vvEPA
United States
Environmental Protectior
Agency
Great Lakes
RESTORATION

The Great Lakes Restoration
Initiative, or GLRI. is the largest
investment in the Great Lakes in
two decades. Sixteen federal
departments or agencies are working
together on five priorities:
•	Cleaning up toxics and Areas of
Concern (AOC).
•	Combating invasive species.
•	Protecting the lakes from
polluted runoff.
•	Restoring wetlands and other
habitats.
•	Raising public awareness,
tracking progress and working
with partners.
The GLRI's Great Lakes Legacy
Act provides up to 65 percent of the
cost of sediment cleanup with a non-
federal entity contributing the
balance. Legacy Act partnerships
have cleaned up 21 sites in six Great
Lake states and remediated 4.1
million cubic yards of contaminated
sediment.
Completed cleanups have
transformed former toxic hot spots
into attractive locations and valuable
waterfront assets.
EPA Project Manager
Meaghan Kern
312-353-5784
ke rn. meaghan'Sjepa.gov
MPCA Sediment Coordinator
Heidi Bauman
218-302-6623
heidi .bauman@state.mn.us
Web: www. epa. gov/grcat-lakcs-
legacv-act
EPA Begins Cleanup
Activities in Harbor Slips
Port of Duluth - Superior
Duluth, Minnesota
September 2018
U.S. Environmental Protection Agency's Great Lakes National Program
Office is working with its non-federal sponsor, the Minnesota Pollution
Control Agency, to clean up pollution in the St. Louis River Area of
Concern (see figure, back). Three slips in the Port of Duluth-Superior will
be cleaned up this fall, including Minnesota Slip near the downtown Duluth
waterfront and Slips 3 and C. These projects are being performed under the
Great Lakes Restoration Initiative's sediment remediation component, the
Great Lakes Legacy Act (see box, left). The work is an important step in
removing the St. Louis River AOC from a list of the most polluted places
around the Great Lakes.
Minnesota Slip
The Minnesota Slip project will result in the remediation of about 37,000
cubic yards of polluted sediment (mud) in the slip. The mud is
contaminated with heavy metals and polyaromatic hydrocarbons, or PAHs.
Project activities include moving 2,500 cubic yards of the mud within the
slip to level the bottom and allow for its current use to continue. All
sediment will be left in place and covered, or "capped," with approximately
2 feet of dredged material from clean areas of the harbor along with
armoring stone.
Continued on back ...
Photo of Minnesota Slip in Port of Duluth-Superior with a cross-section
diagram displaying the current sediment issues.
Average Water Level
Suspended
Maximum Sediment
Draft
Depth
Silty Sediment ^	Sandy Sediment
Clayey Sediment
Storm Sewer Outfall
New Sediment
Deposition
^Recharge Maximum Dredge Depth

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... continued from front
The cap will isolate contaminants and protect against
damage from boat traffic. The sediment cleanup is
expected to take place in October and November 2018
and will cost about $3 million.
The dock wall along Harbor Drive in Minnesota Slip is
being repaired by the city of Duluth to ensure public
safety, prevent erosion into the slip and facilitate
removal of the SS William A. Irvin, a retired lake
freighter now serving as a museum. In September, the
Irvm will be moved temporarily outside of the slip. The
ship will return to the slip in spring 2019. The
pedestrian bridge may be inaccessible during
construction.
Slip 3 and Slip C
Two additional slips will be cleaned up near the
Minnesota Slip project area - Slip 3 and Slip C in the
Duluth Harbor. Slip 3 is located next to the Pier B
Resort where the retired Coast Guard Cutter Sundew is
docked. Slip C is located near the former Georgia-
Pacific plant and Compass Minerals. These are man-
made slips, which have been altered and used by
multiple industries since their construction more than a
century ago.
About 116,000 cubic yards of sediment contaminated
with heavy metals, dioxins, PCBs and PAHs will be
left in place and capped with about 2 feet of dredged
material from clean areas of the harbor along with
armoring stone. This Great Lakes Restoration Initiative
project will take place September through November
2018 and will cost about $3.5 million.
The projects are being conducted with the help of the
U.S. Army Corps of Engineers. Coast Guard Safety
Zones will restrict public access to in-water
construction areas at all three slips. Schedules allow for
24/7 activites so the cleanups may be completed
quickly.

Slip 3 in Duluth Harbor.
Slip G
Figure
displaying all
the St. Louis
River Area of
Concern
sediment
remediation
sites in
Minnesota.
St. Louis River AOC
Remediation Sites
Remediation Category
| Remedial Site
Navigation Channel
Minnesota Slips. h
Slip 3\
Htfrfnarttown	Slip C
Northland &AGP Slip
Azcon Corp & DSPA Slip
Pon£)s,.Ej5ehind Erie Pier--^^
©
is
Scanlon Reservoir
Thomson Reservoir
Munger Landing
Mud Lake West-
V
0 °-s 1

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