CANCELED: EPA Region 7 Invites Great Bend, Kansas, Community Members to Attend Presentation About Plating Inc. Superfund Site
This site, on the National Priorities List, received funding from the Bipartisan Infrastructure Law to expedite cleanup

U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Region 7 - 11201 Renner Blvd., Lenexa, KS 66219

Iowa, Kansas, Missouri, Nebraska, and Nine Tribal Nations

Contact Information: Kellen Ashford, ashford.kellen@epa.gov, 816-610-2132

LENEXA, KAN. (SEPT. 29, 2023) – Please note that this event has been canceled. This presentation will be rescheduled as soon as EPA is able to do so.

U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) representatives from EPA Region 7 will present at the Great Bend, Kansas, City Council Meeting on Oct. 2, to provide community members with information about the Plating Inc. Superfund Site.

Over the next several months, EPA will be conducting cleanup work under the Comprehensive Environmental Response, Compensation, and Liability Act (CERCLA), commonly known as Superfund. In April 2023, Plating Inc. was one of three Superfund sites in Kansas on the National Priorities List (NPL) to receive funding from the Bipartisan Infrastructure Law (BIL) to begin or expedite cleanup projects.

“In April, EPA Region 7 representatives traveled to Wichita to celebrate the second round of funding for Superfund sites from the Bipartisan Infrastructure Law,” said EPA Region 7 Administrator Meg McCollister. “That funding is now being put to work to clean up contamination in communities across our nation’s heartland.”

The presentation will be held:

Monday, Oct. 2, 2023

6:30 to 7:30 p.m.

Great Bend City Hall
1209 Williams St.

Great Bend, KS 67530

Background

The Plating Inc. Superfund Site sits within the airport industrial area in Barton County, Kansas, 1½ miles west of Great Bend. An inspection from the Kansas Department of Health and Environment (KDHE) determined that 6,400 gallons of chromic acid was on-site in 2007, along with other acids and hydroxides. The secondary containment was inadequate and chromic acid was found to have discharged into the soil. A 2-mile-long groundwater plume of hexavalent chromium has impacted domestic water wells and is moving toward Great Bend’s public water supply wells.

EPA has selected remedial designs for addressing the soil and groundwater contamination. The Agency anticipates that remedial actions – the construction or implementation phase of site cleanup – will begin in fall 2023.

Learn more about the Plating Inc. Superfund Site.

Learn more about Bipartisan Infrastructure Law funding for Superfund sites.

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Learn more about EPA Region 7