Long Prairie Ground Water Contamination

NPL Site

Long Prairie, MN

Site Status

NPL Status
NPL Site
Federal Facility
No
Construction Complete
Yes
HRS Score
31.94
Deleted from NPL
No

Contaminants

Contaminant data is not available for this site. The EPA's contaminant records for Superfund sites are maintained in a separate database that may not include all sites.

Location

City
Long Prairie
Coordinates
45.9785, -94.8566

Other Superfund Sites in Minnesota

Site Name Status HRS Score
Adrian Municipal Well Field Deleted NPL Site 33.62
Agate Lake Scrapyard Deleted NPL Site 29.68
Arrowhead Refinery Co. Deleted NPL Site 43.75
Baytown Township Ground Water Plume NPL Site 35.62
Boise Cascade/Onan Corp./Medtronics, Inc. Deleted NPL Site 50.06
Burlington Northern (Brainerd/Baxter Plant) NPL Site 46.77
Dakhue Sanitary Landfill Deleted NPL Site 42.24
East Bethel Demolition Landfill Deleted NPL Site 28.75
FMC Corp. (Fridley Plant) NPL Site 65.50
Freeway Sanitary Landfill NPL Site 45.91

About Superfund

The National Priorities List (NPL) is the list of sites of national priority among the known releases or threatened releases of hazardous substances, pollutants, or contaminants throughout the United States. The NPL is intended primarily to guide the EPA in determining which sites warrant further investigation.

The Hazard Ranking System (HRS) score is the principal mechanism the EPA uses to evaluate sites for placement on the NPL. Sites with an HRS score of 28.50 or greater are eligible for the NPL. Higher scores indicate greater potential risk.

The EPA's Superfund cleanup process typically follows these phases: preliminary assessment, site inspection, NPL listing, remedial investigation/feasibility study, remedy selection, remedial design/action, construction completion, post-construction completion, and NPL deletion. Some sites remain on the NPL for decades.

PlainEnviro presents this data without advocacy framing. The presence of a site on the NPL does not by itself indicate an immediate health risk to nearby residents. For site-specific health questions, consult your local environmental or health agency.