TechDirect, September 1, 2010

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TechDirect's purpose is to identify new technical, policy and guidance resources related
to the assessment and remediation of contaminated soil, sediments and ground water.

Mention of non-EPA documents or presentations does not constitute a U.S. EPA
endorsement of their contents, only an acknowledgment that they exist and may be
relevant to the TechDirect audience.

> Upcoming Live Internet Seminars

Understanding the FY11 Job Training Grant Application Guidelines - September
2, 2010, 2:00PM-4:00PM EDT (18:00-20:00 GMT). This seminarwill provide an
overview of the FY11 application guidelines for the Environmental Workforce
Development and Job Training Grants -formerly known as the "Brownfields Job
Training Grants." Eligibility and ranking evaluation criteria will be covered, as well as
information on formatting and key building blocks of a successful proposal. A questions
and answers session will be held at the end. For more information and to register, see

http://clu-in.ora/live .

TABEZ - Free E-Tool to Facilitate Writing of EPA Assessment and Cleanup Grants
- September 8, 2010, 2:00PM-3:30PM EDT (18:00-19:30 GMT). TAB EZ is a FREE

online tool intended to streamline and simplify the grant writing process when applying
for EPA brownfields assessment and cleanup grants. The goal of TAB EZ is to level the
playing field for smaller local governments and communities so they may have an
increased chance to obtain EPA brownfields grant funds. TAB EZ is very user friendly.
It offers helpful hints for addressing proposal requirements, as well as links to additional
resources. Multiple participants may work on a proposal, while at the same time all
proposals are password protected to prevent unauthorized use. TAB EZ was developed
by the TAB (Technical Assistance to Brownfields communities) program at Kansas
State University with funding from the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA)
under cooperative agreement TR83389401. This webinar will step attendees through
TABEZ and explain the use of the tool. Attendees may want to log on to TABEZ before
the webcast and follow along using the live tool. TAB EZ is available at httn://www.tahe7.nm
For more information and to register, see httnv/ciu-in.om/iive .

Stable Isotope Analyses to Understand the Degradation of Organic Contaminants
in Ground Water (Parts 1 and 2) - September 9 and 16, 2010, 2:00PM-3:30PM EDT
(18:00-19:30 GMT). When organic contaminants such as benzene, TCE or MTBE are
degraded, the ratio of the stable isotopes of carbon in the organic contaminants will
often change in a predictable fashion.This webinar will briefly review the theory behind
isotopic effects, it will explain the units used to characterize the ratio of isotopes, and it
will discuss the simple mathematics that can relate the shift in the ratio to the extent of
degradation.Then the webinar will illustrate an approach to estimate rate constants for

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natural biodegradation of contaminants in ground water. The isotope analysis will be
used to estimate the extent of natural biodegradation of MTBE at a gasoline spill site.
The extent of biodegradation will be combined with the hydrological parameters at the
site to estimate rate constants for biodegradation. The webinar will conclude with a
number of cautions and warnings. Heterogeneity in flow paths in the aquifer and
proximity to NAPL or other source of contamination to ground water can substantially
confuse the interpretation of stable isotope data. Both these conditions cause the
isotope analysis to underestimate the extent of degradation. Heterogeneity in the rate
of biodegradation can produce substantial errors in the forecasts of plume behavior.
The webinar will provide recommendations to deal with the effects of heterogeneity in
rates of biodegradation. Note: This is a repeat of the June 16, 2010 seminar on this
topic split across two sessions. For more information and to register, see http://ciu-in.ora/iive .

ITRC Protocol for Use of Five Passive Samplers - September 14, 2010,
2:00PM-4:15PM EDT (18:00-20:15 GMT). This training supports the understanding
and use of the ITRC Protocol for Use of Five Passive Samplers to Sample for a Variety
of Contaminants in Groundwater (DSP-5, 2007). The five technologies included in this
document include diffusion samplers, equilibrated grab samplers, and an accumulation
sampler. The training starts with information common to all five samples then focuses
on each sampler as instructors describe the sampler and explain how it works; discuss
deployment and retrieval of the sampler; highlight advantages and limitations; and
present results of data comparison studies. For more information and to register, see

http://www.itrcweb.ora OP http://clu-in.ora/live .

ITRC Phytotechnologies - September 16, 2010,11:00AM-1:15PM EDT (15:00-17:15
GMT). This training familiarizes participants with ITRC's Phytotechnology Technical
and Regulatory Guidance and Decision Trees, Revised (Phyto-3, 2009).This document
provides guidance for regulators who evaluate and make informed decisions on
phytotechnology work plans and practitioners who have to evaluate any number of
remedial alternatives at a given site. This document updates and replaces
Phytoremediation Decision Tree (Phyto-1, 1999) and Phytotechnology Technical and
Regulatory Guidance Document (Phyto-2, 2001). It has merged the concepts of both
documents into a single document. This guidance includes new, and more importantly,
practical information on the process and protocol for selecting and applying various
phytotechnologies as remedial alternatives. For more information and to register, see

http://www.itrcweb.ora OP http://clu-in.ora/live .

Biological-based Assays - Indicators of Ecological Stress - September 23, 2010,
2:00PM-4:00PM EDT (18:00-20:00 GMT). This seminar will feature Dr. Bruce Duncan,
Senior Ecologist with EPA Region 10's Office of Environmental Assessment, and Dr.
Jim Shine, Associate Professor of Aquatic Chemistry at Harvard University's Center for
the Environment and part of the Harvard School of Public Health Superfund Research
Program. Dr. Duncan and EPA Region 10 have been assisting the NIEHS Superfund
Research Program for many years. Part of recent support has been through the
National Bioassay Project, a consortium of existing research centers focused on
developing and crosswalking a suite of tests to evaluate complex mixtures in
sediments. As an ancillary to that project, detailed work on evaluating organism
exposures to contaminants was conducted at a Superfund Site (Lower Duwamish
Waterway) in Seattle, WA. A 2009 exposure study led largely by Matt Kelley (Texas
A&M, now with LSU Health Sciences Center-Shreveport) and supported by EPA, Texas
A&M, Southern California Coastal Water Research Project, and NOAA looked at the
concordance between media concentrations, biomarker response, and bioaccumulation
of PCBs and PAHs at several locations. Dr. Shine's presentation will focus on the
"Gellyfish" sampling tool. The "Gellyfish", an in-situ equilibrium-based sampling tool for
determining multiple free metal ion concentrations in aquatic systems, has been
developed and refined under both laboratory and field conditions. The device is based
on the equilibrium partitioning between free metal ions in the surrounding solution and

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iminodiacetate binding groups held within the gel matrix of the sampler. An
accompanying computer model (GELLYMOD) was also developed to account for
metal-metal competition for uptake into the sampler. Compared to other analytical
methods for free metal ions, the Gellyfish sampler is inexpensive, rapid, reusable, easy
to use, and can measure multiple metals simultaneously, thus permitting the generation
of adequate quantities of data to examine spatial and temporal variability and other
factors affecting metal speciation. For more information and to register, see

http://clu-in.org/live .

ITRC In Situ Bioremediation of Chlorinated Ethene - DNAPL Source Zones -
September 30, 2010,11:00AM-1:15PM EDT (15:00-17:15 GMT). Treatment of
dissolved-phase chlorinated ethenes in groundwater using in situ bioremediation (ISB)
is an established technology; however, its use for DNAPL source zones is an emerging
application. This training course supports the ITRC Technical and Regulatory
Guidance document In Situ Bioremediation of Chlorinated Ethene: DNAPL Source
Zones (BioDNAPL-3, 2008). This document provides the regulatory community,
stakeholders, and practitioners with the general steps practitioners and regulators can
use to objectively assess, design, monitor, and optimize ISB treatment of DNAPL
source zones. For more information and to register, see http://www.itrcweb.ora or

http://clu-in.ora/live .

Superfund Revelopment Seminar Series - September 30, 2010, 2:00PM-4:00PM
EDT (18:00-20:00 GMT). The Superfund Redevelopment Initiative has developed a
new alternative energy pre-feasibility analysis process for Superfund sites. This
process, which often involves economic analysis and GIS mapping components, serves
as an initial step to determine if a Superfund property could support alternative energy
projects. The presentation will highlight two sites: the Iron King Mine Humboldt Smelter
site and the Apache Powder Company site in Arizona at which SRI has provided site
stakeholders with pre-feasibility analyses. Key stakeholders at these sites were
interested in determining if alternative energy production were viable reuses.

Presenters will walk participants through the steps involved in conducting the
pre-feasibility analysis, paying particular attention to how stakeholder concerns were
addressed, outcomes of the analyses and important lessons learned. For more
information and to register, see http://ciu-in.ora/iive .

> New Documents and Web Resources

New CLU-IN RSS Feeds. CLU-IN regulars have been notified when new content is
posted by subscribing to our main RSS feed since 2005. We have just added three new
targeted RSS feeds for our Technology Innovation News Survey, Federal Business
Opportunities (FedBizOpps) Notices, and our Courses and Conferences area. RSS is a
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browse websites for information of interest, this information is sent directly to you.
CLU-IN's RSS feeds provide headlines and short descriptions of new CLU-IN content
with links to the full version. This happens when new content is loaded onto the site.
Sound useful? For more information and to subscribe, visit http://www.ciu-in.ora/rss/about/.

Streamlining Site Cleanup in New York City (EPA 542-R-10-005). The United States
Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) Brownfields and Land Revitalization
Technology Support Center (BTSC) and the New York City (NYC) Mayor's Office of
Environmental Remediation (OER) have jointly prepared this document as a technical
transfer resource for organizations and individuals involved in the redevelopment of
contaminated properties in NYC. This joint effort, supported by the New York State
Department of Environmental Conservation (NYS DEC), advances the environmental

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cleanup goals of PlaNYC 2030, the city's comprehensive sustainability plan. The
purpose of this document is to present how Triad Approach best management
practices (BMP) for site investigation and remediation advance EPA's and NYC Mayor's
Office initiatives in the areas of community revitalization and Brownfields
redevelopment (August 2010, 37 pages). View or download at http://ciu-in.ora/techpubs.htm .

Green Remediation Best Management Practices: Clean Fuel & Emission
Technologies for Site Cleanup (EPA 542-F-10-008). Cleanup of hazardous waste
sites can involve significant consumption of gasoline, diesel, or other fuels by mobile
and stationary sources. Minimizing emission of air pollutants such as greenhouse
gases (GHGs) and particulate matter (PM) resulting from cleanup activities, including
those needing fossil or alternative fuel, is a core element of green remediation
strategies. Efforts to reduce these emissions during site investigation, remedial or
corrective actions, and long-term operation and maintenance (O&M) must meet
regulatory requirements under the Clean Air Act (CAA) and state air quality standards
as well as federal and state cleanup programs. Deployment of green remediation
BMPs can help reduce negative impacts of cleanup activities on public health and the
environment (August 2010, 10 pages). View or download at http://ciu-in.ora/techpubs.htm .

Technology News and Trends (EPA 542-N-10-004). This issue describes selected
field applications of new materials, advanced equipment, and various material
dispersion methods for treating contaminated soil and groundwater (August 2010, 6
pages). View or download at http://clu-in.ora/techpubs.htm .

EUGRIS Corner. New Documents on EUGRIS, the platform for European
contaminated soil and water information. More than 9 resources, events, projects and
news items were added to EUGRIS in August 1-24, 2010. These can be viewed at
http://www.euaris.info/whatsnew.asp. Then select the appropriate month and year for the updates
in which you are interested. The following resources were posted on EUGRIS:

US Navy Web site on Green and Sustainable Remediation. The site on green and
sustainable remediation (GSR) provides links to fact sheets and guidance documents,
case studies, and Web tools on sustainable practices for remediation. The Web-based
multi-media tool discusses sustainability, sustainable remediation, and regulatory
drivers for considering GSR. The tool also discusses GSR metrics, tools, and
environmental footprint reduction methodologies. View online at http://www.ert2.ora/t2asrportai/.

> Conferences and Symposia

Vapor Intrusion Pathway: A Practical Guideline ITRC 2-day Classroom Training,
Atlanta, GA, October 4-5, 2010. Led by internationally recognized experts, this 2-day
ITRC classroom training will enable you to learn the latest strategies to conduct site
screening and investigations; determine what tools are appropriate to collect quality
data and evaluate the results; apply multiple lines of evidence to ensure quality
decision-making; build solutions for VI issues through understanding of mitigation
options; and network with environmental professionals dealing with this interdisciplinary
and complex pathway . Interactive learning with hands-on exhibits, classroom
exercises, and frequent Q&A sessions will reinforce these course objectives and
contribute to a practical understanding of this difficult pathway . For more information

and tO register, see http://www.itrcweb.ora/crt.asp .

Registration Now Open!! 2010 National Training Conference On The Toxics
Release Inventory (TRI) and Environmental Conditions in Communities,
Washington, DC, November 1-4, 2010.This year's conference expands on previous

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TRI National Training conferences to include sessions on sources of other
environmental data and on conditions and trends in ecological and human health that
collectively help to support environmentally-related decision making in communities .
For more information and to register, see

http://chemicalriaht2know.com/content/2010-national-trainina-conference .

Call for Abstracts!! International Conference on Sustainable Remediation 2011:
State of the Practice, Amherst, MA, June 1-3, 2011. The Environmental Institute at
the University of Massachusetts Amherst and the U.S. EPA Office of Superfund
Remediation and Technology Innovation are pleased to announce the International
Conference on Sustainable Remediation 2011: State of the Practice to be held in
Amherst, Massachusetts June 1-3, 2011. The conference will bring together
researchers and practitioners from around the globe to address the state of the practice
and future needs in sustainable remediation across the themes of green chemistry,
human health, and environmental response. Session presentations by scientists,
practitioners, and regulators will feature new research, field applications, and lessons
learned. Abstracts are encouraged in all areas of green and sustainable remediation as
related to hazardous waste cleanup, from basic to applied research, from case studies
to demonstration projects. The deadline for platform presentations is November 1,
2010. For more information and to submit an abstract, see

http://www.umass.edu/tei/conferences/SustainableRemediation/callforabstracts.html .

NOTE: For TechDirect, we prefer to concentrate mainly on new documents and
the Internet live events. However, we do support an area on CLU-IN where
announcement of conferences and courses can be regularly posted. Currently there are
119 conferences and courses featured. We invite sponsors to input information on their
events at http://ciu-in.ora/courses. Likewise, readers may visit this area for news of upcoming
events that might be of interest. It allows users to search events by location, topic, time
period, etc.

If you have any questions regarding TechDirect, contact Jeff Heimerman at (703)
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