EPA Superfund Site

WASHINGTON COUNTY LEAD DISTRICT - RICHWOODS

MO | EPA ID MON000705032

Human exposure is NOT currently under control

About this site’s exposure pathways: As of March 2025, the Washington County Lead District – Richwoods site is considered Human Exposure Not Under Control because lead contamination in soil exceeds healthbased cleanup criteria at multiple residential and other high incidence child use properties. Remedial investigation is ongoing for mine waste, sediments, floodplain soils and surface water. The lead concentration in private drinking water wells also exceeds the federal drinking water standard at numerous properties. Individuals may be exposed to lead contamination through the ingestion and inhalation of soil, dust, and groundwater. A Record of Decision (ROD) was finalized for residential soil in September 2011, and remedial action was completed in 2018, with remaining properties in the Richwoods site being addressed under the ongoing WCLD - Old Mines OU1 residential remedial action and anticipated to continue for many years. In addition, an Interim ROD for groundwater was finalized in September 2022 that will provide safe drinking water to residents with contaminated wells until a final remedy for the cleanup of groundwater is selected. A previous time-critical removal action provided point-of-use (POU) water filtration systems. More properties will be provided POU systems under the newly commenced remedial action for groundwater. As part of its ongoing response activities, EPA meets with the public on a frequent basis, and has provided a health education and outreach grant to the Washington County Health Department to promote habits to minimize exposures of residents to mine waste contaminated media at the site. Current Human Exposure is estimated to be under control by 09/30/2043, and Long-Term Human Health Protection is estimated to be achieved by 09/30/2043.

Data limitations: Proximity to a Superfund site boundary does not mean your property is contaminated. EPA site boundaries show the area designated for cleanup, not the full extent of contamination. Groundwater plumes can extend beyond site boundaries. This tool shows publicly available EPA federal data. It is not affiliated with or endorsed by EPA, and is not a substitute for a professional environmental assessment.

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