EPA RCRA ID: PAD002326908
On this page:
- Cleanup Status
- Facility Description
- Contaminants at this Facility
- Institutional/Engineer Controls
- Enforcement and Compliance
- Related Information
- Contacts for this Facility
Cleanup Status
Note: The EPA is the lead agency for managing cleanups at this facility.
The final Remedial Investigation, Risk Assessment and Cleanup Plan for the ISG/Lukens electric arc furnace dust Monofill site was approved by the Pennsylvania Department of Environmental Protection (PADEP) on May 4, 2000. The plan includes a Final Design of the proposed remedy and a Post-remediation Care Plan, which addresses monitoring and maintenance of continued treatment, and any utilized engineered or institutional controls. This plan proposes buttressing the dust pile side slopes with fill at thicknesses ranging from ten to twenty feet, then covering with six inches of vegetated topsoil. Work is yet to begin on the landfill cap.
EPA/PADEP is reviewing existing environmental information to determine if further investigation is required. EPA/State will focus first on the health and groundwater impacts, if any, presented by the facility. Once EPA/state completes this review process, an environmental determination will be prepared and posted to this website.
Cleanup Actions or environmental indicators characterizing the entire facility are shown below. It is not intended as an extensive list of milestones/activities. This listing, and all the data on this page, come from EPA’s RCRAInfo and are refreshed nightly to this page. For this table and the Cleanup Activities Pertaining to a Portion of the Facility table that follows, a blank in the Status column could mean the action either has not occurred or has not been reported in RCRAInfo.
Cleanup Activities Pertaining to the Entire Facility
Action | Status | Date of Action |
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Human Exposure Under Control Human Exposure Under Control(CA725) | ||
Groundwater Migration Under ControlGroundwater Migration Under Control (CA750) | ||
Remedy DecisionRemedy Decision (CA400) | ||
Remedy ConstructionRemedy Construction (CA550) | ||
Ready for Anticipated Use Ready for Anticipated Use (CA800) | ||
Performance Standards AttainedPerformance Standards Attained (CA900) | ||
Corrective Action Process TerminatedCorrective Action Process Terminated (CA999) |
For definitions of the terms used, hover over or click on the term.
Cleanup Activities Pertaining to a Portion of the Facility
Action | Area Name | Date of Action |
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For definitions of the terms used, hover over or click on the term.
Facility Description
Link to a larger, interactive view of the map.
ISG’s former Lukens Electric Arc Furnace (EAF) Dust Disposal Area is located in Coatesville, Chester County, Pennsylvania. The parcel (also known as the Monofill) was transferred to ISG when they purchased assets from the bankrupt Bethlehem Steel Corporation in May 2003; which Bethlehem had purchased through the acquisition of Lukens Steel in 1998. The site was owned by Lukens Steel from approximately 1810 to 1998. The waste furnace slag and furnace dust were disposed on the property prior to 1980 by Lukens Steel. The site covers approximately 71 acres, of which approximately 3.5 acres were used for electric arc furnace dust storage/disposal. Waste slag and furnace dusts may contain elevated levels of Antimony, Arsenic, Barium, Beryllium, Cadmium, Chromium, Lead, Mercury, Nickel, Selenium, Silver, Thallium, Vanadium, and Zinc.
The Lukens Steel Company Electric Arc Furnace Dust Disposal Area was originally used for the disposal of blast furnace slag from 1810 until approximately 1955. The slag was later mined for use as ballast in road construction. The mining operation created an approximately four acre pit on the site. Lukens Steel Company then dumped electric arc furnace dust (KO61) into the pit from 1962 until October 1980. Since 1980 the KO61 waste generated by the Coatesville Steel facility has been transported to a metals recovery firm for reclamation. PADEP made an official Co-product Determination on the waste slag on March, 1996.
The parcel is bordered to the east by Newlinville Road and to the Northeast by the City Construction Company property. Adjacent property to the north, west, and south of the property is wooded, undeveloped land. To the east is an electrical substation and the main ISG steel mill. The predominant uses of the land within the vicinity of the subject property are steel manufacturing, residential, agricultural and undeveloped.
The ISG property is undeveloped with the exception of a small area previously used occasionally as a shooting range for target practice, two abandoned buildings associated with the mining of the slag for road construction, and PECO high tension power lines. An unpaved road traverses the property in a westerly direction from Newlinville Road past the Monofill and then turns to the south towards the shooting range. The remainder of the property contains small ponds and a creek, undeveloped areas with trees and underbrush, and areas of residual slag with vegetation and trees growing out of them.
Contaminants at this Facility
Contaminant of concern are waste slag and furnace dusts may contain elevated levels of Antimony, Arsenic, Barium, Beryllium, Cadmium, Chromium, Lead, Mercury, Nickel, Selenium, Silver, Thallium, Vanadium, and Zinc and also chromium in groundwater.
Institutional and Engineering Controls at this Facility
The need for Institutional Controls has yet to be determined.
Institutional and Engineering Controls help ensure human exposure and groundwater migration are under control at a cleanup facility. Where control types have been reported by states and EPA in EPA’s RCRAInfo, they are shown below. Not all control types are needed at all facilities, and some facilities do not require any controls. Where there are blanks, the control types may not be needed, may not be in place, or may not be reported in RCRAInfo.
Are Controls in Place at this Facility?
Control(s) Type |
Control(s) in Place? |
Areas Subject to Control(s) |
Documents available on-line: |
|
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Institutional ControlsNon-engineering controls used to restrict land use or land access in order to protect people and the environment from exposure to hazardous substances remaining in the site/or facility. (CA 772) |
Informational DevicesInformational Devices (ID) |
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Governmental Controls (GC) |
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Enforcement and Permit Tools (EP) |
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Proprietary ControlsProprietary Controls (PR) | ||||
Engineering ControlsEngineering measures designed to minimize the potential for human exposure to contamination by either limiting direct contact with contaminated areas or controlling migration of contaminants. (CA 770) |
Groundwater ControlGroundwater Control (GW) |
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Non-Groundwater |
For definitions of the terms used, hover over or click on the term.
Enforcement and Compliance at this Facility
EPA’s Office of Enforcement and Compliance Assurance (OECA) provides detailed historical information about enforcement and compliance activities at each RCRA Corrective Action Site in their Enforcement and Compliance Historical Online (ECHO) system.
RCRA Enforcement and Compliance Reports from ECHO
Related Information
For more information about this facility, see these other EPA links:
- RCRA information in EPA’s Envirofacts database
- Information about this facility submitted to EPA under different environmental programs as reported in EPA’s Facility Registry Services
- Alternative Names for this facility as reported by EPA programs in EPA’s Facility Registry Services
- Cleanups in My Community provides an interactive map to see EPA cleanups in context with additional data, and lists for downloading data
- Search RCRA Corrective Action Sites provides a search feature for Corrective Action Sites
Documents, Photos and Graphics
Contacts for this Facility
EPA Region implements and enforces the RCRA Corrective Action program for and federally recognized tribes.
For further information on this corrective action site, use the Contact Information for Corrective Action Hazardous Waste Clean Ups listings that are accessible through Corrective Action Programs around the Nation.