Review of Cleanup in the Coeur d'Alene River Basin

£%	United States

Environmental Protection
™u - I	I m » Agency

Issue No. 27

December 2010

Inside This Issue

Comments are In: EPA is Listening	1

Adaptive Management: Planning and
Implementing Cleanup Work,

Involving the Community	3

Asarco Settlement Dollars at Work	4

EPA Completes Five Year Review of
Bunker Hill Superfund Site	5

Soil Repository Updates	5

2010 Residential Property Cleanups,
Year in Review	.................7

Wallace Yard and Spur Lines: Cleanup
Nearly Complete	7

Coming Soon: EPA to Hire Basin-
Based Outreach Person.....	.........8

Planning for Lower Basin Cleanup...... 8

Opportunities to

Get Involved		9

Documents..........			.........9

Communications Project Focus Team
(PFT) Update	10

^ Comments are In: EPA is Listening

The public comment period on EPA's Proposed Cleanup Plan
for the Upper Basin closed November 23. EPA received hun-
dreds of comments. It will take time for the agency to consider
and respond to all of them.

EPA takes each comment seriously. The agency is aware that
the cleanup is complex, and is a topic which is deeply important
to local citizens.

Basin Commission Contacts	.......11





EPA is considering
what changes
need to be made to
the cleanup plan
in response to
community concerns.



EPA Regional Admin-
istrator Dennis McL-
erran is engaged and
listening, too. He has
heard input at meetings
with the Basin Com-
mission and with local
elected officials. The agency has received comments both in
favor of and against the plan. EPA will consider changes to the
cleanup plan in response to public input.

How Comments are Handled

All comments are entered into an electronic database.
Comments are logged individually and in categories. This
process ensures that each comment is accounted for and
helps with an orderly and thorough response. The agency will
prepare a document called a "Response to Comments."

Continued on Page 2

EPA Community Involvement Contacts

Andrea Lindsay

lindsay.andrea@epa.gov
(800)424-4372
(206) 553-1896

Debra Sherbina

sherbina.debra@epa.gov
(800) 424-4372
(206) 553-0247

Web Sites:

See Page 12


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Basin Bulletin

December 2010

EPA Listens to Cleanup Plan Comments

It will include both a
response to each com-
ment and a summary
response to each issue.

The Response to
Comments will be is-
sued to the public at
the same time as the
ROD (Record of De-
cision) Amendment.

The ROD Amend-
ment is the final deci-
sion document. It will
describe the selected
cleanup alternative.

The documents will
be completed some
time in 2011. The
public will be able to
request a copy of these
documents, once completed, from EPA. The docu-
ments also will be available on EPA's web site.

— — 	 —	S|

It will take some time before

people making comments get
a response back from EPA.

Originally the comment period was set to close
on August 25. However, in response to public
request, EPA granted a 90 day extension, for a
total comment period of 135 days.

Community Participation

Since the Proposed Plan came out on July 12,
2010, community members have participated in
many EPA-sponsored events. In August, EPA
hosted a public meeting and open house (see
Basin Bulletin August 2010), attended by well
over 200 people.

Citizens were clear that the Proposed Plan was
long and complicated, and that many people had
questions.

CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1

In response, EPA hosted two more open houses,
created more education material to summarize
elements of the plan, and hosted a bus tour of the
Upper Basin. Other local events have been held,

as well.

Nearly 50 people went on the bus tour. The tour
visited areas slated for cleanup and sites where
cleanup is already done. Participants got to learn
first hand about contamination issues and ask
questions. Many people commented that it was
time well spent and that they learned important
information about cleanup issues.

For more on the Proposed Plan and ROD
Amendment, visit http://go.usa.gov/igD.

Or contact Project Managers:

S Anne Dailey, (206) 553-2110
dailey.anne@epa.gov;

S Bill Adams, (206) 553-2806

adams.bill@epa.gov;

S Anne McCauley, (206) 553-4689;

mccauley.anne@epa.gov

8 Or call (800) 424-4372

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Basin Bulletin

December 2010

Adaptive Management: Planning and Implementing
Cleanup Work, Involving the Community

Another document that will come out at the same
time as the ROD is currently called the "Adaptive
Management Plan." This document will lay
out the methods for planning projects under the
ROD, involving the community, and adjusting the
cleanup based on what is learned.

It is in development now with input from the
Basin Commission's Upper Basin Project Focus
Team. Keeping in mind that changes to the
cleanup plan are likely, the Adaptive Management
Plan will be developed concurrently with the
ROD.

With such a large and complex site, all physical and
contaminant conditions cannot be fully known.
There is also uncertainty as to
how effective the cleanup ac-
tions will be, how long they
will take to complete, and
how many will be required to
achieve the overall cleanup
goals. Uncertainty is unavoid-
able, and project management
must account for this reality.

This technical framework will outline how work
priorities will be set and how those uncertainties
will be managed so that the cleanup can be the
most effective.

Adaptive management is not simply "learning by
doing" or "adjusting to the unexpected." Rather,
it is a systematic, deliberate, defined way of
achieving a desired outcome. It uses a six-step
framework for making management decisions.
The six steps are:

1.	Assess the Problem - complete;

2.	Design the Adaptive Management Plan -
underway;

3.	Implement the Adaptive Management Plan -
through a ROD Amendment;

4.	Monitor the action;

5.	Evaluate Monitoring Results;

6.	Adjust the Plan in Response to Monitoring
Results.

The Adaptive Management Plan lays out a
logical and transparent way to prioritize cleanup
work and will also identify the opportunities for
community input. The process includes these
activities:

•	Develop cleanup site priority rankings (sorting
the list of actions in the ROD Amendment)

•	Identify cleanup site groupings (into
geographic areas to make the cleanup
efficient)

•	Lay out the schedule for the individual
cleanups (over a 1 and 5 year schedule)

•	Forecast how effective the cleanups will be in
meeting the cleanup goals

The results of this prioritization work are put into
"Implementation Plans." The
plans will lay out specific work
activities proposed to take place
over the near term. The plans will
include fairly detailed information
about what is proposed to be
cleaned up, when, how, and for
what cost. The plans will not be
static documents but adjusted as the cleanup
proceeds to reflect information learned from the
actions taken. The plans also may be adjusted
based on the availability of funds and other
resources needed to implement cleanup.

The development of the Implementation Plans
is a critical opportunity for public involvement.
Community members will be asked to review
and comment on One-Year and Five-Year
Implementation Plans. Also, the Upper Basin
Project Focus Team may host public workshops
to get input on the development of the
Implementation Plans.

The cleanup work identified in these one- and
five-year plans will be included in the Basin
Commission work plans. The Implementation
Plans will be adopted only after stakeholder and
community input has been considered.

CONTINUED ON PAGE 4

The Adaptive
Management Plan
lays out a logical and
transparent way to
prioritize cleanup work.

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Basin Bulletin

December 2010

Adaptive Management: Involving the Community

CONTINUED FROM PAGE 2

The Adaptive Management Plan will lay out how

The concept of Implementation Plans was the
topic of a public session held last June. Nearly 70
people attended and shared their views about the
cleanup and about work planning.

On December 7, members of the Upper Basin
Project Focus Team shared their knowledge and
opinions about the list of source areas included
in the Proposed Plan, to help refine the list of
cleanup sites.

EPA will use the information collected during this
meeting and from the public comment period to
consider adjustments to the list of cleanup sites

cleanup priorities will be set, with the public's input.

that will appear in the ROD Amendment. EPA
continues to welcome input about how to best
involve community members in plans for the
cleanup work:

•	How do you want to be informed?

•	What information would you like to provide?

•	What should the public's involvement in de-
veloping the Implementation Plans look like?

•	What else should EPA consider?

To share your ideas, contact Bill Adams at
adams.bill@epa.gov (206) 553-2806, or
(800) 424-4372.

Asarco Settlement Dollars at

As part of the Asarco bankruptcy settlement in
December 2009, the Asarco Successor Coeur
d Alene Custodial and Work Trust (the Trust)
was established. The Trust will do Superfund
cleanup work in areas contaminated by historical
mining practices in the Coeur d'Alene Basin.
Dan Silver serves as the Trustee. Last month,
Silver announced his hiring of Dan Meyer
to be the first full-time employee. Meyer will
start January 1,2011. Most recently, Meyer has
served as the Remediation Program Manager
for the Idaho Department of Environmental
Quality, responsible for cleaning up residential
and commercial properties in the Bunker Hill
Superfund Site.

"I am delighted that Dan Meyer has agreed to
serve as the lead manager for the Trust activities

Work

in the Basin," Silver said in announcing Meyer's
hire. "Dan has an extensive history with the
mining community, the regulatory agencies, and
local community leaders. He is known for getting
work done in a fiscally responsible way. And he
has a demonstrated record for collaboration and
achievement under arduous circumstances."

Silver noted that Meyer's first job will be to
establish a Trust office in the Upper Coeur
d'Alene Basin. Over the next few years, the Trust
will be ramping up its remediation activities.
The Trust plans to hire local engineering and
construction firms in 2011 to begin priority
cleanup work identified in EPA decision
documents, including the upcoming Upper
Basin Record of Decision Amendment and
Implementation Plan.

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Basin Bulletin

December 2010

EPA Completes Five Year Review of Bunker Hill
Superfund Site

EPA completed its third five year review report
for the entire Bunker Hill Superfund Site
on November 18. The agency is required to
conduct these reviews every five years where
contaminants remain on-site.

The purpose of the review is to evaluate the
overall performance of the cleanup actions and
to make sure the cleanup is protecting human
health and the environment. During the review,
cleanup actions were evaluated at the site's
three "operable units:" the Bunker Hill "Box"
populated areas, the Box non-populated areas,
and the Coeur d'Alene Basin.

Overall, EPA has found that cleanup actions
are functioning as expected and are protecting
human health and the environment in most
locations where actions have been taken.

High house dust lead levels are occurring in
homes in the Basin and a limited number of
homes in the Box, which require follow-up
actions. The five year review report identifies
a number of issues related to the cleanup work
and recommended follow-up actions to ensure
the work remains protective over the long term.

In April 2010, EPA invited the public to share
concerns about the site and information to
help with the review. The agency extends its
thanks to the individuals and organizations that
provided information.

You can find copies of the five year review
report at locations listed on page 9 and online
at http://yosemite.epa.gov/rlO/cleanup.nsf/
basin/coeur+d'alene+basin or
http://go.usa.gov/iYg

Soil Repository Updates

Three repositories were open to receive remedial
action and Institutional Controls Program
(ICP) waste in the 2010 field season. Big Creek
Repository (BCR) serves the Upper Basin. It is
located between the communities of Osburn and
Kellogg. East Mission Flats Repository (EMF),
located near Cataldo, serves communities in
the Lower Basin. Page Repository serves ICP
users between Elizabeth Park and Pinehurst.
Northwind, Inc., which runs the day-to-day
operations of the BCR and EMF repositories,
hired 17 local and nine nearby community
residents in 2010.

Big Creek Repository expansion design
should be completed for EPA review in December
2010. The final design report should be out by
March 2011. If all goes well, disposal at the north
side expansion area could begin in the 2011
construction season. The north-side expansion
will allow an additional 130,000 cubic yards of
capacity for the yard cleanup program, other
remedial action waste, and ICP program soil
waste. The expansion will extend Big Creek

Repository's active life for another three to five
years. Measures to address citizen concerns are
built into the design of the expansion. Some
examples are reducing visual impacts from the
Coeur d'Alene Trail, continued groundwater
monitoring, stream channel setbacks, and
addressing traffic patterns.

East Mission Flats Repository at Dredge
Road and Canyon Road is fully constructed and
operational. Property cleanup contractors will use
the I-90/Dredge Road access on the west end
of the repository. This routing plan significantly
decreases truck traffic on Canyon Road. The east
side of the repository will remain open for ICP
users this winter. Citizens performing activities
under the ICP can get a gate key from Panhandle
Health District ((208) 783-0707) to access
either the Big Creek or the East Mission Flats
repositories.

DEQ_is gathering site characterization data for
development of two new repositories in the
Upper Basin.

CONTINUED ON PAGE 6

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Basin Bulletin

December 2010

Soil Repository Updates

The Osburn tailings impoundment

(at Nuchols Gulch) and the Star tailings
impoundment (at Woodland Park) were
identified through a two-year public process as the
most suitable locations for additional repositories.
The site characterization field work should be
complete by spring 2011. DEQwill use the results
of the field work for repository design. DEQ_is
doing repository design at the Osburn site first.
The Star repository design will follow once the
Osburn design is completed and will depend on
site acquisition.

The first report for the Osburn site will be the
30% Design Report. This report will outline
major features including the repository footprint,
operational areas, waste placement areas, site
access, and others. The Osburn 30% Design
Report is scheduled for early fall of 2011. The
public will be invited to review the 30%-design
report and provide comments for consideration
in the final design. This presents an opportunity
for citizens to see how citizen concerns and values
expressed during the public process are reflected in
the design phase.

The Page Repository located in Page off of
County Highway 10 accepts ICP waste from the
Bunker Hill Box. Contaminated soils generated
within the Box include public works projects,
homeowner projects, and building contractor

CONTINUED FROM PAGE 5

projects. To accommodate long-term future
community development activities in the Box
(Elizabeth Park to West Kingston area), another
2.6 million cubic yards of ICP repository capacity
will be needed. DEQJias evaluated 26 repository
and technology alternatives for future ICP waste
management in the Box.

DEQ_has narrowed that list of alternatives to
eight, which it presented to the Bunker Hill Task
Force, and to elected county and city officials
at the November Task Force Meeting. DEQ_
received suggestions and comments from the Task
Force, elected officials, and citizens on alternatives
for the Box long-term ICP repository location.
These suggestions and comments will help DEQ_
and EPA in making a decision on location of the
long-term ICP repository.

Work on the Community Fill Policy is also
ongoing. The Panhandle Health District and local
elected officials have expressed a desire to use con-
taminated materials excavated from construction
and maintenance activities as fill, to help establish
developable land. In response, EPA and DEQ_
have agreed to evaluate and develop a policy that
establishes the appropriate precautions, practices
and documentation requirements that would allow
such activities to be conducted in a manner con-
sistent with cleanup objectives of the OU 3 ROD,
as well as the RODs for OU 1 and OU 2.

Local residents attended Open Houses in October to share concerns and learn more about proposed cleanup sites.

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Basin Bulletin

December 2010

2010 Residential Property Cleanups, Year in Review

The Basin Property Remediation Program
(Property Cleanup Program) replaces metals-
contaminated yards in communities from Mullan
to Rose Lake.

As of mid-November, the total number of
properties cleaned up this year was 320, which
is an average year for the program. Contractor
bids were competed in February for a new
three-year term of work. Stewart Contracting
(officially "United Mine Services") and Ferguson
Contracting were awarded the contracts for the
yard cleanup work.

Together the companies cleaned up a preliminary
total surface area equivalent to about 55
football fields and employed 113 Silver Valley
area workers, and another 14 from adjoining
communities. The year's work was paid for
through federal stimulus money and money
provided by the federal government through a
cooperative agreement between EPA and DECX

The state of Idaho contributed the usual 10%
match of the federal contribution. As of mid-
November, TerraGraphics Environmental Inc.,
on behalf of DEQ^has met with 270 property
owners to discuss remediation needs and sampled
296 properties to determine plans for next year's
property cleanups. TerraGraphics had a crew of
38 Silver Valley area residents on board, with 43
support positions outside the immediate area.

^	^dankjyou	^

From DEQ - Kellogg
To the citizens of the Silver Valley,

Contractors, and Local Representatives:

We thank you for working with us to complete
a busy construction season.

Thank you for keeping in touch about your
concerns and questions.

^ Have a Happy Holiday!	^

Wallace Yard and Spur Lines: Cleanup Nearly Complete

Cleanup at the Wallace Yard and Spur Lines is

wrapping up. Located in Wallace, Idaho, and in
Ninemile and Canyon Creek Canyons, this former
rail yard and its spur lines were contaminated with
heavy metals from historical mining operations.
A settlement was approved last spring for the
cleanup. The settlement was approved in federal
court among the Union Pacific Railroad, BNSF
Railway, Inc., and the State of Idaho and the
United States on behalf of EPA.

The cleanup will help reduce risk to people and
wildlife. Wallace Yard will be available for reuse,
subject to private property transactions and local
planning. Contaminated areas were capped with
12" of clean gravel and, in some places, asphalt. In
some areas, such as at the Wallace Visitor Center,
contaminants were removed before the clean cap
and landscape vegetation was placed. Across from
the Visitor Center, a large durable gravel cap was
placed in the truck parking area. In a visible area
north of 1-90 where more cleanup took place,

workers preserved large existing trees and other
smaller vegetation.

About 12 miles of the old spur lines were cleaned
up. Cleanup work included combinations
of removal of contaminants, clean capping,
vegetation, and access barriers. Also, two former
railroad segments now provide asphalt/gravel
access roads to residents living along Yellow
Dog Road and West Fork Ninemile Creek.
Construction is nearly complete on all areas
except the former Hercules Mill site. That site will
be completed in 2011. Additional work will likely
need to be done in the spring to complete the spur
lines.

The railroads are funding the full cost of cleanup
and long-term maintenance. To see the Consent
Decree and other project documents, visit
yosemite.epa.gov/rlO/cleanup.nsf/sites/wallace/.
For more information, contact Ed Moreen, EPA
Project Manager in Coeur d'Alene, at
8 (208)664-4588.

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Basin Bulletin

December 2010

Coming Soon
EPA to Hire Basin-Based Outreach Person

EPA will soon advertise for a full-time Com-
munity Information Specialist. Based in Kel-
logg, this outreach person will be accessible to
citizens and can help build local relationships.
The goal is to improve communications about
the Superfund cleanup. Duties will focus on
outreach, community education, meeting lo-
gistics, and serving as a liaison for community
concerns. The position will report to EPA, and
work closely with EPA Community Involve-
ment Coordinators and DECX

The position will be advertised to the public.
Applicants will need to meet certain qualifica-
tions.

For example, the position is geared towards re-
tired individuals who are looking to contribute
their expertise to the federal government. Under
this hiring program, applicants must be at least
55 years of age or older. Relevant education and
experience will be considered. Stay tuned for
more information.

Planning for Lower Basin Cleanup

While cleanup is well underway in other parts of
the Basin, planning for future cleanup work in
the Lower Basin continues. Some cleanup actions
have already been taken in the Lower Basin. They
include doing a farm-to-wetlands conversion
project, paving boat ramp parking lots, improving
boat ramps, and stabilizing riverbanks. Cleanup
activities in the Lower Basin require significant
advance planning. This is due to, among other
things, concerns about flooding, recontamination,
and the complexities of some actions like river-
bed sediment removal.





"Lower Basin" refers to the area
of the Coeur d'Alene River west of
Cataldo to the mouth of the Coeur
d'Alene River as it runs into Lake
Coeur d'Alene at Harrison.



EPA released the Enhanced Conceptual Site
Model (ECSM) in August. The ECSM shows
that contaminated sediment continues to be trans-
ported throughout the South Fork of the Coeur
d Alene River, including some of its tributaries,
and delivered to its main stem and flood plains.
The ECSM shows that the greater part of lead-
contaminated sediments is now stored, mobilized,
transported, and deposited in the Lower Basin
or Lake Coeur dAlene during flood events. The
ECSM has helped to determine the data needed

to measure and model sediment transport and
river system hydraulics in the Lower Basin. Data
will be used to:

•	Document current trends;

•	Define contaminant source areas;

•	Refine the sediment budget;

•	Build a simulation model, and describe condi-
tions against which to predict the effects of
potential cleanups;

•	Document success of cleanups completed; and

•	Select future cleanups.

For the most part, specific plans for additional
Lower Basin cleanups have been slowed down due
to the concerns noted above, including flooding
and potential recontamination of cleaned up areas.
However, EPA is using the results of the ECSM
and investing more resources to better understand
the Lower Basin. Now that new information is
available, EPA is reviewing Lower Basin remedies
previously selected in the 2002 Operable Unit 3
ROD to determine whether the selected actions
should be modified or supplemented. The Lower
Basin work will likely include review of select
remedial actions identified in the 2001 Operable
Unit 3 Feasibility Study Report with a view to
EPA's anticipated issuance of a ROD Amendment
for the Lower Basin at a future date.

For more information, contact Ed Moreen, EPA
Project Manager in Coeur dAlene, at
8 (208)664-4588.

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Basin Bulletin

December 2010

Opportunities to
Get involved

Basin Environmental Improvement
Project Commission

Executive Director:

Terry Harwood
(208) 783-2528

www.basincommission.com

Next Meeting: February 16, 2011 (tentative)

Citizens Coordinating Council (CCC)

Contact: Jerry Boyd
(509) 455-6000

www.basincommission.com/ccc.asp

Submissions: To make a submission to the
Basin Bulletin, please contact Andrea Lindsay
or Debra Sherbina (see contact info on the front
page)

Subscriptions: You're invited to join our
mailing ore-mail list.The linktothe Basin Bulletin
can be e-mailed to you at the time of publication.
For additions or corrections to the e-mail or
hard copy mailing list, contact Andrea Lindsay
or Debra Sherbina at:

•	U.S. EPA, ETPA-081, Suite 900

•	1200 Sixth Avenue,

•	Seattle, WA 98101-1128

or at their phone and e-mail, as noted on the
front page of the Bulletin.

V	J

The Basin Bulletin is published by the U.S.
Environmental Protection Agency three times
a year.The Basin Bulletin offers updates about
activities related to Superfund cleanup in the
Coeur d'Alene Basin. For mailing list changes,
to send comments about this newsletter,
to contact the editors, or to submit articles
for consideration, call Andrea Lindsay or
Debra Sherbina at the phone numbers
provided. Mention of trade names, products,
or services does not convey, and should not be
interpreted as conveying,official EPA approval,
endorsement, or recommendation.

f	\

Doiuments

Select documents about the cleanup
can be found at:

North Idaho College Library

Molstead Library
1000 Garden Avenue
Coeur d'Alene, ID 83814
(208) 769-3355

Wallace Public Library

415 River Street
Wallace, ID 83873
(208) 752-4571

Spokane Public Library

906 West Main Avenue
Spokane,WA 99201
(208) 444-5336

EPA Field Office

1910 Northwest Boulevard, Suite 208
Coeur d'Alene, ID 83814
(208) 664-4588

EPA Seattle Office
Superfund Record Center

1200 Sixth Avenue

Seattle, WA 98101

(206) 553-4494 or (800) 424-4372

St. Maries Library

822 W. College Avenue
St. Maries, ID 83861
(208) 245-3732

Kellogg Public Library

16 West Market Avenue
Kellogg, ID 83837
(208) 786-7231

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Basin Bulletin

December 2010

Communications Project Focus Team (PFT) Update

By Jeri DeLange, Communications PFT Chair

Over the last few months, the Basin Commission's
Communications PFT has been focusing its
outreach efforts to help citizens "Get Involved,
Get Informed, and Be Heard." The group has
produced a "Frequently Asked Questions" sheet
regarding public commenting. Tips for making
effective public comment are listed on the back
of the sheet. Copies have been made available
to the public at local community open houses,
Basin Commission related meetings, the Basin
Commission office in Kellogg, and online at www.
basincommission.com (under NEWS).

The Citizens Coordinating Council (CCC) also
held a mini-workshop on this topic at the last
CCC meeting in October. It was facilitated by
Vera Williams, CCC Vice-Chair, on behalf of a
joint effort by the CCC and Communications

PFT. Based on suggestions made at the CCC
meeting, it may be presented again at other
venues.

The Communications PFT will also
continue working on finalizing a CCC survey
questionnaire. After the results are tabulated next
year, the information will be used to help increase
public participation in the Basin Commission
process and to help develop communications
pieces or training sessions.

The PFT's Recreation Education Subcommittee,
chaired by Tina Elayer of IDEQi has been
updating the Panhandle Health District's mascot,
Riley Raccoon.

Riley will be used to help educate young children
about lead awareness and playing safe in the
Lower Basin. Look for a new and improved Riley
in the future!

c	\

Get on the e-mail

Want to get timely news and notices about the cleanup? Sign up for our e-mail alert
list. You can expect to get about two or three e-mails per month with real-time project
information. To get on the list, just send your e-mail address to lindsay.andrea@epa.gov.

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Basin Bulletin

Basin Commission Contacts

December 2010

Basin Environmental Improvement Project Commission-Jon Cantamessa, Chair

Allan, Chief; Coeur d'Alene Tribe

8 208-686-5803

FAX:

208-686-8813

chief@cdatribe-nsn. gov.

Buell, Jack; Benewah County Commissioner

8 208-245-3274

FAX:

208-245-4364

jreynolds@benewahcounty.org

Cantamessa, John; Shoshone Cty Commissioner

8 208-752-3331

FAX:

208-753-2711

bocc@co. shoshone. id.us

Currie, Rick; Kootenai Cty Commissioner

8 208-446-1604

FAX:

208-446-1609

rcurrie@kcgov.us

Hardesty, Toni; State of Idaho

8 208-373-0240

FAX:

208-373-0417

toni.hardesty@deq.idaho.gov

Harwood, Terry; BEIPC Executive Director

8 208-783-2528

FAX:

208-783-4561

terry.harwood@deq.idaho.gov

Pfeifer; Grant, State of Washington

8 509-329-3516

FAX:

509-329-3529

gpfe461 @ecy. wa.gov

McLerran., Dennis J., EPA Region 10 Adrnn.

8 206-553-1234

FAX:

206-553-1809

mclerran.dennis@epa.gov

BEIPC Staff









DeLange, Jeri; BEIPC

8 208-783-2548

FAX:

208-783-4561

j eri. delange(S>deq.idaho .go v

George, Dave; WADept. of Ecology

8 509-329-3520

FAX:

509-329-3572

cgeo461 (S)ecy. wa.gov

Hanson, Rob; IDEQ

8 208-373-0290

FAX:

208-373-0154

rob.hanson(S?deq.idaho.gov

Moreen, Ed; EPA Coeur d'Alene Basin Rep.

8 208-664-4588

FAX:

208-664-5829

moreen.ed(S?epa.gov

Stevens, Rebecca; Coeur d'Alene Tribe

8 208-667-5772

FAX:

208-667-0919

rstevens(S?cdatribe-nsn.gov

Technical Leadership Group (TLG) -

Rebecca Stevens, Chair







Adams, Bill; EPA Region 10

8 206-553-2806

FAX:

206-553-0124

adams.bill(S?epa.gov

Addy, Mark; NRCS

8 208-762-4939 xl06

FAX:

208-762-9859

mark.addy@usda.gov

Brewer, Lloyd; City of Spokane

8 509-625-6968

FAX:

509-625-6537

lbrewer@spokanecity.org

Box, Steve; U.S. Geological Survey

8 509-368-3106

FAX:

509-368-3199

sbox@usgs.gov

Clark, Greg; U.S. Geological Survey

8 208-387-1324

FAX:

208-387-1372

gmclark@usgs.gov

Connolly, Randy; Spokane Tribe

8 509-626-4425

FAX:

509-626-9600

connolly@spokanetribe.com

Dailey, Anne; EPA Region 10

8 206-553-2110

FAX:

206-553-0124

dailey. anne@epa. gov

Davidson, Toni; U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service

8 509-893-8034

FAX:

509-891-6748

toni_davidson@fws. gov

Flagor, Bob; NRCS.

8 208-762-4939

FAX:

208-762-9859

robert.flagor@usda.gov

Gentry, Dean; Benewah County

8 208-245-2477





dgg@smgazette.com

George, Dave; WADept. of Ecology

8 509-329-3520

FAX:

509-329-3572

cgeo461 @e cy.wa.gov

Hardy, Rogers; Benewah County

8 208-691-3095





rogershardy@aol.com

Helmich, Bryan; ID Dept. of Fish & Game

8 208-769-1414

FAX:

208-769-1418

bhelmich@idfg. idaho .gov

Hicks, Kenny; Shoshone County

8 208-512-2356

FAX:

208-556-0135

keliicks@suddenlink.net

Hugo, Carrie; ID Dept. of Fish & Game

8 208-689-3453

FAX:

208-769-1418

cchalcraft@idfg.idalio.gov

Johnson, Jeff; U.S. Forest Service

8 208-765-7442

FAX:

208-765-7307

jkjohnson@fs.fed.us

Kirkpatrick, Bob; U.S. Forest Service

8 406-329-3307

FAX:

406-329-3198

bkirkpatrick@fs. fed. us

Kirschner, Fred; Spokane Tribe

8 509-924-0184





fredk@aeseinc .com

Lindsay, Robert; Spokane County Utilities Office

8 509-477-7259

FAX:

509-477-4715

rlindsay @ spokanecounty. org

Meyer, Dan; IDEQ

8 208-783-5781

FAX:

208-783-4561

dan. mey er@ideq. idaho .gov

Perfect, John; Idaho Transportation Dept.

8 208-772-1224

FAX:

208-772-1203

jolin.perfect@itd.idaho.gov

Raskell, Sandra; Coeur d'Alene Tribe

8 208-667-5772

FAX:

208-667-0919

sraskell@cdatribe-nsn.gov

Rothrock, Glen; IDEQ

8 208-666-4623

FAX:

208-769-1404

glen.rotlirock@deq.idalio.gov

Rust, Bill; Shoshone County

8 208-556-8020





wcrust@icebridge.net

Sheppard, Clyde; Kootenai County

8 208-773-9116

FAX:

208-773-0162

rustyshep@roadrunner.coni

Spears, Brian; U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service

8 509-893-8032

FAX:

509-891-6748

brian_spears@fws.gov

Stevens, Rebecca; Coeur d'Alene Tribe

8 208-667-5772

FAX:

208-667-0919

rstevens@cdatribe-nsn.gov

Stevenson, Mike; Bureau of Land Management

8 208-769-5024

FAX:

208-769-5050

niike_stevenson@bhii.gov

Taylor, Greg; ID Dept. of Water Resources

8 208-762-2805

FAX:

208-762-2819

greg.taylor@idwr.idalio.gov

Werner, Terry; City of Post Falls

8 208-773-1438

FAX:

208-773-0311

twemer@po stfallsidalio. org

Zion, Rod; U.S. Army Corps of Engineers

8 208-667-7025 X30

FAX:

208-765-6140

rodney.e.zion@usace.aniiy.mil

TLG Project Focus Team (PFT) Leads

Communications - Jeri DeLange

S 208-783-2548

FAX:

208-783-4561

j eri. delange@deq.idaho .go v

Human Health/Residential - Rob Hanson

S 208-373-0290

FAX:

208-373-0417

rhanson@deq.idaho.gov

Lower Basin - Rebecca Stevens

S 208-667-5772

FAX:

208-667-0919

rstevens@cdatribe-nsn.gov

Repository - Andy Mork, lead

S 208-373-0141

FAX:

208-373-0154

andy.mork@deq.idalio.gov

Repository - Ed Moreen, vice lead

S 208-664-4588

FAX:

208-664-5829

moreen.ed@epa.gov

Upper Basin - Bill Adams

S 206-553-2806

FAX:

206-553-0124

adams.bill@epa.gov

Citizens Coordinating Council - Jerry Boyd, Chair

Jerry Boyd	@ 509-455-6000

Vera Williams	® 208-772-0584X3006

j erry .boyd@painhamblen. com
vlwilliams@surfacewatersolutions.com

- 11


-------
oEPA

United States

Environmental Protection	~:~

Agency	DPrt	o ,

. ' -	Postaqeand Fees Paid

Region !0	U-S-EPA

Community Involvement and Outreach	lieattieWA

1200 Sixth Avenue, Suite 900, ETPA-081
Seattle, Washington 98101-3140

December 2010



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