Contact CHSR
The Center for Hazardous Substance Research
2010 Durland Hall
Kansas State University
Manhattan, KS 66506
Phone: 785-532-6519
chsr@k-state.edu
News & Upcoming Events
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CHSR has been announced as the winner of a $23 million grant from the EPA to expand its Technical Assistance to Brownfields program.
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See all upcoming *FREE* TAB Brownfields workshops and webinars
Articles
Growing Climate Solutions Act (link is external)
Partnerships help improve water quality in Kansas (link is external)
Videos
- 2015 International Year of Soils - Watch the video (link is external)
- The Ogallala Road by Julene Blair - Watch the video (link is external)
- The Waters of Kansas - Watch the video (link is external)
Do you have an upcoming sustainability-related conference or workshop you think should be here? Tell us!
Former Lowry Air Force Bombing and Gunnery Range, Colorado
Site Location
Arapahoe County, Colorado, approximately 20 miles southeast of Denver and adjacent to the city of Aurora
Site Description
This 56-square-mile site was used by the Department of Defense for bombing and gunnery training during the World War II era. The site was also used for small arms training, chemical warfare treatment training, explosive ordnance disposal (EOD, by detonation), and as a location for Titan missile silos. The land has since been transferred to new owners and developed for commercial, industrial, recreational, and residential use. Numerous unexploded ordnance (UXO) and other safety hazards have been encountered during this development. The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers is now working to reduce safety and environmental risks created by former Department of Defense activities by finding and removing unexploded ordnance (UXO), and by removing underground petroleum storage tanks.
Organization Requesting Assistance
Restoration Advisory Board
Beginning Date of Assistance
April 1997
Summary of TOSC Assistance
The Restoration Advisory Board (RAB) requested technical assistance to help look at different ways to find and remove UXO, and to understand the statistics used at the site. After the RAB helped draft and approved a Letter of Intent for support, TOSC provided several educational sessions covering statistics, risks of ordnance and chemical warfare materials, and methods used to find UXO. TOSC worked with the Department of Defense and with state and local citizens interested in the site to pass on this information. TOSC has also visited the site and provided technical review comments. Defense funds became available for the RAB to hire a private consultant, so TOSC support was no longer necessary.
NOTE: The EPA TOSC and TOSNAC programs have ended.