Region 8
Monticello Radioactively Contaminated Properties
National Information
Regional Information
Site Information
National Priorities List (NPL) History
Proposed Date
10/15/1989
Final Date
6/10/1986
Construction Completion Date
9/2/1999
Deletion Date
2/28/2000
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Site Type: Federal Facilities Deleted NPL City: Monticello County: San Juan Street Address: 9 North 3rd East Street ZIP Code: 84535 EPA ID: UTD980667208 SSID: 0873 Site Aliases: Monticello Vicinity Properties, Store in Monticello, House in Monticello Congressional District: 3 |
Site Description
In all, 424 properties were contaminated with radioactive mill tailings from past uranium and vanadium ore-processing operations at the Monticello Mill site in southeastern Utah.
The Department of Energy (DOE), the State of Utah Department of Environmental Quality (UDEQ) and the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) entered into a Federal Facilities Agreement to clean up the contamination on these properties in December 1988.
The site consists of 424 private and commercial properties in and around the city of Monticello, Utah, covering approximately four square miles.
The properties are near an ore-processing mill that the federal government established during World War II to produce vanadium, a steel hardener, for the war effort. Vanadium, though not radioactive itself, is usually found in the same ore that contains uranium and radium; therefore, the processing wastes contain significant radioactivity. Soon after construction, the mill began processing uranium (yellow cake), which may have been used for the Manhattan Project.
Uranium production continued until 1960, when the plant was closed and dismantled. Contaminated dust from the Monticello Mill tailings piles blew onto the site properties mostly within the city. Also, tailings from the mill site were used as construction material, backfill and as sand mix in concrete, resulting in the radioactive contamination of some vicinity properties in Monticello. The Mill Tailings site is located immediately south of the city, in the flood plain of Montezuma Creek.
EPA added the Monticello Radioactively Contaminated Properties site to the National Priorities List (NPL) on June 10, 1986.
Site Risk
Exposure to radioactive materials could be harmful to human health. Direct contact with and/or inhaling or swallowing the kind of radioactive material found in tailings dust may affect lungs and bones. Also, inhalation of radon gas that results from the radioactive decay of radium 226 could harm lungs.
| Media Affected | Contaminants | Source of Contamination |
| soil, debris, air | radioactive mill tailings and dust from tailings piles, radon gas emanating from radioactive decay products | uranium milling wastes |
Cleanup Progress
The site is being addressed through federal actions in accordance with a Federal Facility Agreement. The DOE is the Responsible Party, although the contaminated properties are not on federally owned lands. EPA and UDEQ share Superfund regulatory oversight responsibilities. Superfund is the shorthand term for CERCLA—the Comprehensive Environmental Response, Compensation and Liability Act—passed by Congress in 1980 to address the dangers of abandoned or uncontrolled sites contaminated with hazardous substances.
In 1989, EPA, DOE and UDEQ signed a Record of Decision (ROD), which selected a remedy to clean up the vicinity properties by excavating and removing the contaminated tailings, soil and construction material from the vicinity properties and storing them at the site. About 152,000 cubic yards of material were removed from the vicinity properties and have been relocated to the repository that was constructed about a mile south of the former mill site.
Cleanup has now been completed on all of the vicinity properties. EPA deleted the site from the NPL in February 2000.
Site Documents
You will need Adobe Reader to view some of the files on this page. See EPA's PDF page to learn more.
Fourth Five-Year Review Report, June 2012 (PDF, 114 pp, 5MB)
Update to the Five-Year Review, December 2010 (PDF, 1 pg, 25K)
Fact Sheet: Monticello, Utah, Disposal and Processing Sites, April 2009 (PDF, 4 pp, 517K)
Monticello Radioactive Contaminated Properties Site Delisting Process, January 2000 (PDF, 3 pp, 925K)
Contacts
EPA
Vera Moritz
Remedial Project Manager
U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Region 8
1595 Wynkoop Street (EPR-F)
Denver, Colorado 80202-1129
303-312-6981
800-227-8917 ext. 312-6981 (toll free Region 8 only)
moritz.vera@epa.gov
DOE
Jalena Dayvault
Monticello Area Project Manager
U.S. Department of Energy
Grand Junction Office
2597 B¾ Road
Grand Junction, CO 81503
970-248-6016
970-248-6023 FAX
jalena.dayvault@lm.doe.gov
UDEQ
Michael Storck
State Project Manager
Utah Department of Environmental Quality
Environmental Response and Remediation Division
195 North 1950 West
Salt Lake City, UT 84116
801-536-4179
801-536-4242 FAX
mstorck@utah.gov
Dave Allison
Community Involvement Specialist
Utah Department of Environmental Quality
Environmental Response and Remediation Division
195 North 1950 West
Salt Lake City, UT 84116
801-536-4479
dallison@utah.gov
View Documents at:
Information Repository
Monticello Site
1665 South Main Street
Monticello, UT 84535
801-587-2271
801-587-2272 FAX
Administrative Record
U.S. Department of Energy
Grand Junction Office
2597 B¾ Road
Grand Junction, CO 81502
970-248-6000
970-248-6040 FAX
Links