TechDirect, August 1, 2009

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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.

> August 2009 CLU-IN Theme: Triad

Throughout 2009, CLU-IN will highlight various topics of interest in a series of
special themes. During August, CLU-IN will focus on its Triad resources which
include Technical Bulletins, Case Studies, and archive internet seminars. The
Triad is an innovative approach to decision-making for hazardous waste site
characterization and remediation. The Triad approach proactively exploits new
characterization and treatment tools, using work strategies developed by
innovative and successful site professionals. A special 8-part seminar series will
be sponsored this month by the Triad Community of Practice covering sessions
delivered at the 2008 Triad National Conference and Training hosted at the
University of Massachusetts. More information on this seminar series is listed
below under Upcoming Internet Seminars. Visitors are also encouraged to review
Triad related resources atwww.ciuin.ora/triad.

> Upcoming Live Internet Seminars

Triad Month Seminar Series - August 4, 6,11,13,18, 20, 25. A little over a year ago,
over 260 individuals gathered from the U.S. and abroad at UMass-Amherst in
Massachusetts to discuss the use of the Triad Approach to conduct investigations and
remedial actions faster, better, and at a reduced cost. The Triad Community of Practice
(CoP) will redeliver updates of several of the same sessions to benefit the greater
CLU-IN audience that either may not have been able to attend the conference, or were
not able to attend a specific presentation while at the conference. By doing this, the
Triad CoP hopes participants can learn more about some of the Triad tools and how
they have been applied by the environmental industry. For more information and to

register, see http://clu-in.ora/live .

ITRC Decontamination and Decommissioning of Radiologically-Contaminated
Facilities - August 4, 2009, 2:00PM-4:15PM EDT (18:00-20:15 GMT). This training
introduces ITRC's Technical/Regulatory Guidance, Decontamination and
Decommissioning of Radiologically-Contaminated Facilities (RAD-5, 2008), created by

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ITRC's Radionuclides Team. The curriculum is composed of four modules: Introduction
and Regulatory Basis for Decontamination and Decommissioning (D&D), Factors for
Implementing D&D, Preliminary Remediation Goal (PRG) Calculators, and Case
Studies and Lessons Learned. For more information and to register, see

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

Updates on Renewable Energy Development on Contaminated Land: Community
Involvement and Useful Informational Tools - August 10, 2009,1:00PM-2:00PM
EDT (17:00-18:00 GMT). This session will provide federal and state regulators,
environmental consultants, site owners and community stakeholders with a quick
overview accompanied by real world applications of renewable energy development on
contaminated sites with a focus on community involvement on Superfund sites. This
hour session will include: analysis of current or successful renewable energy
development projects on contaminated sites and the associated community
involvement issues; conclusions from discussions with community involvement
coordinators regarding renewable energy development on Superfund sites; introduction
to the current mapping and informational tools available to generally assess renewable
energy potential and resources; and contributions to the presentation by various experts
who will also be available for the question & answer session after the main
presentation. For more information and to register, see http://ciu-in.ora/iive .

ITRC Phytotechnologies - August 11, 2009, 2:00PM-4:15PM EDT (18:00-20:15
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 .

ITRC Enhanced Attenuation of Chlorinated Organics: A Site Management Tool -
August 13, 2009,11:00AM-1:00PM EDT (15:00-17:00 GMT). This training on the
ITRC Technical and Regulatory Guidance for Enhanced Attenuation: Chlorinated
Organics (EACO-1, 2008) describes the transition (the bridge) between aggressive
remedial actions and MNA and vise versa. Enhanced attenuation (EA) is the application
of technologies that minimize energy input and are sustainable in order to reduce
contaminant loading and/or increase the attenuation capacity of a contaminated plume
to progress sites towards established remedial objectives. Contaminant loading and
attenuation capacity are fundamental to sound decisions for remediation of groundwater
contamination. This training explains how a decision framework which, when followed,
allows for a smooth transition between more aggressive remedial technologies to
sustainable remedial alternatives and eventually to Monitored Natural Attenuation. This
training will demonstrate how this decision framework allows regulators and
practitioners to integrate Enhanced Attenuation into the remedial decision process. For
more information and to register, see http://www.itrcweb.ora or http://ciu-in.ora/iive .

Collaborative Research on Environmental Toxicants in Rapidly Developing
Settlements of the U.S.-Mexico Border - September 16, 2009, 2:00PM-3:00PM EDT
(18:00-19:00 GMT). This project aims to improve environmental public health in the
San Diego-Tijuana city-region. The objective is twofold: (1) develop new
watershed-based strategies/models that can help the National Institute of
Environmental Health Sciences (NIEHS) address Global Environmental Health (GEH),
and (2) share the science and technology contributions of UCSD's Superfund Basic

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Research Program (SBRP) with urban-regional planning scholars, educators and
professionals who are struggling to better understand how problems of the built
environment, land use and pollution impact environmental public health. For more
information and to register, see http://ciu-in.ora/iive .

> New Documents and Web Resources

Summary of Key Existing EPA CERCLA Policies for Groundwater Restoration
(OSWER Directive 9283. 1-33). This Directive provides a compilation of some key
existing EPA groundwater policies to assist EPA Regions in making groundwater
restoration decisions pursuant to the Comprehensive Environmental Response,
Compensation, and Liability Act (CERCLA) and the National Contingency Plan (NCP)
(June 2009, 11 pages). View or download at

http://www.epa,aov/superfund/health/conmedia/awdocs/pdfs/9283 1-33.pdf .

Technology News and Trends (EPA 542-N-09-004). This issue provides selected
updates on pilot projects and treatability studies described in past issues. Some
technologies moved toward full-scale application at the study sites, while others were
supplemented or replaced by one or more technologies, such as injections of vegetable
oil or sodium lactate, soil mixing with zero valent iron, air sparging, and mulch reactive
barriers (July 2009, 6 pages). View or download at http://ciu-in.ora/techpubs.htm .

Air Force Center for Engineering and the Environment (AFCEE): Sustainable
Remediation Web Site. This web site contains information on the drivers for
sustainable remediation, why it is important, current regulatory, state, and global
initiatives in this area; advantages of sustainable remediation, information on how
sustainable remediation concepts can be integrated into an environmental restoration
project, and Air Force applications of green and sustainable remediation as well as links
to other resources. It also contains the Sustainable Remediation Tool (SRT), which is
free and available to all. More information at

http://www.afcee.af.mil/resources/technoloavtransfer/proaramsandinitiatives/sustainableremediation/ .

EUGRIS Corner. New Documents on EUGRIS, the platform for European
contaminated soil and water information. More than 43 resources, events projects and
news items were added to EUGRIS 1 - 24 July, 2009. 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 reports were featured on EUGRIS:

Sustainable Remediation White Paper, 2009, Integrating Sustainable Principles,
Practices, and Metrics Into Remediation Projects. The Sustainable Remediation
Forum (SURF) White Paper communicates SURF members thoughts on
incorporating sustainability principles into environmental remediation. Large
remediation projects can consume significant amounts of energy and emit large
quantities of greenhouse gases. Site owners and local communities are increasingly
knowledgeable about these sustainable remediation issues. In this paper, sustainable
remediation is broadly defined as a remedy or a combination of remedies whose net
benefit on human health and the environment is maximized through the judicious use

Of limited resources. View or download at http://www.sustainableremediation.org/librarv/issue-papers/ .

Environment Agency, 2009, TOX: Contaminants in soil: updated collation of
toxicological data and intake values for humans: Cadmium. This report, one of a
number on the assessment of risks to human health from contaminants in soil, presents
key data and expert opinions on the toxicology and intake of cadmium. It provides an
update to an earlier report by the Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs

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(Defra) and the Environment Agency published in March 2002. The report is based on
findings identified in a series of literature searches, the latest of which was undertaken
in January 2009. These findings, together with evaluations of national, European and
international expert groups, are used to recommend Health Criteria Values (HCVs) and
to estimate mean daily intakes (MDIs) for cadmium in the UK. View or download at

http://www,environment-aaencv,gov,uk/static/documents/Research/SCHQ0709BQRQ-E-E,pdf .

Environment Agency, 2009, TOX: Contaminants in soil: updated collation of
toxicological data and intake values for humans: Phenol. This report, one of a
number on the assessment of risks to human health from contaminants in soil, presents
key data and expert opinions on the toxicology and intake of phenol. It provides an
update to a report by the Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs (Defra)
and the Environment Agency published in October 2003. The report is based on
findings from a series of literature searches, the latest of which was undertaken in
November 2008. These findings together with evaluations of national, European and
international expert groups are used to recommend Health Criteria Values (HCVs) and
estimate mean daily intakes (MDIs) for phenol in the UK. View or download at

http://www,environment-agencv,gov,uk/static/documents/Research/SCHQ0709BQRP-E-E,pdf .

> Conferences and Symposia

Multi-Agency Radiological Laboratory Analytical Protocols (MARLAP): New
Practical Training on MARLAP Part I, Philadelphia, PA, August 18-20, 2009.

MARLAP Part I is intended for planners and managers of radioanalytical projects and
laboratory personnel who support them. Part I provides the basic framework of the
directed planning process, including project planning, key issues to be considered
during the development of analytical protocol specifications, developing measurement
quality objectives, understanding the qualitative and quantitative components of method
uncertainty, project planning documents and their significance, obtaining laboratory
services, selecting and applying analytical methods, evaluating methods and
laboratories, verifying and validating radiochemical data, and assessing data quality.
This three-day course will cover all aspects of radiochemical project planning and will
provide practical examples, exercises, and case studies. The course will conclude with
a comprehensive exercise where participants will apply what they learned to evaluate
indoor and ambient air quality following the release of Am-241 from a radiological
dispersion device (RDD, or "dirty bomb").For more information and to register, see

http://www.trainex.org/marlap .

Environmental Measurement Symposium, San Antonio, TX, August 10-14, 2009.

The Environmental Measurement Symposium, for the third year, is the combined
meetings of the National Environmental Monitoring Conference (NEMC) and the Forum
on Laboratory Accreditation (the Forum). The NEMC brings together scientists and
managers from federal and state agencies, the regulated community, and laboratory
and engineering support communities. It includes technical sessions, training courses,
exhibits, and networking opportunities. The Forum consists of meetings of a number of
committees of The NELAC Institute (TNI) and mentor sessions targeted to folks wanting
to know more about accreditation. The 2009 Symposium will include keynote speakers
on the San Antonio River Authority, Developmental Lifecycle of Commercial Laboratory
Instrumentation, Pharmaceuticals in Water, and Health Effects of Exposure to Metallic
Species. There will be technical breakout sessions that cover such topics as innovative
approaches for analyzing conventional and emerging pollutants; air methods;
contaminated sediments; data usability; inorganic and organic methods; international
issues in monitoring; and others. There will be two featured plenary sessions on
Wednesday that cover a global perspective on the environmental landscape and

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nanotechnology. For more information, please visit http://www.nemc.us or

http://www.nelac-institute.ora .

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
93 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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