SEPA
   www.epa.gov
MAKING  A                          IN  THE  COMMUNITY:
The Superfund  Job Training Initiative in Silver Valley,  Idaho
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INTRODUCTION
The  Coeur d'Alene Basin Superfund Job Training  Initiative
(SuperJTI) is an environmental remediation job readiness program
that provided  career development opportunities for 20 trainees
living near the Coeur d'Alene Basin Superfund site. Through a
partnership between the  U.S. Environmental Protection Agency
(EPA) and North Idaho College, North Wind Construction Services
and TerraGraphics Environmental Engineering, Coeur d'Alene
Basin SuperJTI provided local job-seekers  with new skills and
work experience linked to the cleanup of the Coeur d'Alene Basin
site. EPA's goal is to help the community create job opportunities
and partnerships that remain in place for the long term.

CANDIDATE  OUTREACH,  RECRUITMENT
AND SCREENING:  APRIL - MAY 2012
                                                                                       ~l
                                          Lower Bas|n'Portion..^    Upper Basin Portion
                                                 ofpL)3        ts^jAVB-    ofOU3
                                                       Coeur d'Alene Basin Superfund Site
Coeur d'Alene Basin SuperJTI staff and the project's community liaison did outreach, sent out flyers and hosted orientation sessions to
publicize the job training program and attract interested candidates. Area community-based organizations and two local newspapers, The
Spokesman Review and The Shoshone News Press, also advertised the program. During April and May 2012, over 100 people came to the
program's four orientation sessions. Following these sessions, 86 people completed a preliminary testing stage; 45 of those participants
were invited to attend program tryouts. Thirty-nine participants decided to continue with the program tryouts.

Program tryouts included leadership, team building  and role-playing activities, a basic physical fitness evaluation, and observation by a
team of evaluators from the project's partners. Seventeen trainees completed the training.
  SITE HISTORY

  The Coeur d'Alene Basin Superfund site (also known as the Bunker Hill Mining and Metallurgical Complex site) is located in Northern
  Idaho's Coeur d'Alene River Basin. EPA placed the site on the Superfund program's National Priorities
  List in 1983. The Coeur d'Alene Basin is one of the largest areas of historic mining in the world.
  Since the late 1880s, mining  activities in the Upper Coeur d'Alene Basin contributed an
  estimated 100 million tons of mine waste to  the river system. Many Basin communities
  were built on mine wastes. Until as late as 1968, tailings were deposited directly into the
  river. Over time, these wastes have spread throughout more than 160 miles of the Coeur
  d'Alene and Spokane rivers, lakes and floodplains.

  Contaminants from mining operations  in the Silver Valley spread harmful levels of
  heavy metals down the South Fork of the Coeur d'Alene River and into the floodplains.
  A plan  for cleaning up residential and  recreational areas in the Basin was developed
  in coordination with community  members, federal, state, tribal and local governments,
  and local organizations. Project goals include  reducing heavy metals, improving fisheries,
  reducing downstream migration of contaminated sediments, and providing safe feeding
  habitat for waterfowl.
       I U.S. Environmental Protection Agency
       I Superfund Redevelopment Initiative

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                                                                WY
 TRAINING:  MAY 2012
The Coeur d'Alene Basin SuperJTI training took place over
two weeks and included:

•   Pre-Employment Training: Trainees completed courses
    in  environmental justice,  interpersonal communication.
    cultural  competence  and effective work habits. EPA
    contractor Skeo Solutions provided the training.

•   Technical Training:  Trainees  completed the  40-hour
    Hazardous Waste Operations  and Emergency Response
    (HAZWOPER) training, flagging, sampling, and CPR and
    first aid training. North  Idaho College and Terragraphics
    provided the training.

Upon  completion  of the  program,  trainees possess  the
marketable skills  needed to begin a  successful career  in
environmental remediation and become valuable members of
the workforce in these communities.
 Coeur d'Alene Basin SuperJTI is  one  of the many SuperJTI
 projects nationwide that are making a difference for unemployed
 and underemployed citizens  living  in communities affected by
 Superfund sites.
   THE COEUR D'ALENE BASIN SUPERJTI TRAINEES:
   •   Live in areas affected by the Coeur d'Alene
       Basin Superfund site. Eighty-eight percent of
       the trainees (15 people)  live  in  communities
       affected by the Superfund site. Twelve percent of
       the trainees (2 people)  live in areas surrounding
       the site.
   •   Include younger and older  populations. Six
       trainees are age 25 or younger and 11 trainees are
       age 26 or older.
JOB PLACEMENT AND FOLLOW-UP:
JUNE 2012 — NOVEMBER 2012

After graduation, trainees interviewed with area subcontractors,
including North Wind  Construction,  Ferguson Contracting
and  McGillivray Environmental, for  available  site  cleanup
positions. Twelve graduates were hired following completion of
the training for a variety of positions, including environmental
technicians, dump truck drivers and construction workers.  Six
of these graduates are working on remediation projects in the
Silver Valley.  Remaining graduates are interviewing with  site
subcontractors, pending the award of new remediation contracts.
 Graduation for the program's 17 trainees was held at Memorial
 Hall in Kellogg, Idaho, in June 2012. SuperJTI's National Program
 Manager Viola Cooper  attended the ceremony and handed out
 certificates to the graduates. The program also included remarks
 from project partners as well as the graduates.
Coeur d'Alene Basin SuperJTI staff and the project's community
liaison  followed up with the graduates and their supervisors
for six months after the graduates  started work. During this
time, graduates could change positions but were encouraged to
remain employed, either with one of the site subcontractors or
another employer.

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 SUPERJTI  COMMUNITY PROFILES:  Making a  Difference
                                          . family friend knew Jacob was looking for a career change and emailed
                                          him a flyer about the SuperJTI program. "There were so many people at
                                           tryouts, I thought there was no chance I'd make it," Jacob recalled. "I
                                            was so excited to learn that I had been accepted."

                                            Since graduating from the program, Jacob feels the training opened
                                            doors for a new line of work and increased his career opportunities. He
                                            was able to put his skills to work right away working locally for North
                                           Wind Construction in Smelterville, Idaho, and as far away as Kodiak,
                                          Alaska. Jacob plans to continue his education and pursue a career in
                                         water resource management.
An advertisement in the paper caught David Villapando's attention. "I was looking
for work and I saw the words EPA, Superfund and free training," he said. "I  ,
had been laid off, so I took the initiative to pick up the phone and call right  ^B
away." After showing up for the competitive tryouts, David's enthusiasm
grew during the selection process. "There were a lot of people who showed
up who really wanted to work. We were presented with challenges and this
excited me more," he  said. "I wanted to be one of those selected."

After completing the training, David felt a new drive and focus in his life.
"I received a well-rounded set of skills in water sampling, flagging, first
aid and working with hazardous waste," he said. David was excited to put
his new skills to work cleaning up yards for Ferguson Contracting, a local
employer. "The work was a great experience, physically challenging, and I
really enjoyed it," he said. David is now looking forward to learning additional
skills. He hopes to obtain a Commercial Drivers License in the near future.


 /
Lonnie heard about the SuperJTI program through his local unemployment
  office. "I had been laid off from my job as a mine operator. I had no
k  previous experience in environmental remediation, but I was looking to
•  learn new skills," he recalled.
                                         I  Lonnie found the training interesting and said the most valuable thing
                                          |  he learned was how to work better as a team member. Since graduating,
                                         I  Lonnie has worked for a local contractor, McGillivray Environmental,
                                            cleaning up yards and performing demolitions. Looking back, he said,
                                           "I would  recommend this program  for anyone  who wants to move
                                          forward with a new career."

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 What is the SuperJTI  Program?

 The Superfund Job Training Initiative, or SuperJTI, supports job readiness programs in
 communities affected  by nearby Superfund sites and  encourages the  employment of
 trainees at  local  site cleanups.  The SuperJTI program combines extensive classroom
 instruction  with  hands-on  exercises  for  each participant.  Upon completion of  the
 program, each participant possesses the marketable skills required to become a valuable
 member of the community's workforce. EPA offers SuperJTI training at no cost to trainins
 participants.

 For more information, please visit:  www.epa.gov/superfund/community/sfjti
 Or contact SuperJTI's National Program Managers:
 Melissa Friedland
 EPA Regions 1-5
 (703) 603-8864
 friedland.melissa@epa.gov
Viola Cooper
EPA Regions 6-10
(415) 972-3243
cooper.viola@epa.gov
     United States
     Environmental Protection
     Agency
United States Environmental Protection Agency
Office of Superfund Remediation and Technology Innovation (5204P)
1200 Pennsylvania Avenue, N.W.
Washington, DC 20460
                                                               Printed on 100% recycled/ret

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