Source: https://fortress.wa.gov/ecy/gsp/Sitepage.aspx?csid=12125
Timestamp: 2019-04-26 15:38:38+00:00

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The Washington Department of Ecology (Ecology) Toxics Cleanup Program is deeply invested in investigating and cleaning up the upper Columbia River Valley and Lake Roosevelt communities. Our efforts cross several scientific and legal endeavors, all with the intent of improving health protection and repairing the environment. Northeast Washington has a proud history of metal ore smelting, but that history also left a complex legacy of contamination.
Tribal, federal, and local government organizations are addressing long-term concerns over contamination. Ecology represents Washington in working with these organizations on cleanup and community outreach. Washington is also a co-litigant in a federal court case against Teck Resources, Ltd., seeking to affirm liable party responsibility for the metals cleanup and natural resource loss compensation.
Historical photo of the metals smelter in Trail, B.C.
The upper Columbia River/Lake Roosevelt site extends over 150 miles from the U.S.-Canadian border near Northport, Washington, to the Grand Coulee Dam. The site lies within parts of Lincoln, Ferry, and Stevens counties.
Smokestack emissions into the atmosphere, as well as direct waste releases into the Columbia River of slag and liquid effluents from metal smelting, contaminated the river and broad upland areas near the Canadian-U.S. border. Slag is an angular, somewhat glassy, industrial waste containing hazardous substances including zinc, lead, copper, and other metals.
The Teck Trail smelter, located less than 10 miles across the border in Trail, British Columbia (B.C.), on the banks of the Columbia River, is the main contaminant source. Since 1896, Teck Metals Ltd. and its predecessors (Cominco and others) have continuously operated the smelter in Trail. Smaller contributions near Northport, Washington, also came from the now-closed Le Roi smelter.
Unnaturally high levels of metals, including lead and arsenic, are found in topsoil in the upper Columbia River Valley near the U.S.-Canadian border. When present, the concentrations of metals commonly observed in the upper Columbia River Valley can be a health concern. Health risks can be greatly reduced if managed properly.
Contact Ecology (right column), or visit our Dirt Alert website, for simple actions that can help you and your family avoid potential exposure to metals in soil.
Download Dirt Alert: Soil Safety & Sampling Guidance for People Concerned about Arsenic & Lead.
Learn about information disclosure requirements for buying or selling real estate.
Search our smelter plume map to see if your property is within the potentially affected area.
The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) is directing topsoil testing efforts and cleaning up residential properties most at risk in the upper Columbia River Valley.
Learn more on EPA's Upper Columbia River Remedial Investigation & Feasibility Study website.
Contact Monica Tonel (right column), EPA project manager, to see if your property has been sampled in the past or if you have concerns about your property.
The EPA is leading several studies to assess human and ecological risks and to understand the extent of contamination in the river and reservoir. This has included recreational beach areas, water quality, sediments, and fish and other aquatic life.
Those studies demonstrate, with specific exceptions, that the beaches and water are safe for recreation on the river and in the National Recreation Area.
Several species of game fish have been tested, and some species have unnaturally high concentrations of certain contaminants.
Follow the Washington Department of Health’s fish advisory for the upper Columbia River and Lake Roosevelt to guide the frequency and amount of fish consumed to protect you and your family.
Learn more and get involved by visiting the Lake Roosevelt Forum website.
Two main investigations focusing on the upper Columbia River site are led by separate entities, each with specific objectives. The investigations are a Remedial Investigation and Feasibility Study (RI/FS) and a Natural Resource Damage Assessment (NRDA).
The EPA is overseeing the RI/FS. The purpose of the RI is to identify the contaminants, their locations, and human health and environmental risks. The FS will be developed later and offer cleanup options to address contaminants found during the RI.
In 2006, Teck American, Inc., entered into an agreement with the U.S. Department of Justice and the EPA to fund the RI/FS from the U.S.-Canadian border to Grand Coulee Dam and in surrounding areas. Teck does most the field investigation work with oversight by the EPA. The EPA is responsible for assessing human health risk.
Visit EPA’s Upper Columbia River Site Study website, Teck’s Upper Columbia River Project website, and the Lake Roosevelt Forum website for more information.
Washington State (represented by Ecology), Confederated Tribes of the Colville Reservation, U.S. Department of Interior, and Spokane Tribe of Indians, collectively referred to as the Upper Columbia River Trustee Council (the Trustees), are conducting the NRDA. The purpose of NRDA is to determine past and ongoing natural resource injuries with the goal of restoring or replacing the injured resources for the public.
The Trustees are currently assessing injuries and then damages related to the public’s loss of natural resources. The goal is to achieve compensation with parties responsible for the contamination to create a restoration fund for injured natural resources.
Learn more about Ecology's NRDA projects.
Ecology has completed seven independent studies evaluating smelter contamination in northeastern Washington that have guided or informed EPA and NRDA studies.
In 2007, Ecology sampled sediments in Lake Roosevelt and the upper Columbia River, upstream of the Highway 395 Bridge near Kettle Falls. Results affirmed widespread fine sediment and industrial slag contamination extending to near the international border.
In 2010 and 2011, Ecology studied northeast Washington freshwater sediments and fish to evaluate area metals and document natural background conditions. Sediments were tested from 14 lakes and a stream, and fish tissues were collected from 13 lakes and a stream. The results identified contamination in the area of the upper Columbia River Valley.
In 2012, Ecology gathered sediment samples from 10 lakes and wetlands along the upper Columbia River Valley to assess metals concentrations. Samples were analyzed for a number of heavy metals associated with smelter stack emissions. Smelter-caused metals enrichment was documented in several lakes along the Valley.
Ecology evaluated native topsoil in non-residential, upland areas within two miles of the U.S.-Canadian border in fall 2012. The sampling area covered about 15 to 20 square miles, reaching as far as 4 miles east and 6.5 miles west of the Columbia River in Stevens County. Over 120 soil samples were tested for various metals, including lead, arsenic, zinc, cadmium and mercury. The study definitively established the presence of high metals concentrations in area topsoil, leading to the follow-on studies by the EPA that have resulted in residential yard cleanups now underway.
Also in 2012, Ecology issued an independent evaluation of sediment toxicity testing the EPA did in 2005. EPA’s sampling documented major slag accumulation and metal contamination areas, particularly in the upper-most portions of Lake Roosevelt and the riverine reaches near the U.S.-Canadian border. Ecology’s analysis affirmed that sediments in the upper Columbia River are primarily contaminated by smelter-related metals in slag. Adverse effects on survival, growth, biomass, and reproduction of aquatic invertebrates are associated with exposure to UCR sediments. The work also identified data gaps and developed methods for advancing further toxicity testing and assessment.
Ecology also sponsored a study with U.S. Geological Survey scientists to evaluate the effects of metals-contaminated sediments on benthic invertebrates in the river using five sampling locations. Benthic invertebrates, meaning they do not have backbones, live in and on the bottom of water bodies and are an important food source in aquatic environments. Two types, amphipods and midges, were assessed in this study. These aquatic creatures had toxic responses to metals, particularly copper, in slag-impacted sediments.
Ecology asked our Air Quality Program specialists to use existing air monitoring data to evaluate conditions in the upper Columbia River valley and assess whether more air monitoring is needed. Based on the assessment, we recommend additional air monitoring in the upper Columbia River valley.
Findings from the Ecology studies confirmed elevated levels of metals in topsoil and sediments in parts of the upper Columbia River Valley and nearby lakes and wetlands. The studies also traced most of these metals to past smelter emissions in Trail, B.C.
Prior to cleanup, the beach sand was granulated slag that settled there over many decades of discharges into the river from the Teck smelter in Trail, B.C. Ecology concluded that removing slag from Black Sand Beach would get the waste out of the river, protect the ecological environment, the health of the river, and benefit recreationalists.
In 2010, under a voluntary agreement between Ecology and Teck, contractors removed about 9,100 tons (6,300 cubic yards) of sand contaminated with granulated slag from the beach. Clean sand and gravel was used to establish the recreational beach, and the slag was hauled to Teck’s recycling facility near Waneta, B.C.
The public provided important input during the project that helped guide several technical decisions affecting the cleanup. The contractor hired local companies for about 50 percent of the project work, bringing positive economic impact to the community.
In 2004, the original Plaintiffs in this suit, Joseph Pakootas and Donald R. Michel (collectively Pakootas), filed a complaint in the U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Washington under the citizens’ suit provision of the federal Comprehensive Response Compensation and Liability Act (CERCLA). CERCLA (often called Superfund) makes certain parties liable for costs and damages associated with releases of hazardous substances. The complaint asked the district court for declaratory and injunctive relief, including enforcing EPA's Order against Teck. Washington State quickly filed a Complaint in Intervention, which was granted. The State and CCT complaints have been amended during the litigation to include NRDA, cost recovery, and air pathway liability.
Securing Teck’s U.S. legal liability for legacy pollution caused by air emissions pollution became procedurally stalled in 2016 due to a 9th Circuit decision. The decision was based on a highly nuanced legal interpretation (not a science-based determination) of the definition of "disposal" in CERCLA, which is also referenced in another federal waste environmental law (the Resource Conservation and Recovery Act).
State and CCT reimbursement of response costs have been awarded or conditionally settled, and in September 2018 the Ninth Circuit Court denied Teck’s appeal, upholding the previous decision that made the company liable for UCR cleanup costs. The NRDA claim phase has yet to begin.
Ecology and Washington Office of the Attorney General staff are available to assist with your questions or information requests.
Based on past requests and interest, we have made some of the expert reports generated during the liability litigations available online. You may download a report by clicking its title below.
Queneau, P.B. 2010. Expert Opinion - Pakootas et al. v. Teck Cominco Metals.
Bierman, V.J. 2010. Expert Report - Waste Transport in Columbia River - Pakootas et al. v. Teck Cominco Metals.
McLean, D.G. 2010. Opinion on the Transport of Metallurgical Slag by the Columbia River, Trail B.C. to International Border. Northwest Hydraulic Consultants.
Quivik, F.L. 2010. History of Mining, Milling, and Smelting in NE Washington. Pakootas et al. v. Teck Cominco Metals, Ltd.
Queneau, P.B. 2011. Expert Opinion – Rebuttal of Higginson. Pakootas et al. v. Teck Cominco Metals.
McLean, D.G. 2011. Opinion on the Transport and Fate of Metallurgical Slag Discharged into the Columbia River. Northwest Hydraulic Consultants.
Stevens, Jennifer. 2011. Expert history report. A Rebuttal Report to: Fredric Quivik, Terence McNulty, Adrian Brown, and Rex Bull.
Vlassopoulos, D. 2011. Rebuttal Report. Pakootas et al. v. Teck Cominco Metals, Ltd.
Queneau, P.B. 2014. Expert Opinion of Paul B. Queneau. Pakootas, et al. v. Teck Cominco Metals Ltd.
Vlassopoulos, D. 2014. Expert Report of Dimitrios Vlassopoulos. Pakootas et al. v. Teck Cominco Metals Ltd.

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