ATSDR Releases Final Public Health Assessment for Fort Wainwright site in Fairbanks, Alaska

Monday, October 27, 2003
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The Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease Registry (ATSDR), a public health agency of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, today is issuing the final public health assessment on the Fort Wainwright site in Fairbanks, Alaska.

The purpose of this public health assessment is to evaluate potential sources of contamination associated with Fort Wainwright and to identify potential exposure pathways in the surrounding communities. The most common contaminants at the base are volatile organic compounds (VOCs), pesticides, polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs), and petroleum, oils and lubricants.

ATSDR's review of available information indicates that people residing near Fort Wainwright have not been, and are not currently being, exposed to site-related contaminants at levels that could result in adverse health effects.

After evaluating available environmental information, ATSDR has drawn the following conclusions:

  • The majority of the on-post contaminated sites do not represent a public health hazard for on-post or local residents either because they are not easily accessible by the public, or they contain only low levels of contamination or they have been remediated to remove the contaminants of concern. The Army, in coordination with the Alaska Department of Environmental Conservation and the Environmental Protection Agency, has been remediating all known sources of on-site environmental contamination.
  • Exposure to contaminants in groundwater from on-site drinking water wells poses no past or current public health hazard.
  • Exposure to contaminants in groundwater from off-site municipal or private residential wells poses no past, current or apparent future public health hazard. Private wells used by the Shannon Park Baptist Church and the Church of Latter Day Saints' Steese Chapel Hall have been affected by site-related contaminants. However, ATSDR found no evidence of harmful exposure to church parishioners or workers. An off-site spill also occurred in a residential area; however, ATSDR found no evidence of harmful exposures to residents using private wells.
  • Past exposure to air emissions from the on-site coal-fired power plant was categorized an indeterminate public health hazard because of a lack of measurements during time periods when plant emissions could have reached concentrations in the ambient air that exceed current National Ambient Air Quality Standards. Fort Wainwright's current efforts to both reduce and monitor emissions from the power plant are expected to ensure that ambient air quality will meet federal standards and be protective of public health.

The public health assessment may be reviewed at the following repositories:

EPA Region 10
Superfund Records Center
1200 6th Ave. ECL-076
Seattle, Wash.

Noel Wien Library (Selected Documents)
1215 Cowles St.
Fairbanks, Alaska

Fort Wainwright Directorate of Public Works (Administrative Records)
Building 3023
Fort Wainwright, Alaska

Community members seeking more information on the public health assessment may contact Environmental Health Scientist Sue Neurath or Health Communications Specialist Youlanda Outin, toll free, at 1-888-422-8737. When calling, please refer to the Fort Wainwright site in Fairbanks, Alaska.


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Related News Releases For Fairbanks North Star County, Fairbanks, Alaska


Release Date:  Tuesday, June 27, 2006
Communities surrounding the Eielson Air Force Base (EAFB) outside Fairbanks, Alaska, have been exposed to no contaminants from base materials released into the environment at levels considered harmful to human health, says the Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease Registry (ATSDR). In a newly released report, the agency addresses the concerns of on-base anglers’ potential exposure to polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs) in fish captured from the Garrison Slough, and to fuel-related and volatile organic compounds (VOCs) in the groundwater.

Release Date:  Wednesday, August 13, 2003
The public has from Aug. 13 through Sept. 12 to comment on a public health assessment of the Fort Wainwright site in Fairbanks, Alaska. ATSDR finds the contaminant substances from post operations present no past, current or apparent future public health hazard.


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Page last reviewed: October 27, 2003