United States Environmental Protection Agency
Region V
POLLUTION REPORT



Date:
Friday, September 25, 2009
From:
Bradley Benning, OSC

Subject: 

Ongoing Activity
Midwest Metallics Site
7955 West 59th Street, Summit, IL
Latitude: 41.7775000
Longitude: -87.8203000


POLREP No.:
18
Site #:
B5J2
Reporting Period:
9/14/09 to 9/25/09
D.O. #:
0031
Start Date:
11/14/2005
Response Authority:
CERCLA
Mob Date:
6/15/2009
Response Type:
Time-Critical
Demob Date:
 
NPL Status:
Non NPL
Completion Date:
 
Incident Category:
Removal Action
CERCLIS ID #:
ILD054348974
Contract #
30228-0031
RCRIS ID #:
 

Site Description

The Site is located at 7955 West 59th Street in the City of Summit, Cook County, Illinois.  Approximately 23 acres in size, the Site is located 10 miles southwest of Chicago, Illinois.  The Site is located in the west-central section of Summit, and has  the geographic coordinates of latitude 41.46.39 N, longitude 87.49.13 W.  The Site is bordered by an industrial complex and 59th Street to the north; by railroad tracks and an automobile junkyard to the east; and by railroad tracks and railroad yard to the south and west.  Although the Site is located in an industrial neighborhood, there is significant residential development less than 1000 feet to the southeast of the site.

The Site previously operated as a scrap metal processing/recycling facility for more than 20 years.  The scrap metal shredder was utilized for the processing of scrap metal articles, such as automobile hulks and light iron.  The shredding process facilitates separation of ferrous and nonferrous metals from nonmetallic materials contained in the feed material; after separation, the remaining material is commonly referred to as shredder residue.  Shredder residues consist predominantly of nonmetallic solid material, including plastic, glass, rubber, soil, carpet and fabric.  It is an unconsolidated, heterogeneous solid, medium to dark brown in color and typically exhibiting a slight, musty odor.

Key Site features include the main ASR pile, two sets of abandoned railroad tracks, the former materials processing/shredder area, a surface water impoundment located along the northern edge of the Site, and two office/garage buildings currently being leased to trucking companies.  The main ASR pile extends along the Site’s eastern border in a north-northeast/south-southwest direction and measures approximately 875 feet along its longest axis.  The pile ranges in height from 30 to 70 feet above ground surfaces and in width from 125 to 250 feet.  Two separate  operations are active at the Site.  These companies have leased discrete areas in the west-central and northeastern sections of the Site to conduct their operations.  Generally, ground elevations increase by five to 10 feet from north to south, with drainage patterns to the north and northeast.  Water and/or leachate from the ASR pile was observed accumulating along the east border and flowing off the Site toward the adjacent automobile junkyard.  Other small piles of ASR are located throughout the Site, and many of the berms on Site are constructed of ASR material.  

A Removal Site Assessment was conducted on March 15, 2000, to determine the extent of the automobile shredder residue (“ASR”) previously observed at the Site, and to obtain additional analytical data to warrant a removal action.  Samples of the ASR were collected from various locations throughout the Site.  Eleven samples were collected at 200 foot intervals along the base of the large pile, and eight samples were collected on the top of the pile.  Eight surface samples, a sediment sample and one water sample were also collected.  The samples were analyzed for Total lead, TCLP metals, and PCBs.  The results identified total lead levels ranging from 20.6 to 180,000  ppm, TCLP lead levels of 0.283 to 94.1ppm, and PCBs from 7.6 to 217.7 ppm.  The ASR appears to cover an area in excess of 20 acres with depths ranging from one to 10 feet. The largest volume of ASR is located in the pile along the eastern perimeter and is estimated to contain 350,000 cubic yards.  In addition to the ASR, the Site allegedly has four underground fuel storage tanks which probably contained diesel fuel for the Site vehicles.  The condition and/or possible contamination from these tanks were not addressed during the initial site assessment activities.  These potential fuel tanks are outside the scope of this removal action.


Current Activities

This is the initiation of the next phase of action to consolidate the ASR pile for future capping.  On 6/15/09, Environmental Quality Management (EQM) mobilized to the site to begin work to consolidate the current pile into an area that will be the final footprint of the pile prior to capping.  The main work will be to move the southern pile off of property currently owned by a third party, and to pull material back from the site perimeter to allow for cover and drainage canals.  A detention pond is planned for the northwest corner of the site.

Final grading was completed by 9/18/09, and cover operations with about six inches of limestone screenings started on 9/21/09.  The limestone screenings are spread out then compacted with a vibratory drum roller.  Currently about 50% of the site has been covered.

The east perimeter has been flagged and a temporary chain link fence will be installed.

One 55gal. drum and several 5 gal. containers of oil left on the property are being consolidated for sampling and disposal at a recycling/blending facility.

ERRS has received bids on lead treatment chemicals based on the possibility that the development plan will go through and EPA will use its remaining funding to treat and/or dispose of a limited amount of ASR.


Planned Removal Actions

Site mobilization and setup. - Completed

Consolidation of numerous small ASR piles into the final footprint area. - Completed

Install drainage channels and detention pond. - ongoing

Reshape/Reconfigure pile to design standards. - completed

Temporary cover with 6" of limestone screenings - ongoing

Replace perimeter fencing along east boundary. - ongoing

Demobilization.


Next Steps

Complete drainage swales along north and east perimeter.

Install fencing along east perimeter.

Maintain dust control measures as needed.

Continue to apply 6" of limestone screenings as temporary cover.

Maintain site security.

Demobilization from site to allow a re-development plan to possibly conduct off-site disposal of the ASR and remediate remaining hot spots on site.

Return to site by March 1, 2010, and complete final cover if development plan is not viable.


Key Issues

Determining future status of Parcel 7.

Confirming ownership of all parcels associated with the site.

A re-development plan is in the works that would address the ASR pile and residual contamination on the site property.  If successful, the ASR pile would be treated for lead and shipped to a TSCA approved landfill for disposal.  Additional areas on the site that have residual ASR contamination would also be remediated, and the property would have some type of industrial development.  The Agency has proposed a March 1, 2010 deadline for this development plan to be finalized and an AOC signed with the Agency to initiate the removal work plan.  Failure to meet the deadline would result in the Agency continuing with the planned  capping option.


response.epa.gov/midwestmetallics