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THE DIRT: What you need to know about ICP Permits

Contractor digging around a post with a backhoe piling contaminated soil on a dropcloth

Spring is in the air, and you know that means; it’s time to swap snow boots for sneakers and get back outside, residents of North Idaho are eager to get outside and work in their yards. Before heading out to work, are you confident you have everything you need? Sure, you have your shovel, your gloves, and your freshly applied sunscreen. But what about your permit? 

If you live within the Bunker Hill Superfund Site (BHSS) and you have projects that involve digging, grading, and/or excavation, you may also need an ICP excavation permit from Panhandle Health District. 

Residents of the BHSS live in a geographic region that was impacted by lead and other heavy metals from historic mining, milling, and smelting practices. Cleanup measures taken at the BHSS are unique because contamination is so widespread and so deep in some areas that total removals could not be completed. 

After the establishment of the Site in 1983, EPA collaborated closely with the community as they conducted Remedial Investigations and Feasibility Studies to determine the most effective, efficient, and logistically attainable cleanup method. After considering numerous options, it was determined that partially removing contaminated materials and replacing them with clean materials was the most feasible option available. 

Soil sampling criteria were developed and remedial action levels established. After property owners provided consent, soil samples were collected from each property and cleanup decisions were made based on those sample results. To date, over 7,000 properties have undergone some form of remedial cleanup.

Not every property located within the BHSS qualified for remediation, but that does not mean these properties are completely contaminant free. And those that did qualify may have a variety of barrier types and depths. Typical barriers range in depth from six to twelve inches and consist of either gravel or topsoil. 

Because only partial removals could be performed, contaminated materials can still exist beneath these barriers. Barrier fabric was often, but not always, used to mark the transition between clean barrier material and the contaminated material that remains. Dirt disturbing projects can compromise or damage clean barriers, thereby creating a health risk for individuals living near these compromised barriers, with children and pregnant women at highest risk. The Institutional Controls Program (ICP) was established under Panhandle Health District to issue permits and oversee dirt disturbance activities, and to ensure that barriers are properly maintained and reinstalled if disturbed. 

Free ICP permits are required anytime a remediated barrier, or contaminated materials are disturbed, or if one cubic yard or more of soils containing contaminants must be moved. An ICP permit will provide you with sample data available for your property, records of any remediation work, and guidelines for safely completing your project. These permits also give you access to free soil disposal repositories and supplies to help you safely complete your project. Permits are a legal requirement and help protect homeowners from future legal ramifications of compromised barriers when their property is sold.

So, before you head outside and start your spring and summer projects, be sure to contact the ICP to see if you need a permit. Inquiries and permit requests can be made through our website cdabasin.idaho.gov, over the phone at (208)783-0707, or in person at 35 Wildcat Way in Kellogg.

The Dirt is a series of informative articles focused on all aspects of cleanup efforts associated with the Bunker Hill Superfund Site. Our goal is to promote community awareness of contamination issues, to provide tools for protecting public health, and to keep the community informed of current and future cleanup projects. The Dirt is a group of committed and local experts from multiple agencies including the Basin Environmental Improvement Project Commission, Panhandle Health District, Shoshone County, Silver Valley Economic Development Corporation, and the Idaho Department of Environmental Quality.