Cleanups In My Community (CIMC) - Superfund National Priority List (NPL) Sites, National Layer
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This data layer provides access to Superfund National Priority List Sites as part of the CIMC web service. Superfund is a program administered by the EPA to locate, investigate, and clean up worst hazardous waste sites throughout the United States. EPA administers the Superfund program in cooperation with individual states and tribal governments. These sites include abandoned warehouses, manufacturing facilities, processing plants, and landfills - the key word here being abandoned. Only NPL sites have been included in Cleanups in My Community thus far. EPA maintains the NPL, which identifies for the States and the public those sites or other releases that appear to warrant remedial (long term) actions. These NPL sites fall into the following categories: Proposed: Sites may be proposed for the NPL and then may be placed on the NPL as final or be removed from the Proposed NPL. Final: Those sites placed on the NPL are called "final," and for these sites, a cleanup remedy is selected and implemented. However, it may be several years after construction of the remedy is completed before the hazardous substances are completely cleaned up or controlled in place. Deleted: After the clean up process is complete, and appropriate reviews confirm the area is cleaned up or the hazards are controlled, sites can be deleted from the NPL. For more information on the data provided through this web service, please see the processing steps below, and see more information here: https://www.epa.gov/cleanups/cimc-about-data#superfund. The CIMC web service was initially published in 2013, but the data are updated twice a month. The full schedule for data updates in CIMC is located here: https://ofmpub.epa.gov/frs_public2/frs_html_public_pages.frs_refresh_stats.
Superfund Site Information
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This asset includes a number of individual data sets related to site-specific information for Superfund, which is governed under the Comprehensive Environmental Response, Compensation and Liability Act (CERCLA) of 1980, which was amended by the Superfund Amendments and Reauthorization Act (SARA) in 1986. The Superfund Enterprise Management System (SEMS) contains basic site description, location, schedule of activities, enforcement and settlement data, contaminants and selected remedy and much more, as well as the records that clearly document site decisions. This asset also includes sampling data and lab results (CLPSS, EDDs), redevelopment and technical assistance case studies, site reuse and land revitalization information, EPAOSC.net information, Superfund Technical Assistance Grants information, site management information records (RODs, Remediation plans, cleanup directives), contract management information, and more. Superfund site management information can also be found in agency wide systems such as EAS and COMPASS.
Intersection of Natural Hazard Vulnerability and Superfund Site Location
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Spreadsheet lists all active and upcoming Superfund sites and their vulnerability to 12 natural hazards using a vulnerability score between 0 and 100. This dataset is associated with the following publication: Summers, K., A. Lamaper, and K. Buck. National Hazards Vulnerability and the Remediation, Restoration and Revitalization of Contaminated Sites – 1. Superfund. ENVIRONMENTAL MANAGEMENT. Springer-Verlag, New York, NY, USA, 14, (2021).
Intersection of Natural Hazard Vulnerability and Superfund Site Location
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Spreadsheet lists all active and upcoming Superfund sites and their vulnerability to 12 natural hazards using a vulnerability score between 0 and 100. This dataset is associated with the following publication: Summers, K., A. Lamaper, and K. Buck. National Hazards Vulnerability and the Remediation, Restoration and Revitalization of Contaminated Sites – 1. Superfund. ENVIRONMENTAL MANAGEMENT. Springer-Verlag, New York, NY, USA, 14, (2021).
NPL Superfund Site Boundaries (EPA)
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This GIS dataset contains polygons depicting U.S. EPA Superfund Site boundaries. Site boundaries are polygons representing the footprint of a whole site, defined for purposes of this effort as the sum of all of the Operable Units and the current understanding of the full extent of contamination. For Federal Facility sites, the total site polygon may be the Facility boundary. As site investigation and remediation progress, OUs may be added, modified or refined, and the total site polygon should be updated accordingly. Superfund features are managed by regional teams of geospatial professionals and remedial program managers (RPMs), and SEGS harvests regional data on a weekly basis to refresh the national dataset and feature services.