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Coalinga Asbestos Mine


EPA #: CAD980817217

State: California(CA)

County: Fresno

City: 17 miles northwest of Coalinga

Congressional District: 20

Other Names: Johns-Manville Mill Area, Southern Pacific Land Company, City of Coalinga, Arroyo Pasajero

Bulletin Board

Description and History

NPL Listing History

NPL Status: Final

Proposed Date: 09/08/1983

Final Date: 09/21/1984

Deleted Date: 04/24/1998

The Coalinga Asbestos Mine site covers 120 acres near Coalinga. The mill was operated by the Coalinga Asbestos Company as a joint venture between the Johns-Manville Sales Corporation, the Kern County Land Company, and private investors from 1962 to 1974, when the mill property reverted to the Southern Pacific Land Company (SPLC). SPLC leased the facility to the Marmac Resource Company for chromite mining in 1975. All operations ceased in 1977. The site consists of partially demolished mill buildings and a process waste mine tailings pile that occupies about 20 acres. Two large open-pit mines are located above the mill site and were used as the sources of ore for the Coalinga Asbestos Company milling operations. While the mill was operating, some milling and mining products from Coalinga and from the Atlas Asbestos Mine, located about 3 miles away, were transported to the City of Coalinga. Because these two mines contributed to the contamination of a 107-acre area in Coalinga, the contamination in Coalinga is also being cleaned up. (For additional information, please see the separate listing for Atlas Asbestos Mine site.) The area surrounding the Coalinga Asbestos Mine is primarily rural. The land is used for ranching, farming, and recreational activities such as hunting. About 10 ranchers live within 5 miles of the site. The closest community is Coalinga, located approximately 16 miles away. The City of Coalinga has a population of approximately 19,000 people.

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Contaminants and Risks

Contaminated Media:

Surface Water

Surface Water

Air

Air

Soil and Sludges

Soil and Sludges

Air, soils, sediments, and surface water contain asbestos. People who come into direct contact with, accidentally ingest, or inhale contaminated surface water, sediments, soil, or air may be at risk.

Who is Involved


This site is being addressed through Federal and potentially responsible parties' actions.

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Investigation and Cleanup Activities

The site was addressed in two long-term remedial phases directed at cleanup of the Coalinga Asbestos Mine (Johns-Manville Mill) and the City of Coalinga contaminated areas.


Cleanup Complete

Coalinga Asbestos Mine: Under EPA supervision, the parties potentially responsible for contamination at the Coalinga Asbestos Mine investigated the nature and extent of contamination. The cleanup remedy, selected in 1991, includes diverting the stream flow away from the tailings pile by building a cross-canyon stream diversion, minimizing the release of asbestos into a nearby creek by improving the existing sediment trapping dam, paving the road through the Mill Area to suppress dust, dismantling the mill building and disposing of the debris, and limiting access to the site by erecting a fence and placing deed restrictions on the property. The design of the remedy was completed in early 1994 and cleanup activities were completed in the fall of 1995. On November 21, 1998, a Notice of Intent to Delete the Coalinga Asbestos Mine site was published in the Federal Registry. The public comment period ended on December 21, 1998 and EPA responded to comments received. The Coalinga Asbestos Mine site was formally deleted from the National Priorities List on April 24, 1998. EPA bases its decision to delete the site on the criterion that the responsible parties have implemented all appropriate response actions required for the site. Even if a site is deleted from the NPL, where hazardous substance, pollutants, or contaminants remain at the site above levels that allow for unlimited use and unrestricted exposure, EPA's policy is that a subsequent review of the site will be conducted at least every five years after the initiation of the remedial action at the site to ensure that the site remains protective of public health and the environment. The second five-year review for the Coalinga Asbestos Mine Superfund site was completed on September 28, 2006. The review concluded that the remedy for the site continued to be protective of human health and the environment.


Cleanup Complete

City of Coalinga Contaminated Area: In 1989, the EPA selected a remedy to clean up the 107 acres of contamination in the City of Coalinga that resulted from the Atlas and Coalinga asbestos mines. The remedy included excavating and consolidating approximately 20,000 cubic yards of asbestos, chromium, and nickel-contaminated soil and building debris; building an underground waste management unit (WMU) to contain and dispose of contaminated soil and waste on site; covering the WMU area with an impermeable cap; regrading the excavated area; decontaminating the debris; monitoring the soil, groundwater, and air; and implementing deed restrictions on the use of the land. The parties potentially responsible for site contamination began cleanup activities under EPA oversight in 1990 and completed activities in 1993. The five-year review for Atlas and Coalinga Asbestos Mine sites, completed on September 28, 3006 found that EPA policy had changed regarding the protectiveness of the 1% asbestos cleanup level that was set in the ROD for the City of Coalinga OU for the soils in the area outside the WMU and recommended that additional work be done to assure that the cleanup is protective. EPA subsequently conducted further soil and activity-based air sampling to determine whether the City of Coalinga OU presented any exposure issues of concern. The results of the sampling showed that the cleanup of the site continued to be protective of human health and the environment and than no further remedial action was necessary.

Cleanup Results to Date

Graph image

The Coalinga Asbestos Mine Superfund site contains two operable units (OUs): the Coalinga Asbestos/Johns-Manville Mill and the City of Coalinga property. The Coalinga Mine Johns-Manville Mill cleanup was completed in 1995. The remediation of the Coalinga City site was completed in 1993. The State of California Department of Toxic Substances Control has assumed oversight of Operation and Maintenance for this site. On November 21, 1998, a Notice of Intent to Delete this site was published in the Federal Registry. The public comment period ended on December 21, 1997 and EPA responded to comments received. The Coalinga Asbestos Mine site was formally deleted from the National Priorities List on April 24, 1998. EPA bases its decision to delete the site on the criterion that the responsible parties have implemented all appropriate response actions required for the site. Even if a site is deleted from the NPL, where hazardous substance, pollutants, or contaminants remain at the site above levels that allow for unlimited use and unrestricted exposure, EPA's policy is that a subsequent review of the site will be conducted at least every five years after the initiation of the remedial action at the site to ensure that the site remains protective of public health and the environment. The last five-year review for the Coalinga Mine site was completed on September 28, 2006. While it was determined that the remedies in place at the Johns-Manville Mill OU remains protective of human health and the environment, the review noted that EPA policy had changed regarding the protectiveness of the 1% asbestos cleanup level that was set for the City of Coalinga OU and recommended that additional work be done to assure that the cleanup is protective. EPA completed this work in 2009, and determined that the cleanup is protective.

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Potentially Responsible Parties


Potentially responsible parties (PRPs) refers to companies that are potentially responsible for generating, transporting, or disposing of the hazardous waste found at the site.


Pine Canyon Land Company, Santa Fe Pacific Corporation, Catellus Development Corporation, Southern Pacific Transportation Company

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Community Involvement

Public Meetings:

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Public Information Repositories

File cabinet

The most complete collection of documents
is the official EPA site file, maintained at
the following location:

Superfund Records Center

Mail Stop SFD-7C

95 Hawthorne Street, Room 403

San Francisco, CA 94105

(415) 536-2000

Enter main lobby of 75 Hawthorne street,
go to 4th floor of South Wing Annex.

The public information repositories for
the site are at the following locations:

Coalinga District Library, 305 North 4th Street, Coalinga, CA 93210

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Additional Links

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Contacts

Name Phone Number Email Address
EPA Site Manager Jere Johnson 415-972-3094 Johnson.Jere@epa.gov US EPA Region 9
75 Hawthorne Street
San Francisco, CA 94105
SFD-7-2
EPA Community
Involvement Coordinator
Jackie Lane 1-800-231-3075 lane.jackie@epa.gov US EPA Region 9
75 Hawthorne Street
San Francisco, CA 94105
SFD-3
EPA Public Information
Center
(415) 947-8701 r9.info@epamail.epa.gov
State Contact Steve Ross 916-255-3694 Department of Toxic Substances Control
8800 Cal Center Drive
Sacramento, CA 95826-3200
PRP Contact
Community Contact
Other Contacts
After Hours
(Emergency Response)

US EPA

(800) 424-8802

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