HomeMy WebLinkAbout2023-10-03 Council Meeting
Site History and Revised Cleanup Plan
Union Pacific Railroad – Former Ashland Rail Yard
ECSI #1146
Ashland City Council Meeting
Oct. 3, 2023
Margaret Oscilia | Oregon Department of Environmental Quality
Outline
Location
Site background
Photos
History
Supplemental Remedial Investigation/Feasibility Study
New cleanup plan
Impacted Areas
Cleanup considerations
Estimated project timeline
Questions
Site vicinity map
Total historic Southern
Pacific parcel was
approximately 21 acres.
Former rail yard parcel
is 11.7 acres.
Photo of Site – Facing southeast from Clear Creek Drive
Photo of Clear Creek Drive – Facing east
Photo of Williamson Way – Facing west
Photo North of A Street – Facing west-northwest
Site use
•1887-1986 Locomotive
fueling, maintenance, and
Retention Ponds
railcar repair.
–Petroleum hydrocarbons,
polycyclic aromatic
Bunker C Tank
hydrocarbons (PAHs), metals
•1980s Most buildings
Roundhouse
removed.
Turntable
•Railroad is currently active but
Engine
Pit
the rail yard is undeveloped
and inactive.
DEQ Voluntary Cleanup Program
Releases
•Contaminants released and reported.
•Responsible party works under DEQ oversight.
Exposure
•Extent of contamination is determined.
•Contaminants of concern are identified.
•Risks to human health and environment are evaluated.
Solutions
•Protective cleanup levels are determined.
•Cleanup plans are evaluated and selected.
•DEQ confirms when cleanup is complete.
Impacted areas
Uninvestigated area:
No historical use by
railroad. Not included in
cleanup.
•Soil
–Petroleum compounds
from bunker C fuel and
diesel
–Lead and arsenic
–PAHs
•Shallow groundwater
8.7-acre west area:
–Petroleum compounds
Shallow (< 3 feet) in
from bunker C fuel and
various locations
diesel
–arsenic
3-acre east area:
Shallow and deep (up to 9 feet)
in multiple locations
Cleanup history
20012010-2013
2018-present
New site data collected and
Revised cleanup using railcars.
Initial cleanup plan
evaluated.
developed and Record of
Not completed due to
Current revised cleanup plan is
discrepancies in a property deed
Decision.
proposed.
restriction.
Deed restriction modified.
Revised property deed restriction
Initial cleanup plan not with City.
completed.
New federal cleanup standards
Community concern about set in 2018 and require less soil
excessive truck traffic.removal.
20062016-2018
2021 Supplemental Remedial Investigation/
Feasibility Study (RI/FS)
•Re-evaluated risks based on new site data, current toxicity values,
and likely future exposure area settings.
•Defined areas where cleanup is required.
•Established objectives of the clean-up based on likely future use.
•Evaluated cleanup alternatives.
•Recommended a preferred cleanup alternative for the site.
Four cleanup plan options
Alternative 1 – No Action
•Required to consider by rule.
•No action to reduce contaminants.
•Not protective.
Alternative 2 - Excavation and Offsite Disposal of Shallow and
Deep Soil
•Excavate and remove soil from entire 11.7 acres exceeding site-specific
screening levels.
•Removal by rail car.
•No engineering controls.
•Deed restriction for single-family residential use.
Four cleanup plan options (cont’d)
Alternative 3 – Excavation and Offsite Disposal of Shallow Soil and institutional
Controls
•Excavate and remove shallow soil from entire 11.7 acres exceeding site-specific
screening levels.
•Deed restriction for site use.
•Deep impacted soil left on eastern 3 acres.
•Additional deed restrictions required on eastern 3 acres.
Alternative 4 – Excavation, Consolidation, Vegetated Soil Cap
and Institutional Controls
•Shallow soil exceeding site-specific screening levels excavated from western 8.7 acres.
•Deed restriction for site use.
•Excavated soil placed in low areas on eastern 3 acres.
•Soil and vegetated cap on eastern 3 acres.
•Additional deed restrictions required on eastern 3 acres.
Evaluated 6 balancing factors
1) Effectiveness
•Alt. 2 – Shallow and deep soil removal - most effective at providing protection.
•However, all alternatives adequately manage risks.
2) Long-term reliability
•Alt. 2 is most reliable because less reliance on institutional controls.
•Alt. 4 –Excavation, consolidation, soil cap –relies more on engineering and
institutional controls.
•However, these types of controls are common at former commercial sites.
3) Implementability
•Alt. 4 is easiest to implement.
•Requires less soil removal and no export off site.
Evaluation of 6 balancing factors (cont’d)
4) Implementation Risks
•Alt. 2 and Alt. 3 (shallow soil excavation) have more short-term implementation risks than
Alt. 4.
•Alt. 2 and Alt. 3 require construction of a new rail spur and transportation off site.
•Alt. 2 would require shoring for deep excavation.
5) Reasonableness of Cost
•Alt. 2 ~ $7,240,000
•Alt. 3 ~ $5,800,000
•Alt. 4 ~ $1,960,000
6) Sustainability/green remediation
•Alt. 4 would have the least amount of greenhouse gas emissions - reduced
truck/locomotive exhaust and fuel burned
•No waste generated with Alt. 4.
Cleanup considerations
Single-family residential development is not an option
•Current zoning is mixed commercial-residential.
•Surrounding development is all mixed commercial and high-density residential.
•City has indicated a preference for a mixed-use community.
Soil removal from eastern 3-acre area is not practical
•Large quantities of soil would need to be removed by truck or rail.
•High degree of uncertainty in soil volume and cost.
•Benefits of soil removal don't outweigh cost and implementation downsides.
•Protectiveness can be achieved by consolidation, capping and deed restrictions.
Most practical and focused cleanup scenario:
•Two separate exposure areas: 8.7 acres (west) and 3 acres (east).
•Most likely future exposure scenario: Urban residential.
•Both areas cannot be subdivided or change use without DEQ approval.
DEQ review recommended alternative
•DEQ accepted the recommended Alternative 4 (excavation,
consolidation and capping) and proposed cleanup plan in 2021.
•In 2022, DEQ prepared a recommendation for the current
proposed cleanup plan in the Revised Recommended Remedial
Action.
•Revised Recommended Remedial Action went out for public
comment in October 2022.
Cleanup plan
Minimum 1.5 ft soil removed
•About 2,700 cubic yards of soil
excavated from western area and
consolidated in eastern area.
•Clean backfill/topsoil for excavations
delivered by side-dump railcars for
entire site.
•One-foot clean soil cap on eastern
area.
•Entire site hydroseeded with native
plants.
•Eastern area will be fenced and have
a deed restriction.
Conceptual vegetated soil cap
Native vegetation
1-foot minimum topsoil
Imported clean fill
Consolidated soil
Existing soil
Institutional controls
For the entire 11.7 acres
•DEQ review and approve any request to subdivide or
develop either the western 8.7-acres or the eastern 3-
acres.
•Allow urban-residential/commercial site use.
For the capped 3 acres
•Site management plan for cap maintenance and guide
future development.
•DEQ review and approve of proposed activities that
would affect the cap.
Potential site use after cleanup
11.7 acres ready for urban-residential mixed use
•Living spaces may be on ground floor or higher.
•Commercial spaces may be on the ground floor.
More cleanup allowed if change in site use
•DEQ oversight if subdivided.
•More cleanup can happen if site use changes to single-family
residential.
Examples of capped sites
Capped sites in Oregon
•Mill Casino in North Bend along Coos Bay;
•Portions of Riverfront City Park in Salem;
•Suburban park in Tigard;
•Bridgeport Village shopping center in Tigard; and
•A former lumber yard ready for re-development in Sweet Home.
Former UPRR sites with soil caps
•An abandoned right of way into a 74-mile-long bike trail for recreational use in
northern Idaho;
•One property redeveloped with a manufacturing site, community visitor center
and sheriff’s office; and
•A soccer field complex.
Estimated timeline
Sept. – Oct.
Winter 2023Spring 2024Fall 2024
2023
Public meeting to Complete Remedial Solicit bids from Complete cleanup
discuss proposed Action and Remedial contractorsactivities
cleanup planDesign Work Plan
Sign Record of Complete remedial Commence cleanup
Decisiondesignactivities
Winter
Fall 2023Summer 2024
2023-2024
Questions
Visit the Ashland Railyard page
for more information:
ordeq.org/AshlandRailYardInfo
Send questions or comments by
5 p.m. Oct. 31, 2023 to:
margaret.oscilia@deq.oregon.gov