Nationwide, there are 1,320 final sites on the Environmental Protection Agency’s National Priority List of waste sites that have released or can release hazardous contaminants.
They are either awaiting or undergoing cleanup. Sites can be deleted from the list when “no further response is required to protect human health or the environment,” according to the EPA.
Each site is scored through the Hazard Ranking System on a scale from 0-100. The higher the score, the greater threat they represent. Scores are based on the likelihood of the site releasing dangerous substances, the amount and toxicity of pollutants and what the environment is like, such as how many people could be affected. However, scores do not wholly reflect the severity or priority of a site, according to the EPA.
Of these 1,320 national sites, 25 are in Minnesota.
- The average score of a site in Minnesota is 42.76.
- All have been on the National Priority List since the 1980s or 1990s except South Minneapolis Residential Soil Contamination in Minneapolis, which has been on since 9/19/2007.
The five sites with the highest scores in Minnesota:
- FMC Corp. in Fridley (65.5)
- New Brighton/Arden Hills/TCAAP (U.S. Army) in New Brighton (59.16)
- Oakdale Dump in Oakdale (55.71)
- Koppers Coke in St. Paul (55.05)
- St. Regis Paper Co. in Cass Lake (52.88)
*Data was analyzed using information from the last EPA update of May 24, 2013.