IONIA COUNTY
IONIA
Congressional District # 03
IONIA CITY LANDFILL
EPA ID# MID980794416Last Updated: April, 2008
Site Description
The Ionia City Landfill is a closed 20-acre landfill in the city of Ionia, Ionia County, Michigan. The site is located in the flood plain of the Grand River and operated from the mid-1930s, until it closed in 1968 or 1969. During operation mixed residential and industrial wastes, including drummed liquids and solids, were dumped and burned. In 1981, the Michigan Department of Natural Resources confirmed the presence of volatile organic compounds (VOCs) in groundwater. Samples of drummed wastes revealed the presence of paint wastes and spent solvents. The Remedial Investigation, completed in 1989, identified a one-quarter acre area in the northern portion of the site, containing approximately 6,000 cubic yards of drummed wastes and contaminated soils. Approximately 6,000 people live within one mile of the site.Site Responsibility
This site is being addressed through federal and potentially responsible parties' actions.Threats and Contaminants
Contaminants detected, included methylene chloride, 1,1,1-trichloroethane, trichloroethene, toluene, styrene, and lead. A plume of contaminated groundwater, containing high concentrations of vinyl chloride, methylene chloride, cis-1,2-dichloroethene, trichloroethene, and other VOCs, has been defined in the vicinity of the drum disposal area. Contaminated groundwater, containing lower levels of VOCs, extends to the Grand River which is located immediately south of the site and approximately one-third mile from the area of buried drums. Analyses of surface water and sediment samples from the Grand River have shown no contamination; however, VOC contamination has been detected in a small intermittent stream that abuts the eastern boundary of the site. No drinking water supplies are impacted or threatened by groundwater contamination at the site.Cleanup Progress
In 1984, the city removed and disposed of exposed drums under the terms of an Unilateral Administrative Order (UAO). Following the issuance of a Record of Decision (ROD) in 1989, a Consent Decree (CD) was entered in 1990, whereby the potentially responsible parties (PRPs) would utilize in-situ vitrification to remediate the area of drummed wastes and contaminated soils in the northern portion of the site; however, due to numerous delays the remedy was never implemented. As a result of worsening groundwater conditions at the site, the PRPs removed approximately 7,000 cubic yards of bulk waste, drums, and contaminated soil in 1994 under the terms of a negotiated Consent Order. In 1995, a second Consent Order was negotiated under which the PRPs implemented a groundwater pump and treatment system to contain the higher concentrations of VOCs in groundwater. This work was undertaken as a removal action. Construction of the extraction and treatment system was completed in November 1997 and is fully operational. The system will operate for an undetermined number of years until the plume has been fully captured and no longer poses a risk.A ROD was signed for this site on September 28, 2000. The ROD calls for the continued operation of the groundwater pump and treatment system (air stripper) to capture and remove VOCs within the 500ug/L total VOC isoplath. Long-term monitoring is also required for those contaminants outside the influence of the pump and treatment (P&T)system. A CD to carry out the continued operation and maintenance of the pump and treatment system and long-term monitoring was signed by the PRPs on November 8, 2001. A Vertical Aquifer Sampling Field Study was conducted during November and December 2002 to determine the extent and distribution of VOCs. In October 2003, the treatment portion of the P&T System was shut-down, because contaminant levels were below city of Ionia Waste Water Treatment Plant (WWTP) cleanup levels.
Based upon data collected over the past several years at the site, it appears that the full extent of the contaminant plume has been delineated and that monitored natural attenuation (MNA) is reducing the some, if not all, of the remaining contamination. An upcoming MNA report to be received by the USEPA will determine the exact extent that MNA is working across the site and what the next steps for the site will be, taking into account the current pump and treat system and the captured plume.
Contacts
Remedial Project Manager, U.S. EPAdemaree collier (collier.demaree@epa.gov)
(312) 886-0214
Community Involvement Coordinator, U.S. EPA
bob paulson
(312) 886-0272
Aliases
IONIA CITY LDFL
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