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Site Number: |
B5UJ |
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Contract Number: |
EPS50905 |
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D.O. Number: |
167 |
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Action Memo Date: |
5/13/2010 |
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Response Authority: |
CERCLA |
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Response Type: |
Time-Critical |
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Response Lead: |
EPA |
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Incident Category: |
Removal Action |
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NPL Status: |
Non NPL |
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Operable Unit: |
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Mobilization Date: |
11/8/2011 |
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Start Date: |
11/8/2011 |
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Demob Date: |
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Completion Date: |
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CERCLIS ID: |
INN000510429 |
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RCRIS ID: |
INR000130385 |
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ERNS No.: |
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State Notification: |
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FPN#: |
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Reimbursable Account #: |
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1.1.1 Incident Category
Comprehensive Environmental Response, Compensation, and Liability Act (CERCLA) Incident Category: Groundwater plume site
1.1.2 Site Description
The following sections provide information on the site location, description of threat, and removal assessment results.
1.1.2.1 Location
The site is a Residential Area bounded by West Vermont Street to the south, Holt Road to the east, West Michigan Street to the north, and North Rybolt Avenue to the west in Indianapolis, Marion County, Indiana. The site consists of 23 homes that rely upon private drinking water wells as their only sources of water.
1.1.2.2 Description of Threat
In 2009, the Marion County Public Health Department
(MCPHD) identified homes in the West Vermont-Cossell Road neighborhood that obtained
drinking water from private wells. MCPHD
sampled the wells and detected vinyl chloride in drinking water at three
residences at concentrations above the Removal Management Level (RML) (January 2015) of 1.9 micrograms per liter (µg/L) and Maximum Contaminant Level (MCL) of
2 µg/L in groundwater used as a drinking water source
Vinyl chloride is a hazardous substance, as defined by section 101(14) of CERCLA. According to the Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease Registry (ATSDR), the effects of drinking high levels of vinyl chloride are unknown. However, the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services has determined that vinyl chloride is a known carcinogen. In addition to ingestion of contaminated water, there is potential exposure via inhalation of vinyl chloride vapors from use of contaminated water for cooking, showering, and bathing. Breathing vinyl chloride for long periods of time can result in permanent liver damage, immune reactions, nerve damage, and liver cancer.
1.1.3 Preliminary Removal Assessment/Removal Site Inspection Results
The following section describes the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency's (EPA) assessment activities and previous actions.
November 2009 – February 2010
In November 2009 and February 2010, EPA installed temporary treatment systems in the three residences where vinyl chloride was above the 1998 Removal Action Level (RAL) of 2 µg/L in drinking water. On May 13, 2010, EPA approved an action memorandum to provide water treatment systems for these three residences.
March 2011
In March 2011, EPA’s Superfund Technical Assessment and Response Team (START) contractor prepared a Technical Memorandum that evaluated and summarized information about contamination at the West Vermont Site. The 2011 Technical Memorandum identified three potential sources of contamination for the Residential Area - Allison Transmission, the Genuine Parts facility, and Michigan Plaza. Each of these facilities had releases of PCE and/or TCE into soil and groundwater.
The 2011 Technical Memorandum identified several data gaps that made it difficult to attribute contamination in the Residential Areas to the these facilities. These data gaps included a lack of monitoring wells between the Residential Area and Allison Transmission that were appropriately screened to monitor contaminant migration from Allison Transmission; an insufficient understanding of preferential pathway flow through sewer lines in the vicinity of Michigan Plaza; and a lack of monitoring wells west of Genuine Parts, the Maple Creek Village Apartments, and Michigan Plaza properties, as well as within the Residential Area.
Information about each facility is below.
Allison
Transmission
Allison
Transmission is located at One Allison Way, north and northwest of the
Residential Area. General Motors (GM)
previously operated the facility, and conducted aircraft engine testing,
machining, parts cleaning, and storage. GM is conducting
environmental investigations and remediation at this facility under a Resource
Conservation and Recovery Act (RCRA) corrective action agreement with EPA.
GM
released many hazardous substances, pollutants, or contaminants to the
environment, including polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs); transmission fluid;
and volatile organic compounds (VOC), including tetrachloroethene (PCE) and its degradation
daughter products trichloroethene (TCE), cis-1,2-dichloroethene (cis-1,2-DCE),
trans-1,2-dichloroethene (trans-1,2-DCE), and vinyl chloride. During a 2009 investigation of the Areas of
Interest (AOI), GM discovered that chlorinated solvents contaminated
groundwater at multiple AOIs. Chlorinated solvent contamination from AOI-51, a
former degreaser area, had migrated south toward the West Vermont Site.
GM
installed groundwater monitoring wells and collected soil and groundwater
samples along West Michigan Street north of the Residential Area. Results from these samples indicated that
contamination from AOI-51 and Allison Transmission had not migrated as far
south as West Michigan Street and the Residential Area. However, EPA identified horizontal and
vertical gaps in GM' data. For example,
monitoring
well MW-1103-S3/S4, located on West Michigan Street north to northwest of the
Residential Area, was screened just above bedrock (85 to 95 feet below ground
surface [bgs]). Monitoring well MW-1101-S4, also installed along West Michigan
Street, was screened between 92 and 97 feet bgs. However, because both
monitoring wells were screened in zones deeper than AOI-51 contamination and
deeper than the residential wells, the two wells were not effective for
monitoring contaminant migration from AOI-51.
Therefore, EPA identified a data gap that required additional
investigation.
Genuine
Parts
The Genuine
Parts facility, also known as the Former Allison Plant 10, is located at 700 North Olin
Avenue, northeast of the West Vermont Site. BHT Corporation (BHT) operated the
facility as a carburetor remanufacturing and brake overhaul facility. BHT and its successor, the Genuine Parts Company, owned and operated
the facility from 1956 until 1974. Currently,
the Genuine Parts Company is conducting environmental remediation at
this facility through the Indiana Department of Environmental Management (IDEM) Voluntary Remediation Program (VRP).
In May 2000, Genuine Parts discovered buried drums and waste
on the western portion of the property during installation of remediation
system piping.
Soil and groundwater at the facility were contaminated with chlorinated
VOCs including TCE and breakdown products, such as cis-1,2- DCE, trans-1,2-DCE,
and vinyl chloride; polynuclear aromatic hydrocarbons (PAH); and metals such as
cadmium, chromium, and lead.
Contamination
from Genuine Parts migrated to the south, flowed beneath Little Eagle Creek,
and impacted the Maple Creek Village Apartments (formerly the Michigan Meadows
Apartments). Groundwater results from
January 2002 indicated that a vinyl chloride plume extended south to monitoring
well MW-170D, which is located about 200 feet northeast of the Residential Area. Vinyl chloride concentrations in January 2002
ranged from 1,500 µg/L near Genuine Parts to 80 µg/L in monitoring well
MW-170D. Between 2002 and 2007, no
groundwater data were collected south-southwest of the Maple Creek Village
Apartments, near the Residential Area.
Recent groundwater sampling data shows that the Genuine Parts facility continues to have elevated
concentrations of TCE, cis-1,2-DCE, and vinyl chloride in groundwater on-site and off-site.
Michigan
Plaza
Michigan
Plaza is a strip mall located at 3801-3823 West Michigan Street, northeast of
the West Vermont Site. One of the former
tenants, Accent Cleaners, operated a dry cleaning business, from which
chlorinated solvents were released into the sanitary sewer. Contamination flowed along this preferential
pathway, and impacted soil and groundwater at Michigan Plaza and the Maple
Creek Village Apartments to the north.
From 2007-2015, Aimco and/or its subsidiary, Aimco Michigan
Meadows Holding (AMMH), LLC, conducted work under IDEM’s VRP at Michigan
Plaza. IDEM terminated the Voluntary Remediation Agreement (VRA) with Aimco for the Michigan Plaza Site on June 30, 2015 for failure to take appropriate and timely response actions to address hazardous substances at the site.
Aimco conducted in-situ bioremediation at the facility, which
included injections of CAP18 and CAP18 ME. CAP18 is a vegetable oil product
that can enhance the dechlorination process by anaerobically stimulating
biological processes to transform contaminants such as PCE to ethane or
ethene. CAP18 ME has the addition of
methyl esters to the CAP18 proprietary blend.
Aimco injected 6,506 gallons of CAP18 in August 2007; 1,884 gallons of
CAP18 ME in February 2009; and 2,208 gallons of CAP18 ME and and 70.3 liters of
BAC-9 in July 2013. BAC-9 is an enriched bioaugmentation culture
capable of degrading chlorinated solvents.
Vinyl chloride concentrations increased
significantly after CAP18 injections. Prior
to the CAP18 injections in 2007, there was a low-concentration vinyl chloride
plume at Michigan Plaza. For example, in
groundwater monitoring well MMW-P-06, vinyl chloride increased from non-detect
(ND) (less than 2 µg/L) in February 2007 to 15,600 µg/L in July 2011. Vinyl chloride concentrations
in monitoring well MW-170D, located between Michigan Plaza and the Residential
Area, increased from 105 µg/L in February 2007 to 230 µg/L in June 2008,
following the first CAP18 injection.
According to IDEM, “the aggressive bioremediation effort has
increased [vinyl chloride] concentrations over 1000 times in some locations and
has changed the equilibrium of the aquifer.” The Interstate Technology Regulatory Council
(ITRC) documented that limitations on in-situ
bioremediation included incomplete degradation and the buildup of cis-1,2-DCE
or vinyl chloride, referred to as “stall,” caused by insufficient microbial
populations.
Additionally, ITRC stated that “if receptors are located close to the
source zone, they may be at risk of exposure to incomplete degradation products
(e.g., VC [vinyl chloride]). As such, CAP18
and CAP18 ME injections appear to be the direct cause of increased vinyl
chloride concentrations in groundwater.
In
addition to creating high levels of vinyl chloride, another consequence of
CAP18 injections was the generation of methane in groundwater and soil
gas. At Michigan Plaza, methane has been
detected in groundwater as high as 30,600 µg/L in monitoring well MMW-P-03D. According
to the Protocol for In-Situ Bioremedition of Chlorinated
Solvents Using Edible Oil, methane is a metabolic
byproduct of edible oil injections where strongly reducing conditions exist.
PCE, TCE, DCE, and vinyl chloride concentrations remained high in groundwater
monitoring wells on- and off-site. In May 2014, PCE
was detected at a maximum concentration of 456 µg/L in on-site well
MMW-P-11S. TCE was detected at a maximum
concentration of 16.4 µg/L in off-site well MW-168S. cis-1,2-DCE was detected at a maximum
concentration of 923 µg/L in on-site well MMW-P-10D. Vinyl chloride was detected at concentrations
of 1,160 µg/L in on-site well MMW-P-06; 1,490 µg/L in on-site well MMW-P-10D;
and as high as 269 µg/L in off-site well MMW-20-LA. Additionally, methane was detected in
MMW-P-03D at 28,900 µg/L.
September 2011 – December 2011
On September 26, 2011, EPA approved an action memorandum to
conduct a hydrogeologic assessment to fill data gaps identified in the 2011 Technical Memorandum. In November and
December 2011, EPA activities included:
reviewing historical reports of environmental investigations from the three
potential release sources; drilling and collecting samples at five vertical aquifer sample
(VAS) locations; installing 13 groundwater monitoring wells; gauging 151
groundwater monitoring wells; and sampling 68 groundwater monitoring wells, 4
private drinking water wells, and 5 soil borings. EPA installed 13 nested monitoring wells (MW-WES-01a
to MW-WES-05c) to fill data gaps, including drilling monitoring wells west or
southwest of Genuine Parts and Michigan Plaza along Holt Road; south of the
Residential Area on West Vermont Street; and south of Allison Transmission
along West Michigan Street. The hydrogeologic assessment was detailed in
the Technical Memorandum, Hydrogeological
and Analytical Evaluation, West Vermont Site.
The
bullets below summarize the findings from EPA’s investigation and subsequent
review of information.
Groundwater flow near the Residential Area was to the
south-southwest and was possibly influenced by numerous factors including, but
not limited to, pumping of residential wells.
- Chlorinated solvents were detected in groundwater at Allison Transmission. Contamination
was not detected in monitoring wells between Allison Transmission and the
Residential Area. It appeared that GM's remedial activities reduced chlorinated solvent concentrations and restricted
groundwater plumes to the Allison Transmission property.
- TCE, DCE, and vinyl chloride were detected in several
monitoring wells associated with Genuine Parts. Historically, a
contamination plume migrated south from Genuine Parts toward the Residential
Area. However, contamination was not detected in monitoring wells
or borings between Genuine Parts and the Residential Area during the 2011 investigation.
- Contamination from Genuine Parts migrated south and
co-mingled with a plume from Michigan Plaza that migrated north through the
sanitary sewer onto the Maple Creek Village Apartment property. As such, it was impossible to distinguish
between contamination to attribute it to Genuine Parts or Michigan Plaza.
- Vinyl chloride concentrations increased several orders of
magnitude following aggressive bioremediation at Michigan Plaza. A large chlorinated solvent plume was present
beneath Michigan Plaza; this plume extended off the Michigan Plaza property in
all directions because of releases to leaky sanitary sewers, soil, and groundwater. During EPA’s investigation, vinyl chloride
was detected at a maximum concentration of 10,500 µg/L
in monitoring well MMW-P-06 at the Michigan Plaza facility. DCE and vinyl chloride were detected in
monitoring wells and borings between the Michigan Plaza property and the
Residential Area.
- Vinyl chloride was detected in two samples
collected from drinking water wells in the Residential Area in December 2011, at
concentrations ranging from 4.8 to 26.1 μg/L.
EPA concluded that contamination from Allison Transmission had not affected the
Residential Area. A co-mingled plume from
Genuine Parts and Michigan Plaza contaminated drinking water wells in the
Residential Area. Aggressive bioremediation at Michigan Plaza significantly
increased vinyl chloride concentrations in groundwater.
January 2013
Soil Gas Assessment
EPA and START collected soil gas samples to assess if vapor
intrusion posed a threat to nearby residents. EPA installed 15 soil gas wells between the Potentially Responsible Party (PRP) facilities and the Residential Area and within the Residential Area. Analytical results were compared to November
2011 Vapor Intrusion Screening Levels (VISL) for soil gas using a target risk
for carcinogens of 1x10-4.
At
sample location SG10 in the Residential Area, the PCE concentration was 330
parts per billion by volume (ppbv), which exceeded the VISL of 62 ppbv. TCE was also detected in SG10 at 310 ppbv,
which exceeded the VISL of 4 ppbv.
Based on the analytical results and potential threat to
human health, EPA requested that IDEM require the PRPs to sample sub-slab and
indoor air at residential properties. As
of August 2015, the PRPs have not sampled for vapor intrusion in the Residential Area.
Groundwater
Assessment
In January 2013, EPA installed additional groundwater
monitoring wells to better understand hydrogeology and contaminant migration
from the PRP sites into the Residential Area.
Aimco claimed that an intermediate till unit was a confining layer that prevented
migration from their facility to the Residential Area.
EPA installed three nested well sets west of the Michigan
Plaza property. Each well nest contained
two groundwater monitoring wells, one screened in the sand directly above the
till and one screened in the sand directly beneath the till (WES-6S/D,
WES-8S/D, and WES-9S/D). EPA also
installed a groundwater monitoring well (WES-7) screened beneath the till in
the Residential Area near the most contaminated drinking water well.
During drilling activities, professional geologists examined
soil cores from each boring. Above the
till, EPA identified predominantly sand and gravel with some interbedded silt and
clay. EPA identified the till unit at
approximately 33 to 45 feet bgs. The till was ranged in thickness between 2
and 10 feet. Beneath the intermediate
till unit, EPA identified a sand unit, ranging in thickness from 1 to 9 feet.
EPA and Aimco collected gaging data from EPA’s monitoring wells. Groundwater gaging showed that hydraulic head
in EPA’s nested well sets varied by 0.02 to 0.27 feet.
Analytical data indicated that the lower sand unit was
contaminated with vinyl chloride and cis-1,2-DCE. Vinyl chloride was detected in each of the
seven new wells at concentrations ranging from 3.2 µg/L to 115 µg/L
in wells
screened above and below the till unit.
Additionally, cis-1,2-DCE was detected in groundwater monitoring wells
WES-8S and WES-8D at concentrations of 28.3 and 298 µg/L, respectively.
A U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) Hydrologist, working under
an Interagency Agreement to EPA, reviewed the West Vermont data and concluded that
the till was a poor confining layer. The till was not laterally contiguous and was
absent north of Michigan Plaza’s Source Area C.
Additionally, there was little difference in hydraulic head in wells
screened above and below the till. The
data showed upward and downward vertical movement across the till, which varied
seasonally. Based on this information, EPA
concluded that that the upper and lower sand units were in hydraulic
communication and the till unit was a poor barrier to contaminant migration. This conclusion is further supported by high
concentrations of cis-1,2-DCE and vinyl chloride in the sand beneath the till.
June 2013 – March 2014
EPA began monthly sampling of its groundwater monitoring
well network in June 2013 in advance of a third CAP18 injection at Michigan Plaza in July 2013. Historically, vinyl chloride concentrations
increased several months after each injection.
EPA sampled the wells to determine if there was an increased threat to
residential drinking water wells from byproducts of the injection. EPA sampled wells for VOCs and methane.
During the period from June 2013 to March 2014, EPA detected
vinyl chloride in 13 monitoring wells at a maximum concentration of 151
µg/L. EPA detected cis-1,2-DCE in six
monitoring wells at concentrations as high as 298 µg/L. PCE was detected in monitoring well
MW-WES-01C in June and October 2013 at 6 and 7.4 µg/L, respectively. Methane was detected in 13 monitoring wells
at a maximum concentration of 551 µg/L in MW-WES-01C in November 2011. Methane and chlorinated solvent detections
were in monitoring wells east or northeast of the Residential Area or within
the Residential Area.
October - November 2014
EPA collected groundwater samples in October 2014 to provide
data for a Documentation Record. EPA
sampled concurrently with the PRPs to develop a site-wide synoptic picture of
groundwater conditions. Additionally,
EPA installed two background monitoring wells (MW-WVS-10 and MW-WVS-11) at Olin
Park in November 2014, upgradient of both Genuine Parts and Michigan
Plaza. EPA subsequently sampled both
wells.
A 3-D model prepared for EPA show a small, deep plume migrating south from Genuine Parts
and a high-concentration, laterally-extensive plume migrating in all directions
from Michigan Plaza. The October 2014
data supports EPA’s previous conclusions that a co-mingled groundwater plume
from Genuine Parts and Michigan Plaza is impacting residential drinking water
wells. The model also shows a lack of monitoring wells deep in the aquifer at the Genuine Parts facility, Maple Creek Village Apartments, and the Michigan Plaza facility.
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