Superfund Sites in Reuse in South Dakota
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Ellsworth Air Force Base
The 4,858-acre Ellsworth Air Force Base (EAFB) Superfund site is an active military base located in Meade County and Pennington County, South Dakota. The base includes runways, airfields, munitions storage, industrial facilities, recreational fields and residential housing. Military and industrial processes contaminated the site with hazardous substances such as solvents and jet fuels. The EPA added the site to the National Priorities List (NPL) in 1990. The U.S. Air Force, the EPA, and the State of South Dakota worked as partners to clean up EAFB. Cleanup activities included ground water pumping and treatment, installation of landfill caps, soil excavation and natural attenuation of contaminated soil. The U.S. Air Force also ended use of on-site wells and now relies solely on the municipal water supply. Remedy construction reached completion in 1999 and site monitoring continues. The EAFB remained an active military base for the 28th Bombardment Wing (B-1B bombers) throughout the cleanup process. In addition, on-site renewable energy projects, such as a solar panel array and geothermal energy systems, generate up to 38 kilowatts of power for the EAFB.
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Whitewood Creek
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Williams Pipe Line Co. Disposal Pit
The 52-acre Williams Pipe Line Co. Disposal Pit Superfund site is located in Sioux Falls, South Dakota. The Great Lakes Pipeline company constructed a facility at the site and began operations in the early 1940s. Bulk quantities of liquid fertilizers as well as petroleum products were stored and conveyed at the facility including fuel oil, diesel fuel, unleaded gasoline, aviation gasoline and jet fuel. Tanks and pipe racks moved petroleum fuel to the loading racks where delivery vehicles were filled. Constructed in 1945, a burn pond on site collected stormwater runnoff, which was often contaminated with spilled materials from various areas of the site. Until 1987, site operators periodically burned off petroleum products that accumulated on the pond. In 1966, Williams Pipe Line Company purchased the site. An unlined disposal pit on the site accepted liquid fertilizers and the site housed fuel tanks for delivery trucks until 1988. EPA added the site to the Superfund program’s National Priorities List (NPL) in 1990. Cleanup activities included capturing contaminated water and monitoring groundwater. After meeting cleanup goals, EPA deleted the site from the NPL in 1999. The site property remains in continued industrial use. The Williams Pipe Line Terminal (now Magellan Pipeline Company) houses 42 aboveground petroleum storage tanks, a fuel loading area, garages and an administration building on site.
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