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Corrective Action Plan Page 42 <br /> REPORTS <br /> To document the remedial action and to comply with regulatory p y gu atory reporting requirements, <br /> the following engineering and status reports will be prepared <br /> ❑ A corrective action report to document the excavation and treatment of <br /> contaminated soil, the treatment and discharge of groundwater pumped from the <br /> excavation, the construction of replacement groundwater monitoring wells, the <br /> restoration of the site and the post-soil-remediation, base-line, groundwater-quality <br /> data <br /> ❑ Quarterly groundwater-monitoring and status reports to record the progress of <br /> remediation <br /> ❑ A Site Closure Report to support an application to decommission the <br /> groundwater-monitoring wells and to have the property de-listed as the site of an <br /> unauthorized release of fuel hydrocarbons <br /> REMEDIATION SCHEDULE <br /> A proposed remediation schedule, that includes key project milestones, is presented in <br /> graphical form on Figure 13 <br /> It is expected that contract documents can be prepared, the remediation contract put out <br /> to bid and a contract awarded within four weeks of the date financing becomes available <br /> and the project is authorized Permitting procedures are estimated to require an additional <br /> eight weeks <br /> When all requisite permits have been secured, the exiting structure and appurtenances on <br /> the 152 East I lth Street site can be demolishes and the remedial excavation completed <br /> with about four weeks After excavation is complete, it will take approximately one month <br /> to pump, treat and discharge some 300,000 gallons of groundwater from the remedial pit <br /> The above schedule would permit the site to be fully restored and re-paved within some <br /> ten weeks of a remediation contract being awarded <br /> The time required to fully treat the contaminated soil transported to the aeration site will <br /> depend upon the mean concentrations of components of gasoline that it contains and the <br /> weather conditions at the time it is treated For planning purposes, some three to four <br /> months have been allowed for that purpose A report documenting the active phases of the <br /> remediation program can be issued a short time after soil treatment is complete <br /> Experience has shown that it is difficult to predict the total time required for groundwater <br /> contaminated by hydrocarbons to remediate by natural processes (i a bioremediation) <br />