The West Lake Landfill site originated in 1939 as a limestone quarry operated by the Westlake Quarry Company. Landfilling at the site began in the early 1950s. In 1973, after having changed hands (and responsible oversight) several times, B&K Construction Co., a company contracted by Cotter Corporation, dumped a portion of the original stored radioactive material at a nearby storage facility. 8,700 short tons (7,900 tonnes) of leached
barium sulfate, the material with the lowest relative radioactivity, was combined with 39,000 short tons (35,000 t) of topsoil to dilute the contaminated material at the landfill. The leached barium sulfate was a byproduct of
Mallinckrodt Chemical Works’ uranium enrichment program as a part of the
Manhattan Project and later nuclear weapons production, and dumping it there was illegal. Due to the discovery of the radioactive and other contaminants at the site, West Lake was proposed as a
Superfund site in October 1989 and was officially listed as such a site in August 1990. The Nuclear Regulatory Commission discovered the disposal and investigated the site, publishing a report in 1977. West Lake was proposed to be a Superfund site on October 28, 1989, designating it as a
Superfund site on August 30, 1990. The
EPA has listed four potentially responsible parties: the
US Department of Energy; the Cotter Corporation; and
Republic Services subsidiaries Bridgeton Landfill and Rock Road Industries. In 2008, the
EPA announced that they would contain the contaminated sites by placing a multilayered cover over of the OU-1 Disposal Area. After receiving additional comments from environmental groups and the general public, the EPA asked the potentially responsible parties to commission a study of alternative cleanup options. The resulting supplemental feasibility study was released in 2011. The West Lake landfill has drawn further scrutiny because of a nearby subsurface
smoldering fire (in the OU-2 Disposal Area), an event located only 1,000 feet (300 m) away from OU-1. If the fire were to reach the OU-1 area of radioactive waste, the radiation risks are low. In February 2018, EPA head
Scott Pruitt announced a proposed plan to remediate the West Lake Landfill. Known as “Excavation Plus” or “Alternative 4,” the plan involved removing radioactively impacted material with a concentration greater than 52.9 picocuries per gram (pCi/g), to a maximum depth of 16 feet. The proposal would remove approximately 67 percent of the radioactivity from the landfill and take 5 years to implement at an estimated cost of $236 million. Potentially responsible parties, including Bridgeton Landfill LLC, Rock Road Industries Inc., Cotter Corporation, and the
Department of Energy are liable for the costs of the clean-up. Included in the plan is a proposal to build a cover system which will protect the community of Bridgeton for the long term. ==Current management==