) regulations in
compliance
                                      Accomplishment
                                         100 percent
                                         100 percent
                                            54
                                         75 percent
                                         68 percent
   Superfund Program Measures Accomplished
               Target
Achieved
Remedial Investigation/Feasibility Study (RI/FS)
Starts
Decision Documents
Remedial Design / Remedial Action (R
Negotiation Starts
Remedial Design Starts
Remedial Design Completion
Remedial Action Starts
Remedial Action Comph
Five-Yea r Reviews
Deletions
Emergency Response Exercises
Sites Proposed to  the National Priorities List (
Final NPL Sites
FRP and SPCC Inspections
                        Region 4 Superfund
                        Site Universe, 2015
                              247 NPL sites
                23 Sites with Superfund Alternative Agreements
                          60 Removal Action sites

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                                                  --;, -
Community volunteers at the annual /-
Creek cleanup event in Jacksonville, Florida.
                             ,'c  '*«•
  35 YEARS OF THE  SUPERFUND PROGRAM:
  Healthier Families. Cleaner Communities. Making a Visible Difference
  On December 11, 1980, Congress passed the Comprehensive Environmental Response, Compensation,
  and Liability Act (CERCLA), also known as "Superfund." This important legislation filled a major gap
  in environmental protection. Events at Love Canal in New York and other sites around the country
  demonstrated that wastes buried long ago could prove to be a serious threat to public health and the
  environment. Overtime, the responsibilities of the Superfund program grew to include federal facilities
  and oil spills. Program reforms designed to make Superfund "faster, fairer and more efficient" included
  provisions that encouraged redevelopment and expanded public involvement.

  Since then, EPA has been working hard to fulfill the program's mission to protect human health and
  advance environmental protection. In the Southeast, the results are striking. Over 1,780 removal actions
  have addressed immediate threats to human health and the environment, along with almost 350 long-
  term remedial actions. Fifty-eight sites have been taken off the N PL following cleanup. The total estimated
  value of private-party settlements in Region 4 since 1980 is more than $3 billion.


  The Jacksonville Integrated Planning Project (JIPP)
  This community-based effort in Jacksonville, Florida, is a national model for EPA's commitments to environmental justice,
  public health and sustainable development. For several years, the Agency worked with local, state and federal stakeholders
  to improve public health and environmental outcomes. The area faces significant economic and environmental challenges,
  including five Superfund sites. After the community first identified its top priorities - access to affordable health care,
  affordable healthy food and safe recreation opportunities - the focus moved to local capacity building, expanding the
  project's network of community partners, and transitioning to self-sustaining, community-led efforts. Today, these
  follow-on efforts are well underway - planning for a community health center, grant-funded opportunities for area
  youth to work in local parks, plans to link neighborhood greenways, development of a community market, healthy food
  initiatives and construction of affordable housing.

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        was huge  because it  connected  people and helped create  new  partnerships  ... and
relationships have changed in a positive way. The Eastside and Springfield neighborhoods established
relationships through the JIPP and planted seeds of trust that continue to grow.**
                                                                                  - JIPP participant
                                                    After
I
Davis Timber Company
At this former wood treatment site in Mississippi, cleanup work finished under budget and ahead of schedule. Cleanup
included recycling of 325,000 pounds of steel and land restoration using native plants and soil amendments. Today, the area
hosts a community center and an animal welfare facility.
The TVA Kingston Fly Ash Spill
Following a rapid emergency response, this long-term cleanup effort addressed the largest ash spill in the country's history.
The project included one of the largest baseline ecological risk assessments ever conducted in the United States.
The Gulf Coast
When the Deepwater Horizon oil rig exploded in the Gulf of Mexico in 2010, Region 4 provided our full support to the
federal response to the oil spill, monitoring air, water and sediment, and overseeing beach cleanup, shoreline protection
and waste management efforts. Region 4 assessed more than 1,000 miles of the Gulf Coast's shoreline. At the height of the
response, over 45,000 people and 6,000 vessels were involved in containment and cleanup efforts across the Gulf Coast.

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                 R4SUPERFUND  TIMELINE
   7956 Superfund Amendments
        and Reauthorization Act
        strengthens program
        authorities
   7959 Rapid Region 4 response to
        Hurricane Hugo
   Early  Program reforms make Superfund
   7990s "faster, fairer and more efficient"
   7992  First Construction Completion in the nation in
         Mississippi
   7992  Rapid Region 4 response to Hurricane Andrew
   7992  Under Federal Facility
         Compliance Act, federal
         agencies are subject to
         hazardous waste laws
   7993  Cleanup of explosives
         and chemicals at
         Divex Chemical
         site in South Carolina
   7994  EPAs Environmental
         Justice Task Force
         formed
           7953
7950 President Carter signs
     Superfund law
7957 First Consent Decree in Region 4
7952 First two sites in Region 4
     deleted from NPL
7953 A.L. Taylor site in Kentucky is
     first Region 4 site listed on NPL
     First Administrative Order on
                Consent in Region
   2000s Superfund responsibilities address 2001 attacks
         on World Trade Center and Pentagon, 2001
         anthrax attacks, Columbia space shuttle
         disaster, and hurricanes Katrina and Rita
   2000  Emergency actions at the Anniston Lead site in
         Alabama protect public health
   2000  Cleanup of highly toxic materials at former Flura
         Chemical facility in Tennessee
   2004  900th Construction Completion at Solitron
^H    Microwave site in Florida
     xvEPA
7996 Illegal insecticide spraying in Mississippi leads
     to relocation effort, $50 million cleanup
7996 Cumulative Superfund cost recovery settlements
     exceed $2 billion
7997 EPAs Office of Children's Health Protection
     created
7999 Superfund Redevelopment Initiative helps
     communities turn sites into productive assets

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             35  YEARS   OF  EXCELLENCE
2005
2006
2005
2005
2009
2075
2075
Emergency response to train derailment in
Graniteville, South Carolina
1,000th Construction Completion at the Macalloy
Corporation site in South Carolina
Rapid response to TVA Kingston Fossil Plant coal fly
ash slurry spill
First Region 4 Superfund Excellence in Site Reuse
Awards given to two Florida communities
American Revitalization and Recovery Act provides
$27 million for cleanups in Southeast
                                                   2070
                                                   2072
                                                   Region 4 supports federal response to
                                                   the Deepwater Horizon oil spill
                                                   Closure of Savannah River Site's P
                                                   Reactor, first for nuclear weapons
                                                   production reactor under CERCLA in
                                                   the country
                                                   Off-site soil cleanup around Cabot/
                                                   Koppers site in Florida
Region 4 hosts record-setting EPA
Community Involvement Training
Conference
Redevelopment at Fort Gillem establishes
largest logistics  hub in Atlanta
                                                                             &EPA

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Taking Action, Safeguarding  Healthy
Communities
2015 PROJECT HEADLINES
Final Cleanup of Maxey Flats Former Nuclear
Disposal Area Underway in Kentucky
Region 4 has worked closely with state agencies to ensure the
proper closure and long-term care of the Maxey Flats Nuclear
Disposal site, protecting public health and the environment. The
facility accepted radioactive waste from 1963 to 1977. In June
2015, Director Franklin E. Hill joined Kentucky Governor Steve
Beshear and state and local officials to shovel the first load of dirt
onto the synthetic liner that will serve as part of the nuclear waste
site's permanent protective cap.
"This is a good day for Kentucky as one of our biggest environmental challenges is being properly dealt with, keeping
our citizens and our environment safe from the radioactive disposal done here in the past," Governor Beshear said. "This
action is being taken to ensure the safety of our citizens and our environment near the disposal site." At $35.2 million,
the project is the largest state-funded environmental cleanup effort ever completed in the Commonwealth. The final
capping plan includes installation of a permanent vegetative cap, permanent surface water control features and surface
monuments to identify the locations of buried waste. Cap construction is projected to wrap up in November 2016.
                                       Rapid Response to Train Derailment and Fire
                                       in Tennessee Keeps Community Safe
                                       On July 2, 2015, a CSX train carrying the extremely flammable
                                       and toxic chemical acrylonitrile derailed and caught fire near the
                                       Tennessee community of Maryville. Local authorities evacuated
                                       about 5,000 residents. Region 4 emergency responders mobilized
                                       rapidly, conducting air and water quality monitoring and
                                       providing technical, operational and community support to state
                                       and local response agencies.
After the fire was extinguished on July 3, residents were allowed back into their homes. About 4,000 tons of contaminated
soil were excavated for off-site disposal. The breached tank car was decontaminated and rail service was restored. The
Tennessee Department of Environmental Quality continues to monitor the area.

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CHILDREN'S  HEALTH AND
ENVIRONMENTAL EDUCATION
Protecting children's health is central to EPA's mission, and the Agency has taken great strides to
improve the environment for children where they live, learn and play. Environmental education is also a
key part of ensuring children's health. Region 4's Children's Environmental Health (CEH) Outreach Team
travels across the Southeast, visiting schools, making presentations at community centers, and sharing
information to support healthy communities and advance environmental protection.
Alabama Partnership Leads to Summer Camps Supporting Healthy Communities
As part of a OneEPA partnership, Region 4 Superfund participated in a series of summer camps in North Birmingham,
Alabama. The goal of the camps was to help youth learn about healthy living, making a difference in their community
and nearby environmental activities. More than 120 children took part in games, demonstrations and giveaways. In small
groups, children rotated through five stations (climate change/energy, healthy homes/lead, asthma, water quality awareness
and healthy soil). A partnership between the City of Birmingham and Region 4 made the summer camps possible.
                                    Protecting Children's Environmental Health

                                    Children are often more vulnerable to pollutants than adults
                                    due to differences in behavior and biology, that can lead to
                                    greater exposure and/or unique windows of susceptibility during
                                    development

                                    At EPA, protecting children from environmental health risks is
                                    fundamental to our vision of making the world a better place
                                  J for future generations. Children represent 25 percent of our
                                    population but 100 percent of our future.

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  COMMUNITY ENGAGEMENT AND CLEANUP
 Community involvement is a core component of the Superf und process, and for good reason. Nationally, one
 in four people live within four miles of a Superf und N PL site. Early and meaningful community participation
 during Superfund cleanups not only gives the public the ability to inform site cleanups and how people are
 affected by Superfund process; the collaboration also produces better outcomes for everyone, including the
 environment.

 Region 4 works closely with  EPA's Community Engagement Initiative to emphasize meaningful, "early and
 often" community engagement and public outreach as core components of the program's activities. We
 recognize that the needs of each community are unique and tailor our approaches to best meet those
 needs. Region 4's community engagement goals include ensuring transparency and accessibility in the
 Superfund decision-making process, providing information and technical assistance that makes a difference
 for communities, and producing site outcomes that are responsive to stakeholder concerns and aligned with
 community needs.
 Collaboration at the Kerr-McGee Chemical Site Addressing Community Priorities
 The 14th Avenue Ditch Improvement Project demonstrates how a partnership among environmental regulators, local
 government and community stakeholders can deliver results that benefit public health, the environment and communities.
 Next to the Kerr-McGee Chemical site in Columbus, Mississippi, traffic and stormwater improvements along 14th Avenue
 were a longstanding community priority, the result of flooding, safety and contaminant migration issues from the Kerr-McGee
 site. Project implementation required significant and ongoing collaboration among federal, state and local stakeholders. The
 14th Avenue Ditch Improvement Project was successfully completed in July 2015.
10

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              2015 conference participants included 447 people on site, 257 people online and a surge in EPA staff attendance 0/277.

Region 4 Hosts Record-Setting 2015 EPA Community Involvement Training Conference
In August 2015, Region 4 hosted EPA's 14th Community Involvement Training Conference, focused on the theme of "Working
to Make a Visible Difference in Communities." This dynamic gathering brought together more than 500 people from EPA and
the Agency's partners and stakeholders working on environmental community involvement, partnerships, stewardship, and
outreach and education programs. The conference also included field trips demonstrating the power of effective community
involvement and cooperative conservation efforts in the Atlanta area, an eco-cafe, exhibits and networking opportunities.
The 2015 conference made history as the largest one to date.

                                              Festival   Is   Part   of   Regional  Outreach   to
                                              Underserved Communities in Southeast Georgia
                                              In September  2015, Region 4  staff joined  Georgia  Southern
                                              University for its second annual STEM Festival, a community event
                                              celebrating science, technology, engineering and math. Our Mobile
                                              Command Post (left) helped elementary, middle and high school
                                              students learn about Region 4's emergency response activities, while
                                              exploration stations provided hands-on activities for children young
                                              and old. More than 3,000 children and their families participated in
                                              the 2015 STEM Festival.
  Did You Know?

  EPA's first Community Involvement Training Conference
  was held in Boston in 1998. The biennial event brings
  EPA staff and stakeholders and partners together to
  learn  about best practices  to enhance community
  involvement and engagement.

  The three-day  conference  includes keynote sessions,
  exhibits and technology displays, go-minute information
  sessions, half- and full-day trainings, and  field trips
  showcasing community-based projects and programs.



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     SUPERFUND REDEVELOPMENT
    The reuse of Superfund sites  returns land to productive use and  restores blighted  properties,
    benefiting surrounding communities - providing job opportunities, sustaining local economies, and
    offering recreational and ecological amenities. EPA Region 4 is committed to helping communities
    restore Superfund sites as valued assets. Region 4 views the revitalization of communities affected by
    contaminated properties as a key part of our mission to protect human health and the environment.
    By the end of FY 2015, 96 Superfund sites in the Region were determined to be ready for anticipated
    use.
     Reclaim, Restore, Reinvent: Creating
     Jobs and Cleaner Energy at the
     Martin-Marietta, Sodyeco, Inc. Site
     In Charlotte, North Carolina, Re Venture Park - a 667-acre
     renewable energy industrial park - is bringing together
     innovative businesses that will create hundreds of new jobs.
     Forsite Development is converting industrial building space
     into a business park focused on energy efficiency, renewable
     energy and environmental technology. The project is home
     to biomass combined heat-and-power projects, an algae-
     to-fuel pilot plant, an all-electric truck company, an energy
     efficiency training firm,  a plastics recycler and a 35-acre
     aquaculture project, among others. In total, new investments
     on site exceed $14 million.
Climate Connections: Working
Toward a Sustainable Future

EPA  is  committed  to  advancing sustainable
environmental outcomes through efforts like the
Green  Power Partnership and  the RE-Powering
America's Land Initiative.

In Region  4, we work with partners in the  public
and private sectors to support renewable energy
development opportunities on currently and formerly
contaminated lands.
     EPA's Superfund and Resource Conservation and Recovery Act programs and state agencies worked closely with
     Forsite Development, Clariant Corporation, the owner, and community partners to clean up the area and support its
     return to productive use. Clariant Corporation and Forsite Development focused on making sure reuse plans were
     compatible with the cleanup. The companies committed to maintaining the remedy and putting land use controls in
     place for commercial and industrial uses. By reclaiming, restoring and reinventing this industrial area, Re Venture
     Park serves as a national model for innovative redevelopment. It is one of the leading renewable and clean energy
     projects  on a Superfund site in the United States. The project illustrates how the reuse of Superfund sites can protect
     human health, advance environmental protection and provide valuable community assets.
  Environmental stewardship is also an
  integral part of the project. The area's
  natural resources will be enhanced by a
  185-acre conservation easement, wildlife
  habitat projects, stream restoration and
  a trail system connecting the regional
  Carolina Thread Trail to the nearby U.S.
  National Whitewater Center.
                CAR9LINA
                  THREAD
                   TRAIL
12

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   ENVIRONMENTAL JUSTICE
   Helping healthy, sustainable and equitable communities is a priority of the federal government. Making
   a visible difference in communities for all Americans is one of EPA's top priorities. Every day, Region 4
   works to improve the health of American families and protect the environment.

   Environmental justice plays a key role in an integrated effort that addresses housing, environment,
   transportation and health issues. Everyone deserves the opportunity to live, work, play and learn in a
   clean, healthy environment. Low-income, minority and tribal communities are often overburdened  by
   pollution and face disproportionate human health impacts, greater obstacles to economic prosperity
   and increased vulnerability to climate change.

   Region 4's Superfund and Environmental Justice programs collaborate closely to make sure minority,
   low income and tribal communities facing disproportionate environmental risks  have opportunities
   for meaningful participation in environmental decision-making. We also coordinate closely with EPA
   headquarters and states to support initiatives that provide all people living near Superfund sites with
   technical assistance, training opportunities and other services.
                                        Landmark  Environmental  Justice  Efforts in
                                        Region 4

                                        Spartanburg, South Carolina:
                                        In 1997, the Forest  Park and Arkwright neighborhoods were
                                        surrounded by two Superfund sites, six brownfields and an active
                                        chemical plant. Community organization ReGenesis, led by Harold
                                        Mitchell - now a South Carolina state representative - set out to
                                        improve local quality of life and address the root of the problems.
                                        In 1997, ReGenesis received an environmental justice small grant of
                                        $20,000 from EPA. Over time, city, county, state and federal agencies
                                        became involved. Since then, Spartanburg has turned that grant into
                                        more than $270 million in local investments.
EPA Administrator Gina McCarthy visiting
Spartanburg in June 2015 to learn more about its
national leadership on environmental Justice issues.
                                        Today, community health centers, affordable housing and a state-of-
                                        the-art recreation center stand because of the collaborative efforts
                                        of the Superfund and Brownfields programs, the community and a
                                        host of local, state and federal partners. A solar facility is planned
for the site of an old chemical plant. New housing has replaced old, unsafe stock. Community members have been
trained in asbestos abatement - and they found work not just locally, but in Virginia, helping to renovate the Pentagon,
and in New Orleans, where they helped rebuilding efforts after Hurricane Katrina.

^^Spartanburg is a shining beacon of what's possible when folks impacted by community decisions
have a seat at the table. As the Superfund program celebrates 35 years of revitalizing communities,
I was thrilled to celebrate such an amazing success story because at the core of EPA's mission is
the belief that no matter who you are or where you come from, you have the right to clean air to
breathe, clean water to drink and healthy land to call home. ^

                                                          - EPA Administrator Gina McCarthy
                                                                                   &ER&

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A New  Era  of Partnerships =
Collaboration +  Experience +  Innovation
PARTNERSHIPS
Region 4 works collaboratively with a diverse network of partners - affected communities, states, tribal
and local governments, nonprofits, private sector organizations and other federal agencies - to ensure
the protection of public health and the environment.

We also rely on our government, nonprofit and private sector partners to help fulfill EPA's mission of
responding to emergencies and cleaning up hazardous  sites.  Through several types of partnering
agreements-includingcontracts, nonprofit grants, state cooperative agreements and federal interagency
agreements - Region 4 ensures that all required Superfund cleanup work is performed with broad-based
support using the most cost-effective approach possible.
Superfund Cooperative Agreements - A Performance Partnership
EPA's partnerships with state agencies are vitally important to the cleanup and reuse of Superfund sites. Accordingly,
Region 4 Superfund has established performance-based agreements with all eight states in the Southeast Region. These
agreements have helped focus the efforts of EPA and the states on making tangible progress toward site cleanup. In
FY 2015, Region 4 Superfund provided the states with over $4.2 million dollars in cooperative agreement funding for
ongoing remedial projects. The support has allowed the states to join in the site cleanup process from site characterization
through five-year reviews.

Interagency Agreement Strengthens Core Superfund Services
EPA's Superfund program has been working with the U.S. Army Corp of Engineers' South Atlantic Savannah (US ACE -
SAS) District to develop a partnership for environmental response that leverages the capabilities and strengths of both
agencies. This includes an acquisition framework to use contracts available to either Agency in support of the Superfund
program and its responsibilities under both CERCLA and the Robert T. Stafford Natural Disaster Act. An interagency
agreement with the USAGE provides the mechanism for access to these capabilities throughout the Region. Architectural

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                         Reg/on 4 staff traveled to Indonesia in 2014 to provide cleanup recommendations for contaminated sites.
and engineering services, remedial action services, and non-time-critical removal services, including design, construction
and oversight assistance, will be available beginning in mid to late 2016.

Building  International Capacities by Partnering across EPA Programs
EPA is a world-renowned environmental organization with over three decades of experience in addressing domestic public
health and environmental challenges. Since its inception, the Agency has recognized that domestic action alone is not
enough to fully address environmental concerns. It is in the interest of the United States and its international partners to
share environmental management practices and to achieve the mutual goal of protecting the global commons. International
cooperation is vital to achieving our mission.

EPAs Regional offices help make this possible. In September 2015, Region 4 hosted a delegation from the Indonesian Ministry
of Forestry and the Environment.  The study visit was part of implementing a joint Memorandum of Understanding between
EPA and the  Indonesian Ministry for Environmental Cooperation. Staff met to share information on EPAs hazardous waste
management, clean water and clean air act programs and cleanup approaches. The Indonesian delegation and Region 4
Superfund Division Director Franklin E. Hill also toured the 35th Avenue Superfund site in Alabama to learn about ongoing
cleanup  and soil treatment activities.

EPA-State Joint Review Is Latest in Series of Collaborative Efforts in Central Georgia
Cleanup of this former pesticide production facility near downtown Fort Valley has been complex, tackling contamination
in groundwater, soil, surface water, stormwater, sediment and the air. The  remedies included groundwater treatment and
monitoring,  soil excavation, treatment and disposal, building demolition, attic and drainage pipe decontamination, and
institutional controls.
Throughout  the  process,  Region 4  has  worked closely with  the
community  and  the Georgia Environmental  Protection  Division
(EPD). Local partnerships have  led to remarkable  reuses - Peach
County public library, a tourist information center, offices and open
space for community festivals (see right). Most recently, EPA partnered
with Georgia EPD on the sites third five-year review. The project found
that the site's remedies continue to be protective of public health and
the environment. Groundwater treatment is ongoing.
Welcome Center
    Fort Valley
 Main Street DBA
    Peach County
        of Commerce
 Development Authority
  of Peach County
 Georgia Peach Festiva


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  CONTRACTS AND TRAINING
  EPA's mission to protect public health and the environment brings together a diverse, skilled workforce
  committed to doing their best work for the American people. As today's environmental problems continue
  to increase in complexity, EPA's ability to  respond creatively, flexibly and effectively relies  on  a high-
  performance work environment. EPA's culture supports staff growth and development, and is collaborative
  and results driven.

  New National Contracting Paradigm - The Remedial Acquisition Framework (RAF)
  After 20 years of Remedial Action Contracts (RACs), EPA's contracting paradigm is changing. As the current suite of RAG
  contracts expires, they will be replaced with a new national contracting approach designed by EPA's Remedial Acquisition
  Framework (RAF) Group:
  •  Design Engineering Services (DES)  - for activities requiring professionally licensed and accredited architectural and
    engineering staff. DES activities are in support of EPA-lead, PRP, state, tribal and federal facility remediation requirements.
  •  Remedial Environmental Services (RES) - for remedial and non-time-critical removal action services. The primary
    focus of this contract will be EPA-lead remedial action or the site cleanup phase of the process.
  •  Environmental Services and Operations (ESO) -  for remedy operation service in support of response  actions. The
    primary focus will be for EPA-lead remedy operations. This includes technical assistance and support, PRP and federal
    facility project oversight, and remedial action management support for EPA-lead remedial actions.

  With national multiple-award contracts,  Regions will be able to place task orders to  fulfill their requirements selecting from
  a broad pool of highly qualified and capable service providers. The Region 4 Superfund program is a strong supporter of the
  new contracting paradigm. Demonstrating our commitment to the process, we  have provided a large cadre of skilled and
  dedicated staff to assist the Agency in executing the new suite of contracts in a timely manner.
16

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  Participants at the ERRS
  contract signing.
2015 Contract Awards Maintain Key Region 4 Response Capabilities
In 2015, Region 4 awarded two Superfund Technical Assessment and Response Team (START) contracts, three Emergency &
Rapid Response (ERRS) contracts and one Enforcement Support Services contract (ESS). The START and ERRS contracts provide
emergency response support services to Superfund on-scene coordinators and have a potential value of over $100 million and a
five-year performance period. The ESS supports the Superfund Enforcement and Information Branch and has a maximum contract
value of $4 million over five years. This unprecedented number of contract awards reflects the diligent and collaborative efforts of
both Superfund and acquisition management staff.

Trainings Enhance Field Readiness of Region 4 Superfund Staff
Region 4 Superfund's Science and Ecosystem Support Division hosted several trainings in 2015 to enhance the field readiness of
Superfund staff. A course in field sampling procedures familiarized participants with Region 4 standard operating procedures and
included hands-on exercises. EPAs new Quality Assurance Field Activities Procedure (QAFAP) focuses on quality management
for sampling and non-sampling field activities. Since most Region 4 Superfund staff are field personnel, the training provided both
professional development and met programmatic requirements. The QAFAP incorporates document control, records management,
field personnel training, sample and environmental data management, field documentation, field equipment, planning investigations,
reports, internal audits and corrective actions. Region 4 SESD also hosted a three-day Introduction to Environmental Geophysics
course in October 2015. Through the OSWER training program, an additional six courses were offered in Region 4 during 2015,
and at least 11 training courses are scheduled for Region 4 in 2016.

2016 Superfund Symposium to Strengthen  Partnerships, Focus on Innovation
Recognizing the importance of sustaining strong working relationships among all of our partners, Region 4 has committed to
hosting the 2016 Superfund Contractor Technical Symposium. The gathering will bring together the Region's contractor community
with EPA and other federal agencies to share innovative technologies and cleanup strategies. Focus areas will include sustainability,
green remediation, cleanup optimization, community engagement and other topics.


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     PUBLIC ACCESS TO
     ENVIRONMENTAL  INFORMATION
    Communities and EPA's local, state, tribal and federal partners rely on accurate Superfund program
    information. EPA staff members also rely on access to comprehensive information generated during the
    program's environmental restoration efforts. We work hard to make sure this information is up-to-date,
    transparent and easily accessible, serving as a vital and valued shared resource.

    Region 4 has invested substantial resources over the long term to effectively manage and provide
    program  information to EPA staff and share  this  information with states, communities and other
    interested parties. To accomplish this goal in recent years, we have focused on providing Superfund
    communities with comprehensive information resources and enhancing the program's website, posting
    information on a timely basis.
    OneEPA Effort Strengthens Community Access to Environmental Information Resources
    OneEPA has been designed to improve knowledge sharing across EPA. It ensures that communities, regulated entities
    and other stakeholders have access to the best environmental information resources possible. "OneEPA Web" is a
    critical element of this work, transforming and restructuring EPA's website to focus on key environmental topics, while
    helping Web users quickly find accurate and up to date information. Since EPA relies on its website as one method to
    effectively communicate with many audiences, this work will allow EPA to present consistent Agency messages and
    communicate information with one voice.

    Region 4 has continued to be at the forefront of this effort, leading an Agency- wide effort to update and refine relevant
    Superfund-related content for our target audiences, while providing easier access to information about Superfund and
    all the work being done to protect human health and the environment. In addition, during this transition, Region 4
    has continued to provide impacted communities with comprehensive information resources on work and progress
    across the Southeast, posting information online on a timely basis and highlighting regional work at Superfund sites.

    EJSCREEN: A Tool for Putting Environmental Justice into Action
    To better meet the Agency's responsibilities related to the protection
    of public  health and the environment, EPA has developed a new
    environmental justice  (EJ)  mapping and screening  tool called
    EJSCREEN. It is based on nationally consistent data and an approach
    that combines environmental and demographic indicators in maps
    and reports.

    Region 4 Superfund will ensure that program staff are well trained and
    use EJSCREEN to identify communities with environmental justice
    concerns and assign appropriate resources to address them. These resources may include enhanced communication
    with communities, assistance with Community Advisory Groups and Technical Assistance Grants, and coordination
    with enforcement planning efforts to make sure environmental justice concerns are considered in cleanup and cost
    recovery negotiations.

    To learn more about EJSCREEN, please visit http://www.epa.gov/ejscreen.
18

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Advancing  Environmenta
Protection
 Final Cleanup Makes Vital Difference in Camilla, Georgia
 Cleanup and reuse of the Camilla Wood Preserving Company site, a former wood-treating facility, was
 a top community priority. "Cleaning it up and then fencing it off and forgetting about it didn't make
 any sense," recalled former Camilla Mayor Jay Powell. "This is a large area right next to downtown.
 We saw an opportunity to turn a big negative into a big plus."
 The community worked closely with Region 4 on its
 reuse plans for the western part of the site, making
 sure the remedy would be compatible with recreational
 uses. In 2007, the City of Camilla turned 25 acres into
 soccer fields and a recreation complex. Construction of
 the final remedy for the eastern part of the site finished
 in November 2015. Following cleanup, the community
 plans to use the area for additional recreation facilities.
                                 Florida Site Efforts Focus on  Long-Term
                                 Protectiveness and Reuse
                                 In Pensacola, Florida, Region 4 listened carefully to the
                                 community's  public health  concerns  and responded
                                 comprehensively. Cleanup of the Escambia Wood Treating
                                 Company site has included emergency response, relocation
                                 of families  from surrounding neighborhoods, and long-
                                 term remedies for site soils and groundwater. Starting in the
                                 mid-1990s,  EPA worked with local stakeholders to create
                                 a revitalization vision that includes a buffer area between
                                 redevelopment and a local church. In 2015, the community
                                is fulfilling a vision 20 years in the making; Escambia County
                                will take ownership of 70 acres of EPA-owned property and
                                create a commerce park.
Removal of the last part of "Mt. Dioxin,"
a huge pile of contaminated soil at the
Escambia Wood Treating Company site.
                                                                                   &ER&

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                    South Carolina Emergency Response
                    Tackles  Landfill  Fire  and Asbestos
                    Waste
                    After responding to a fire at Bennett Landfill, Region
                    4 and its partners - the South Carolina Department
                    of Health and Environmental Control (SCDHEC),
                    and the Emergency Management Agencies of Union
                    and Chester  Counties - evaluated  the area and
                    conducted air monitoring, sampling and surveying.
                    In collaboration with SCDHEC and the Agency for
                    Toxic Substances and Disease Registry, Region 4
                    also hosted several availability sessions to address
                    stakeholders'  concerns.  The  project  team then
                    moved  forward with  cleanup -  compacting and
                    encapsulating still-smoldering parts of the landfill
                    {right) and addressing asbestos waste. The cleanup
                    finished in the fall of 2015.
                                                              N  Mercury Spill Cleanup in Georgia
                                                                  In February 2015, EPA was notified that three
                                                              |  adolescents discovered containers of mercury
                                                                  in a basement, played with the mercury and
                                                                  carried  the material  outside.  The incident
                                                                  was  discovered the next day,  when a teacher
                                                                  noticed free mercury in the hair of one of the
                                                                  adolescents. The child's  blood mercury level
                                                                  exceeded health-based limits.  Several homes,
                                                                  a yard and a public roadway had substantial
                                                                  mercury contamination.

                    Region 4 staff responded to the scene, providing assessment and cleanup support to state and local
                    response and health organizations. Over the course of several  weeks, EPA contractors conducted
                    decontamination, excavation and demolition activities to make sure homes were safe for residents. In
                    all, more than 400 cubic yards of contaminated debris and soil, 275 gallons of contaminated liquid, and
                    75 pounds of free mercury were removed.

                    Removal Action in North Carolina Protects Public Health, Potential Reuse
                    A metal plating business at the Blue Ridge Plating site in Asheville closed down in 2014. A site assessment
                    after its closure discovered asbestos-containing construction materials, containers of  hazardous
                    substances and even possible explosives. Cleanup included building demolition,  management of
                    asbestos-containing materials, removal and disposal of thousands of gallons of hazardous liquids, and
                    disposal of more than 3,000 cubic yards of contaminated soil. In  addition to protecting public health
                    and the environment, the removal action has cleared the way for the site property's potential sale and
                    reuse. To help pay for the cleanup, the site's PRPs entered into a cost recovery agreement with EPA; they
                    agreed to pay $150,000 plus proceeds from the future sale of the property.
20

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                                             EPA Assistant Administrator Mathy Stanislaus
                                             Joined Region 4 management on a tour of sites -
                                             including the 35th Avenue site - where the Agency
                                             is making a visible difference in communities.
Alabama  Cleanup Tackling  Soil Contamination,  Restoring  Residential
Properties
The 35th Avenue  Superfund site in  Birmingham,
Alabama, includes parts of three North Birmingham
communities - Collegeville, Fairmont and Harriman
Park - affected by nearby industrial activities. After
sampling found about  400  properties with  soil
contamination  above acceptable  levels, a  multi-
phase  removal action to protect public health and the
environment began in 2014. Phase 3, which began in
January 2015, focused on reducing cancer risk from
soil in the three communities. Phase 4 began in July
2015;  it focuses on cleaning up remaining residential
properties. Since February 2014, EPA has addressed
145 properties, including three schools and two low-income apartment complexes. As of October
2015, more than 30,000 tons of contaminated soil have been removed and landfilled off site. To address
community concerns, answer questions and provide information, Region 4 staffs a Community Center
in downtown Birmingham five days a week.

                                            Oil Response Scenario in Tennessee
                                            Builds Capacities, Tests Preparedness
                                            In June 2015, Region 4 staff kicked off a challenging
                                            oil response  scenario - a government  initiated
                                            unannounced exercise (GIUE) - in Chattanooga.
                                            The exercise  focused  on a small  (2,100-gallon)
                                            discharge of oil from piping at an oil storage facility
                                            into the Tennessee River. This facility stores over 14
                                            million gallons of heavy oils and is regulated under
                                            EPAs  oil pollution prevention regulations.  The
facility's response team and OSRO (a contracted oil spill removal organization) responded. The OSRO
deployed a containment boom into the Tennessee River and provided recovery devices and provisions
for the storage of "recovered oil." Region 4 staff initiated the GIUE, observed the facility's response and
provided exercise feedback following its completion.

Spill Cleanup in Central Kentucky Restores Water Quality
A crude oil spill near Glasgow, Kentucky, in 2014 saturated parts of Beaver Creek. After trenching
operations indicated the source was a nearby abandoned well, Region 4 and the Kentucky Department
of Environmental Protection worked together to plug the well. Due to extensive limestone cave systems
in the  area, more than 80,000 gallons of cement were required to properly plug the well to land surface.
The Oil Program: Preventing, Preparing and Responding

The goal of the Region's oil spill prevention and removal program is to work cooperatively with the
oil industry and other governmental agencies to reduce the number, size and impact of oil spills into
waterways and other associated environmentally sensitive areas. Our program is one of the most
comprehensive and effective in the nation.
                                                                                           &ER&    21

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                     Cleanup Milestone Achieved at Savannah River Site
                     Cleanup of  this federal facility,  a former  nuclear
                     weapons  complex  in  Aiken,  South  Carolina,  is
                     protecting  public health while providing hundreds of
                     local jobs.  Part of the cleanup includes safely closing
                     massive underground storage tanks that once contained
                     radioactive high-level waste. In September 2015, final
                     pouring of grout into Tank 16 was completed, ahead
                     of schedule. It is the seventh underground radioactive
                     high-level waste storage  tank operationally closed at
                     the site, and the fifth tank closed since 2012.
                     "This continuing work will make the surrounding community and the environment safe for decades,"
                     noted EPA project manager Jon Richards. "EPA is committed to working with DOE, the state and the
                     community to finish the work of closing the high-level radioactive waste tanks and completing the
                     cleanup of several other operable units. The work requires a skilled workforce from the community
                     as well as the concerted  effort of federal, state and local agencies to protect human health  and the
                     environment."

                     Workers placed nearly 6,300 cubic yards of grout into the Tank 16 primary tank and systems from June
                     through September. Closure is the culmination of several extensive preparation and isolation activities,
                     where the placement of grout to fill up the entire tank and all internal tank components is the final step.

                     Tank 16 is also the first closure of a Type II tank. Type II tanks are among the oldest at the site, having been
                     constructed between 1955 and 1956. Tank 16 is 85 feet in diameter and has a storage capacity of about
                     1 million gallons. Tank 16 was closed ahead of the October 27, 2015, deadline in the Federal Facility
                     Agreement (FFA) between DOE, EPA, and South Carolina Department of Health and Environmental
                     Control.
                       Federal Facilities

                       From nuclear weapons plants and military bases to landfills and fuel distribution stations, the U.S.
                       government operates thousands of facilities across the country. Because of past waste disposal
                       practices and unintentional releases, many federal facilities are contaminated. Contaminated federal
                       facilities such as Department of Defense (DOD) military bases and Department of Energy (DOE)
                       nuclear reactor, processing and research centers are complex sites that require coordination with
                       EPA's partners.

                       Region 4 partners and collaborates with many groups, including governmental and non-governmental
                       organizations and  local stakeholders, to coordinate cleanup, technical assistance and restoration
                       efforts at 20 federal facilities on the N PL Innovative cleanup solutions are enabling the restoration of
                       these facilities so they can once again serve an important role.

                       Region 4's responsibilities include oversight of complex cleanups at 17 DOD bases and three major
                       DOE complexes on the NPL the Savannah River Site in South Carolina, the Oak Ridge Reservation in
                       Tennessee and the Paducah Gaseous Diffusion Plant in Kentucky. Region 4 also implements the Base
                       Realignment and Closure (BRAC) program in the Southeast, working closely with our federal partners
                       to facilitate the reuse and redevelopment of federal facilities at N PLsites.
22

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SUPERFUND  ENFORCEMENT
Every year, EPA takes hundreds of enforcement actions against violators of federal environmental
laws.  Superfund  enforcement and cost recovery protects human health and the environment  by
compelling the parties responsible for contamination to clean it up or pay for the cleanup. In turn,
resources returned to the Trust Fund help make cleanup activities possible in communities across
the Southeast. While compliance with the nation's environmental laws is the  ultimate objective,
enforcement is a vital part of encouraging governments, businesses and other parties to meet their
environmental obligations.

Region 4's Superfund program vigorously pursues enforcement and cost recovery activities. In line
with EPA enforcement goals, we returned $18.2 million in taxpayer funds to the Agency and reached
agreements with potentially responsible parties (PRPs) to conduct $267 million in cleanup work in
2015. Our enforcement program continues to identify and  implement best practices to expedite site
cleanups and optimize PRP-lead removals and remedial investigations.
2015 Agreements Enable Alabama Cleanup,
Reimburse EPA for Past Costs
The Capitol City Plume site encompasses nearly 50 city blocks in downtown
Montgomery, Alabama. At the request of the City of Montgomery, EPA delayed
finalizing the site on the NPL and has been in negotiations with the City, the
State of Alabama and several PRPs (the Downtown Environmental Alliance)
to defer future cleanup under state authority,  while ensuring EPA  cleanup
objectives are met, community concerns are addressed and EPAs past costs
are reimbursed. On September 30, 2015, several documents were executed to
complete this process - a Memorandum of Understanding between EPA and
the Alabama Department of Environmental Management (ADEM) outlines
agency roles and responsibilities, a Work Agreement between ADEM and
the Alliance enables response actions at the site, and a Past Cost Settlement
Agreement between EPA and the Alliance resolves EPAs outstanding response
costs and reflects a settlement of $2.6 million.

Florida Cleanup Moving Forward Following
EPA-PRP Negotiations
In March 2015, EPA finalized a Consent Decree with PRPs for the cleanup of
the Orlando Gasification Plant site, which is located near downtown Orlando.
Under  the agreement, the PRPs will clean up site soils and groundwater
and reimburse EPA for its costs. Coal tar waste product handling at the site
led to the contamination. Site PRPs are currently completing groundwater
investigations and developing remedial design documents for the  cleanup
of site soils. Both residents and businesses use the public water system for
drinking water. Through ongoing investigations  and groundwater monitoring,
EPA, the Florida Department of Environmental  Protection and the site's PRPs
continue to protect people and the environment from site contamination.
"Enforcement First" at EPA

Region  4  Superfund's approach
to  "enforcement  first"   means
that we conduct thorough, timely
investigations to identify PRPs, take
all appropriate remedial and removal
enforcement   actions,   address
recovery of EPA's costs and make
sure PRPs conduct investigations and
cleanup under enforceable orders.
                                                                                &ER&   23

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    Science and Sustainability:
    Pioneering for the Future
    GREEN  REMEDIATION
    Cleaning up a Superfund site uses energy,
    water and other natural or material resources.
    EPA recognizes that much can be done to
    conserve natural resources, minimize waste
    generation and reduce energy consumption,
    improving the environmental performance
    of Superfund  activities  while fulfilling the
    Agency's mission to protect human health
    and the environment.

    Following our Clean and Green Policy, Region
    4 Superfund continues to work collaboratively
    with our partners to implement proven green
    remediation solutions. The policy supports
    a more sustainable  future by promoting the
    use of renewable energy and cleaner burning
    fuels, water conservation, green reuse designs
    for sites following cleanup, greenhouse gas
    emission  reduction  technologies,  waste
    reduction and recycling programs, and other
    best management practices at sites wherever
    possible.
Green Remediation
is the practice of considering all environmental
effects   of  remedy  implementation  and
incorporating options - such as the use of
renewable energy resources - to maximize the
environmental benefits of cleanups.
  Materials
     Waste
Energy
              Core
  Land &    Elements
Ecosystems
24

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Region 4 Superfund's Green Team in Action in 2015
Region 4  Superfund's "Green Team" shares  and enhances knowledge on
sustainability-related issues for Superfund and site cleanup activities, including
green remediation approaches and best practices. During the past year, team
members developed a "green" survey of Region 4 staff to identify best practices,
project highlights and training needs. The team also developed educational
materials on pollinator protection and habitat enhancement, and participated
in the Region 4 Sustainability Forum. In addition, the team developed materials
for the Region's first Sustainability Day in November 2015.

Region 4 Evaluation Guides Innovative Federal
Facility Cleanup near Atlanta
Cleanup planning for Fort Gillem, a  former U.S. Army  base in Forest Park,
Georgia, has identified several opportunities to use green and sustainable best
management practices. Based on ASTM and Interstate Technology Regulatory
Council guidance, these opportunities include soil and groundwater sampling
technologies that require less materials and energy and generate less waste, as
well as a remediation method - enhanced bioremediation - that will reduce
greenhouse gas emissions and accelerate cleanup.
Sustainability

The  concept  that  everything we
need for our survival and well-being
depends, either directly or indirectly,
on   our   natural    environment.
Sustainability is important to making
sure that we have - and will continue
to have - the water, materials and
resources to protect human health
and our environment.

Other  EPA  efforts  in  the  area
of   Sustainability    practices   and
approaches  include  labeling  green
products  and  promoting   green
chemistry and engineering, managing
materials   rather   than   creating
waste,  using  green infrastructure
to manage stormwater runoff, and
supporting the sustainable design of
communities.
Cleanup and redevelopment are taking place simultaneously. At up to 8 mill/on square feet, the redevelopment of the former base at
Fort Gillem represents a chance to build Atlanta's largest logistics hub. Development activities for the Gillem Logistics Center in 2015
have included building removal (left and center) and site preparation (right). Grocery retailer Kroger has also Invested $175 million in a
new distribution center and warehouse on site, creating 120 jobs. Video link: https://vimeo.com/ij2922224


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     SCIENCE, RESEARCHJECHNOLOGICAL INNOVATION

     High-quality research, sound science and technological innovation are essential to the protection of
     human health and the environment and are hallmarks of the Region 4 Superf und program. The program
     also benefits from specialized expertise in areas including hydrogeology, human health, and radiological
     and ecological risk assessment. Region 4 scientists integrate knowledge from a wide variety of sources
     and disciplines to provide responsive solutions to public health and environmental challenges.
     Innovative Science in Action

     >  EPA's Scientific Integrity Policy
     The Agency's ability to protect human health and the environment depends on high-
     quality science. In January 2015, EPA published its updated Scientific Integrity Policy,
     which provides a framework intended to ensure scientific integrity throughout EPA and
     promote scientific and ethical standards. In Region 4, our Scientific Support  Section
     makes sure that the science used to support remedial decisions is sound and has
     integrity, that proper quality control  and quality assurance measures are in place, and
     that sampling approaches and data evaluation are free from unintentional bias.
     ^  RARE Project Underway - Urban Background Study
     Region 4 is leading an innovative urban contaminant background study. Funded by EPA's
     Regional Applied Research Effort (RARE) grant, surface soil sampling is planned in 11
     cities across the Southeast. Soil samples from any large, long-established city are expected
     to contain elevated levels of certain metals and polynuclear aromatic hydrocarbons
     (PAHs)  due to human activity. This is commonly referred to as "urban background."
     Because these increased contaminant concentrations are due to urban activities and
     not site releases, it is often challenging to address these contaminants at sites where
     investigations, cleanup and risk management are ongoing without background data.
     The project will serve as a pilot effort that will hopefully inform development of regional
     and national urban background databases.

     ^  New Technical  Guides and Training for Vapor Intrusion
     After several years of work, EPA has issued final technical guides for vapor intrusion
     for both petroleum  and non-petroleum volatile organic compounds. Region 4 staff
     served on the team  that developed the documents. The guides cover any site in the
     Superfund, RCRA, Brownfields or Underground Storage Tank programs where vapor
     intrusion may be of potential concern. Both guides are applicable to residential and
     non-residential settings. Region 4 staff has provided one-on-one and group trainings
     on these new guides and continues to provide technical support on site-related vapor
     intrusion issues.
Surface so/I sampling for the
RARE urban background study,
September 2015.
26

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^ The TAGA Bus in Region 4
The  Trace  Atmospheric  Gas Analyzer  (TAGA) bus is a self-contained mobile
laboratory capable of real-time  sampling and analysis in the  low parts-per-billion
level of outdoor air or emissions from various environmental sources and concerns.
In addition, the TAGA has specialized sampling equipment for  measuring indoor air
and at remote locations.

Region 4 worked with EPAs Environmental Response Team (ERT) to use the TAGA
at several sites to get real-time air data to help our risk assessors and risk managers
determine if vapor intrusion is  occurring and,  if so, locating the potential source
of the contamination. The TAGA bus can save a lot of time and expense in ruling
out potential vapor intrusion locations when many properties  need to be evaluated
or when immediate results are needed to determine potential human exposures to
contaminated air.
                                        .
                                  The TAGA mobile lab collecting an
                                  ambient air sample.
Installation of an injection well for groundwater
cleanup at the Flash Cleaners site.
^ Cleanup Innovations: Molecular Biological Tools
The use of molecular biological tools for remediation has steadily increased
in the past several years, with the application of recent research continuing
to bear fruitful results. Cleanup of the Flash Cleaners Superfund site,
a former dry-cleaning facility in Pompano Beach, Florida, is a striking
example. Enhanced  bioremediation  of tetrachloroethylene  (PCE)-
contaminated groundwater started with a basic census of the microbial
population in the groundwater. The remedial design specified the addition
of PCE-consuming bacteria and appropriate nutrients. A short four years
later, the groundwater is nearly clean.

Region 4 staff also participated in the Battelle Bioremediation Conference
and immediately used information from the forum to  revise sampling
and analysis plans at two other sites to assess the bacterial populations'
viability for groundwater remediation. These in-place treatment methods
often have lower capital costs and lower operation and maintenance costs
when compared to other remedial actions.
^ Updated Contaminant Screening and Training
EPA and other agencies continually evaluate the toxicity of contaminants and provide regular updates through the Regional
Screening Level and Regional Removal Management Level tables. Recently, the toxicity of trichloroethylene (TCE) - a
colorless liquid typically used in industrial processes and a frequent contaminant at Superfund sites - has been revised
to a  more conservative screening number for the inhalation pathway. This has had the largest impact in vapor intrusion
evaluations, especially when women of child-bearing age are present. Scientific Support Section staff explained the toxicity
information and provided training on the use of the more conservative screening value at Region 4 Superfund sites.
   What Is Vapor Intrusion?

   Vapor intrusion is a process by which chemicals volatile from impacted soil or groundwater beneath a building and diffuse
   toward regions of lower chemical concentration (e.g., the atmosphere, conduits, basements).
                                                                                                 &ER&   27

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      ECOLOGICAL PENALIZATION
     Ecological  revitalization  returns  land from a contaminated state to one  that  supports functioning
     and  sustainable habitat. Ecological  revitalization improves soil health, supports diverse vegetation,
     sequesters carbon, protects surface water and groundwater, and provides wildlife habitat and passive
     recreation opportunities. Through FY 2015,18 sites in Region 4 are in planned or actual ecological reuse.
     Pollinator Health: Showcasing Habitat Resources Across the Southeast
     Pollinators contribute substantially to our national economy, playing a significant role in the production of over 150
     food crops, and are vital to our national ecological systems. In support of the President's National Strategy to Promote
     the Health of Honey Bees and Other Pollinators, Region 4 Superfund has been at the forefront of working to identify
     opportunities and provide resources to help incorporate pollinator-friendly native plantings as part of site cleanup,
     long-term stewardship and reuse activities. This work will help EPA measure the Superfund program's progress towards
     meeting the national strategy objective of tracking the total acreage of pollinator-friendly habitat created and protected
     at Superfund remedial sites. Region 4 is also working to expand opportunities to include pollinator-friendly plantings in
     green remediation and green infrastructure activities.

     In Region 4, hundreds of acres at Superfund sites have already been planted with pollinator-friendly habitat as a result of
     cleanup and restoration activities. Region 4 has developed communication materials - posters and a series of fact sheets
     - to showcase existing pollinator-friendly habitat at Superfund sites across the Southeast and to support future efforts to
     create and restore additional habitat for pollinators at Superfund sites. For example, at the TVA Kingston Ash Recovery
     Project in Tennessee, a fact sheet highlighted how ecological revitalization activities have resulted in the reestablishment
     of over 60 acres of pollinator-friendly habitat at a formerly disturbed area.
                                                                                   „..
28

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                   FY 2015 AWARDS
In 2015, the remarkable efforts and dedication of EPA Region 4 staff were recognized with a range of
national and regional awards.
 Award Type
Title
Description
National Honor Awards

Notable Achievement
Awards

Regional Bronze A wards








Additional Recognition

James W. Craig Pollution
Prevention Leadership
National Exemplary
Leadership in Records
Management
Superfund Individual of the
Year
Superfund Advancing
Innovation and Sustainability
in Cleanup Practice
Hart Oil Response Team
FortGillem Vapor Intrusion
Team
Region 4 Superfund Technical
Assistance and Response
Team
Sycamore Point Mercury
Emergency Response Team
North Birmingham Air
Toxics and Children's Health
Community Initiative Team
LWD Superfund Site
Enforcement Team
Hercules, Inc. Superfund Site
Enforcement Team
Eden Coal Ash Spill
Enforcement Team
Milan Army Ammunition Plant
Team Award
Environmental Justice and Air
Permitting Training Workshop
Exemplary Administration of
2014 Region 4 Reorganization
Process
Exceptional enforcement work eliminating future sources of pollution.
Innovation in records management and ensuring public access to
essential Superfund information.
Commitment to service, technical excellence and teamwork in Superfund
environmental chemistry.
Work in Hattiesburg, Mississippi, to transform abandoned wood-treating
facility into animal shelter and community center.
Innovative, exceptional work in response to significant release of crude oil
in Kentucky.
Diligent engagement supporting development of vapor intrusion plan and
implementation.
Dedicated efforts ensuring continuity of services for Region's Emergency
Response and Removal program through a OneEPA approach.
Exemplary response to largest residential mercury spill in Region's history.
Exceptional skill in communicating complex scientific information to
community members in North Birmingham, Alabama, and expertise in
adapting outreach and education materials and delivery methods.
A model in PRP negotiation and settlement efficiency.
Extraordinary response to municipal sewer collapse and accelerated
cleanup in Hattiesburg, Mississippi.
Exemplary communication and collaboration at coal ash spill in Eden,
North Carolina.
Remedy work that establishes national cleanup standard for RDX, a
munitions-related contaminant, and restores groundwater to unrestricted
use.
Outstanding collaboration to deliver high-quality training to
environmental justice stakeholders in North Birmingham, Alabama, and
Pascagoula, Mississippi.
Exemplary administration of Region 4 reorganization process, embracing
EPA as a high-performing organization.
                                                           &ER&  29

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                                FY 2015  AWARDS
     Recognizing Community Leadership and Excellence in Superfund Redevelopment

     Every year, Region 4 seeks opportunities to recognize the remarkable community-wide efforts that
     return Superfund sites to use. Through our Excellence in Site Reuse Award, we honor the hard work
     and partnerships that make site reuse possible.
     From  Toxic Waste to Restored  Ecological
     Habitat and Community Recreation
     In recognition of the Tennessee Valley Authority (TVA)'s cleanup,
     ecological restoration and community revitalization efforts at the
     Kingston Ash Recovery Project site, EPA Region 4 awarded TVA
     our Excellence in Site Reuse award in June 2015,

     Since 1955, TVAhas operated apowerplantin Kingston, Tennessee.
     In December 2008, a containment  dike for coal fly ash failed,
     creating a wave  of water and ash that choked the Emory River,
     disrupted electrical power, ruptured a gas line, covered a railway,
     and necessitated the evacuation of a nearby neighborhood. EPA,
     TVA, and state and local agencies responded immediately. The
     cleanup's objectives were to  ensure that it was protective of public
     health and the environment, employed sound science, and took place quickly and safely. TVA removed contaminated
     sediments, stabilized perimeter walls, and restored habitat. To date, the health of the river is improving much faster than
     expected. There are no unacceptable risks to public health or the environment.

     TVAs extensive  ecological restoration efforts went far beyond cleanup requirements. Today, diverse natural habitats
     provide an interconnected  ecosystem that supports a wide range of wildlife and allows for recreation. Rehabilitated
Revegetatlon of over 50 acres of shoreline and wetland
habitat used special native seed mixes. Several varieties
of wetland shrubs were also planted and are now well
established.
     Left to right: Cleanup work, cap Installation, and a before and after view of the Middle Embayment area at the TVA Kingston site.
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                                FY 2015  AWARDS
wetlands and river ecosystems are home to fish, amphibians, birds and pollinators. These areas are also now part of the 32-
acre Lakeshore Park. The community park has walking trails, a boat ramp and dock, fishing piers, canoe launches, restroom
facilities, and a pedestrian bridge.

TVA's community support and outreach activities have also been remarkable. Over more than six years, TVA has invested
$1.178 billion to protect public health and environment. TVA funding has been used to build new public schools and a
wastewater treatment plant and to rehabilitate a historic theater. Future land  uses planned for the area include a sports
complex, an emergency response center and a volunteer fire station for the Swan Pond Community. At the Kingston Ash
Recovery Project site, TVA went above and beyond in its support of a comprehensive cleanup, ecological restoration and
broader community revitalization.

Continued Use and Mixed-Use Revitalization in  Northeastern Florida
Region 4 also awarded the City of Jacksonville and several community organizations our 2015 Excellence in Site Reuse award
in recognition of their cleanup  and redevelopment work at the Jacksonville Ash and Brown's Dump sites in Jacksonville,
Florida. Years of coordinated efforts have transformed four once-contaminated  areas into safe places for locals to live, shop,
work and play.

The Jacksonville Ash site covers three areas where the City of Jacksonville deposited incinerator ash. The Forest Street and
5th & Cleveland incinerators operated from the early 1900s until the 1960s, and Lonnie C. Miller, Sr. Park received ash and
residue. The Brown's Dump site is a fourth incinerator ash deposit location. EPA is addressing the four sites through the
Superfund Alternative Approach. Cleanup efforts have included soil removal,  surface covers and institutional controls to
prevent contact with contaminated soils.

The City of Jacksonville worked with EPA on an approach that would allow residential and commercial uses to continue
during cleanup. Community facilities - a public park, a middle and high school,  and two elementary schools - also remained
open throughout. The school properties were cleaned up during the summer months when students were on their break. The
cleanup has spurred new development as well. The sites now support an animal care center, several residential developments,
a church, community centers and the 11-court MaliVai Tennis Center. Future plans include additional park facilities.
Animal care facility, tennis courts at the Emmett Reed Park sports complex and community center, and Darnell-Cookman Middle/High
School.
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                                 FY 2015 AWARDS
  Collaborative Efforts in Mississippi Recognized
  with State Excellence Award
  In April 2015, Region 4 recognized the Mississippi Department
  of Environmental Quality (MDEQ) with our Excellence in State
  Engagement Supporting Reuse Award. MDEQ's collaborative efforts
  to support and encourage the appropriate reuse of Superfund sites
  across Mississippi have included a variety of approaches, including
  offering assistance in reuse planning processes and implementing
  environmental covenants. Mississippi's efforts to develop a process
  and template to streamline placement of restrictive covenants
  on Superfund  site properties in the  state ensures that remedial
  actions remain protective as sites are  returned to productive use.
  Collaboration among MDEQ, EPA, site owners and communities
  is generating success stories and paving the way for future reuse.
MDEQ's Trey Hess (right) accepting the award from
Region 4 Superfund Division Director Frank/in E. Hi/I and
Robin Richardson, EPA's Deputy Director of the Office of
Superfund Remediation and Technology Innovation.
  The Economic Impacts of Region 4
  Superf und's Work

  Superfund sites across Region 4 are home to commercial
  facilities, retail centers, government offices and residential
  areas.  Many  sites  continue to  host  industrial  and
  manufacturingoperations. Others are parks, recreation areas
  and wildlife refuges. On-site businesses and organizations
  on current and former Region 4 Superfund sites provide
  over 11,500 jobs and contribute an estimated  $627 million
  in annual  employment income for residents across the
  Southeast. Restored on-site properties in Region 4 generate
  about $6.1 million in annual property tax revenues for local
  governments.

  Making a Visible Difference in Communities

  EPA Region 4's Davis Timber site team worked with the
  community of Hattiesburg,  Mississippi,  to support the
  transformation of an  abandoned wood-treating facility
  into an animal shelter and community center. The Longleaf
  Recreational Trail (right) runs alongside the site, connecting
  the area with downtown Hattiesburg.
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                           FY 2016  PRIORITIES
In FY 2016, Region 4 Superfund will remain focused on EPA's priorities for the Agency's future:

Making a Visible Difference in Communities
     •  Making decisions based on sound science.
     •  Maintaining a strong enforcement first program.
     •  Maintaining response readiness.
     •  Focusing on federal facility oversight.
     •  Ensuring meaningful community engagement and environmental justice.
     •  Returning sites to productive use.

Embracing EPA as a High-Performing Organization
     •  Consolidating changes in organizational structure.
     •  Adjusting to new systems architecture.
     •  Implementing a new contracting paradigm.
     •  Adapting to resource constraints.
     •  Focusing on the most effective use of resources to protect human health and environment.

Looking Ahead
  In FY 2016, Region 4 Superfund will continue to focus on sustaining healthy and vibrant communities. From reducing
  children's exposure to lead and mercury contamination to the provision of clean drinking water, Superfund cleanups will
  be a leading force in the protection of public health. Through enforcement actions, we will continue to hold polluters
  accountable and deter violations that may undermine public and environmental health. Our emergency response program
  will respond rapidly to chemical, oil, biological and radiological releases as  well as national emergencies, including
  homeland security. Across the Southeast, our efforts will continue to make a visible difference in communities, as sites
  returned to use support job creation, enhanced property values and tax revenues, and sustainable economic growth.
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 "EPA must work each and every day - hand-in-hand with other federal agencies, states,
 tribes and local communities - to improve the health of American families and protect the
 environment one community at a time, all across the country."

                                                     — EPA Administrator Gina McCarthy
&EPA
     United States
     Environmental Protection
     Agency
     United States Environmental Protection Agency
     Region 4
     Sam Nunn Atlanta Federal Center
     61 Forsyth Street, SW
     Atlanta, GA 30303-8960

     EPA 904/R-15/002 I December 2015 I www.epa.gov/aboutepa/about-epa-region-4-southeast
                                                             J* ^» Printed on 100% recycled/recyclable paper
                                                             V ^ with minimum 25% post-consumer fiber.

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