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DIVISION INFORMATION Statutes, Regulations and Regulations Development Regulated Facilities and Sites Environmental Covenants and Use Restrictions |
Hazardous Materials and Waste Management Division
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| Site Summary | Site Remediation |
| Asarco Globe 1993 Record of Decision | |
| Asarco Globe Five-Year Review | |
| Proposed Plan for Amended Record of Decision | |
| Proposed Plan to Amend Record of Decision Fact Sheet | |
For questions or comments on the ASARCO Globe Plant Site, contact:
Fonda Apostolopoulos
State Project Manager
(303) 692-3411
(888) 569-1831 ext 3411 toll-free
Warren Smith
State Community Involvement Coordinator
(303) 692-3373
(888) 569-1831 ext 3373 toll-free
or
Armando Saenz, EPA
Remedial Project Manager
(303) 312-6559
The 89-acre Globe Plant is a high purity metals refining facility located at 51st and Washington Avenue, in North Denver and South Adams County. The community which surrounds the Globe Plant includes approximately 2,000 residents.
The Globe Plant has been the processing site for various heavy metals since the 1880s. The plant has produced gold and silver, operated as a lead smelter, refined arsenic, and began cadmium refining in 1926 which continued until June 1993. The plant currently produces litharge (lead oxide), bismuth oxide, test lead, and refines high purity metals. The State of Colorado filed a Natural Resources Damages suit in 1983 under CERCLA (Comprehensive Environmental Response, Compensation and Liability Act), the federal Superfund law. A remedy for the site was selected and a consent decree was signed in 1993.
The chemicals of concern are the metals: cadmium, arsenic, lead, and zinc.
Residents may be exposed to metals through ingestion of contaminated soil particles or by inhalation of re-suspended or airborne particles. The site contains a groundwater contaminant plume flowing off the plant site to the northeast, an unlined waste pile which contributes to groundwater contamination, and soil contaminated with arsenic, cadmium and lead both on and off the plant property.
The Globe area medical monitoring results from 1994 to 1999 indicate no community-wide evidence of health effects from the Globe Plant. For those five years, 8 children (6.0%) under age 7 had blood lead levels greater than or equal to 10 ug/dL (the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has established 10 ug/dL as the blood lead level of concern for children); 6% of all participants had elevated blood cadmium results; and nearly 3% of all participants had elevated urine cadmium results. Long-term residents who have lived for more than 30 years in the Globe area are approximately four times more likely to have an elevated urine cadmium test result. The rate of having an elevated urine cadmium test result is not higher in smokers than non-smokers. Of the 250 Globe area residents tested before and after cleanup of their yards, all but four showed no clinically significant increase in metal exposure. A 1995 Colorado Department of Public Health and Environment cancer study found that for areas near the Globe Plant, the number of observed cancer cases for all cancers studied was similar overall to the number expected based on the cancer rates in the Denver Metro area. The cancer study analyzed cancers with known association with arsenic, cadmium and lead exposure, as well as the number of all types of cancer combined that are reported to the Colorado Central Cancer Registry.
The Consent Decree calls for remedies for the 4 areas of contamination related to the plant, reimbursement of State costs, payment of natural resource damages, and medical monitoring. The remedies include measures to reduce toxic air emissions from the Asarco Globe Plant, provide monitoring of emissions from the Plant, reduce contamination of and treat groundwater, clean ditches around Plant grounds, close a hazardous waste pile on the Plant site, sample community soils (residential, commercial and public properties) and cleanup soils which exceed contamination levels of health concern. The off-plant soils remedy calls for removal and replacement of the top 12 inches of soil, and 18 inches in vegetable garden soils, where metals concentrations exceed 73 parts per million (ppm) cadmium, 500 ppm lead or 70 ppm arsenic. Residents wee given the option to have their property cleaned if soils contain more than the average background for arsenic at 28 ppm. An additional action level of 500 ppm for zinc applies to garden soils.
Community soil remediation construction activities have been completed at over 550 residential properties, parks and vacant lots. The remediation of the Sedimentation Pond, Industrial Drainage Ditch and Retention Ponds has been completed. Work has been completed installing a terrace drain ground water collection system. The hazardous waste pile (FNP) remains open to accommodate toxicity characteristic soils that lie within the area of contamination.
During the residential remediation, medical monitoring was provided to over 1,500 participants. The medical monitoring program for Globe area residents and workers ended in 2004. Biological testing for lead, cadmium and arsenic, and indicators of renal damage was available for the duration of site remediation. Community outreach and educational services are still available to area residents.
EPA
ASARCO Globe Plant Web Site
Agency
for Toxic Substances and Disease Registry (ATSDR) Public Health Assessment