Army use, 1942-1962 The site started producing bombs, boosters, and shells in 1942 during World War II. It consisted of four bomb load lines, an
explosive booster assembly plant, an
ammonium nitrate plant, two explosives burning areas, a
proving ground, a landfill, a wastewater treatment plant, analytical laboratories, and storage and administration facilities. From 1942-1945 the Nebraska Defense Corporation operated the site for the Army. Ammunitions were loaded with
trinitrotoluene (TNT),
amatol (TNT and ammonium nitrate),
tritonal (TNT and aluminum), and
Composition B (
RDX and TNT). From 1950-1956, the plant was reactivated and produced weapons for the Korean War. In 1959 it was declared "excess to Army needs" and was transferred to the
General Services Administration. The
National Guard and Army Reserve retained roughly 1,000 acres for training, the Army used 12 acres as a
Nike Missile maintenance area, and the United States Air Force built the
Offutt Air Force Base Atlas Missile site on 2,000 acres. The Department of Commerce received 40 acres.
Environmental investigations, 1980's- present time Environmental investigations in the 1980's found the soil and groundwater contaminated with
RDX and
TCE. On August 30, 1990 the former plant was listed as a superfund site on the
National Priorities List of
CERCLA. In September 1991, the Kansas City District
Corps of Engineers, the EPA, and Nebraska Department of Environmental Quality entered into an interagency agreement to investigate and control environmental contamination. Cleanup activities were organized into three
operable units (OUs) as follows: In 2004, local residents complained that "regulators were dragging their feet in getting private wells sampled and were accused of not providing accurate and timely information to the public". In spring 2016, three new clusters of monitoring wells dug deeper into the bedrock aquifer than previously were installed at the south end of the known plumes, and showed RDX and TCE above the action levels. Of the 75 household water wells which have been tested as of May 2016, only 3 household wells have contaminants above the defined safe drinking water levels. ==Remediation, 1991 - present time==