oEPA

United States
Environmental Protection
Agency

National Priorities List (NPL)

* * *Fmal Site * * *

\ Site Location:

IMMATIC MANUFACTURING
CORPORATION

Fairfield, New Jersey

Essex County

OSWER/OSRTI
Washington, DC 20460

May 2014

The Unimatic Manufacturing Corporation facility is a former aluminum die-casting facility located at 25 Sherwood Lane in
Fairfield, Essex County, New Jersey. The 1.23-acre subject property is immediately surrounded by industrial properties,
including the Caldwell Trucking Superfund site to the southeast, that are located near commercial areas and residential
neighborhoods.

ix Site History:

Unimatic operated at the facility from 1955 until 2001, primarily as an aluminum die-casting facility. Beginning with the last
facility expansion in 1970, large volumes of lubricating oil were sprayed on die-casting machines throughout the shop area,
covering the walls and floor. Unimatic washed out the PCB-laden lubricant through floor trenches into the facility wastewater
pipes, which discharged to a tributary of Deepavaal Brook. The facility discharged 16,000 to 44,000 gallons per day of
contaminated water through the wastewater pipes which leaked on to the ground at the site, contaminating soil and ground water
throughout the property and beyond the property boundaries.

I Site Contamination/Contaminants:	

Until 1979, wastewater containing PCBs leaked through the pipes, contaminating soil and ground water throughout the property
and beyond the property boundaries. The building is also contaminated with PCBs. The well water that was used at the site until
1989 contained high levels of volatile organic compounds (VOCs), which are believed to have migrated from the Caldwell
Trucking Superfund site. Wastewater discharged from the Unimatic facility was found to contain high levels of VOCs in the
1980s. The wastewater also contained petroleum hydrocarbons and oil, and is believed to have contained PCBs. Soil at the
discharge point is contaminated with PCBs, but the extent of contamination is unknown.

fftt Potential Impacts on Surrounding Community/Environment:

The former Unimatic building is severely contaminated with PCBs, which have entered indoor air. The Unimatic operation
resulted in contaminated soil, ground water and surface water due to decades of wastewater discharge through leaky pipes. The
nearest drinking water wells are located less than one-half mile downgradient of the site, and ground water wells within 4 miles
of the site provide drinking water to more than 20,000 people. The well water used at the site until 1989 contained high levels of
VOCs, and the effluent to the unnamed tributary to Deepavaal Brook was shown to contain petroleum hydrocarbons, oil and high
levels of VOCs in the 1980s. Deepavaal Brook flows into the Passaic River and there is a drinking water intake that serves more
than 450,000 people located 2.2 miles downstream of Deepavaal Brook.

^ Response Activities (to date):

Under National Pollutant Discharge Elimination System (NPDES) Permit No. NJ0031003, the EPA and New Jersey Department
of Environmental Protection (NJDEP) issued numerous non-compliance and violation notices beginning in 1982; however,
Unimatic continued to discharge 16,000 to 44,000 gallons per day to state waters until the facility connected to municipal water
in 1989. Numerous investigations under NJDEP and oversight by the EPA since 2001 have shown that the building, soils and
ground water on site are severely contaminated with PCBs. Unimatic has excavated some contaminated soils, but high PCB
concentrations remain in soil and ground water on and beyond the property. The EPA is performing interim protective measures
inside the building, which will be vacated and sealed.

H Need for NPL Listing:

Other federal and state cleanup programs were evaluated, but are not viable at this time. The EPA received a letter of support for
placing this site on the NPL from the state of New Jersey.

[The description of the site (release) is based on information available at the time the site was evaluated with the HRS. The description may
change as additional information is gathered on the sources and extent of contamination. See 56 FR 5600, February 11, 1991, or subsequent
FR notices.]

For more information about the hazardous substances identified in this narrative summary, including general information regarding the effects of exposure to
these substances on human health, please see the Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease Registry (ATSDR) ToxFAQs. ATSDR ToxFAQs can be found on
the Internet at http://www.atsdr.cdc.gov/toxfaqs/index.asp or by telephone at 1-888-42-ATSDR or 1-888-422-8737.


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