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EPA orders Raytheon, Air Force to clean up contaminated groundwater at Tucson Airport Superfund Site


WEBWIRE

SAN FRANCISCO – The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency today ordered the Raytheon Company and the U.S. Air Force to clean up a migrating plume of contaminated groundwater at the Tucson International Airport Area Superfund Site.


Under the order, Raytheon, formerly Hughes Aircraft, and the U.S. Air Force are required to treat two solvents, trichloroethylene (TCE) and 1,4-dioxane (DX), in groundwater coming from the 1,365-acre Air Force Plant 44 facility at the southern end of the Superfund site.

The extraction and treatment system at the Air Force Plant 44 is not effectively containing the contaminated groundwater plume from the facility, allowing TCE and DX to migrate north and into a drinking water treatment plant operated by the city of Tucson. The treatment plant, located at the northern end of the plume, serves approximately 50,000 Tucson residents. The EPA’s order requires Raytheon and the USAF to install and operate an advanced oxidation process system to treat the solvents in the plume. Currently, the city-operated drinking water plant treats TCE and is able to safely blend DX so that the water is safe to drink.
“Ensuring the safety of our drinking water is one of the EPA’s top priorities,” said Alexis Strauss, the EPA’s Water Division director for the Pacific Southwest region. “We are focused on reducing the impact of past and present contamination, and ensuring Tucson will continue to have a clean drinking water source while protecting groundwater.”

Sampling data from 2006 detected TCE in groundwater as high as 3,400 parts per billion and DX up to 298 parts per billion. The company and the Air Force are required to treat contaminated groundwater to below 5 parts per billion for TCE and 3 parts per billion for DX.

Raytheon and the Air Force face penalties of up to $32,500 per day, per violation if they fail to comply with the order.

The Tucson International Airport Area Superfund Site, listed in 1983, has a 50-year history of chemical contamination due to its aircraft and electronics facilities and unlined landfills. Raytheon used and disposed of metals, chlorinated solvents and other substances at the Air Force Plant 44 facility since 1951.

The company used TCE in several degreasers and as a general-purpose solvent from the 1950s through the mid-1970s. As part of its operations, Raytheon used DX as a stabilizer to enhance the life of the solvent bath for degreasing manufactured parts.

The company collected waste solvents from the manufacturing area and disposed of them in drums, which were then put into uncontrolled landfills, and also discharged liquid solvent wastes into unlined drainage channels and pits at the facility. The waste solvents and other substances migrated from disposal areas into groundwater.

TCE, a volatile organic compound, is a non-flammable liquid widely used in the past as an industrial solvent. The EPA considers TCE a probable human carcinogen, which affects the liver, kidney, immune and endocrine systems, and DX a probable human carcinogen.

The EPA is currently working with several federal organizations, including the Air Force at Plant 44, to complete interagency agreements, also known as federal facility agreements, that establish federal Superfund cleanup and long-term operations and maintenance procedures at all National Priority List sites. To date, the agency has signed 135 of these enforceable agreements, and seeks to establish enforceable arrangements for the remaining 16 sites without agreements.



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