Boeing’s National Pollutant Discharge Elimination System (NPDES) permit allows Boeing to reroute surface water (particularly outfalls 005, 006 and 007) into unlined ponds that result in seepage into the groundwater, which is used by a large part of the Simi Valley community for drinking water.
It is important to note that Boeing, DOE and NASA are working under the oversight of Department of Toxic Substances Control to reduce contamination in groundwater at Santa Susana. Groundwater below the site is not — and never will be — used for public consumption. Last year, DTSC issued a Land Use Covenant and Agreement that restricts the use of groundwater at the site for domestic use or human consumption. In addition, the use of groundwater for drinking water purposes is expressly prohibited in the 2017 Conservation Easement that Boeing recorded over our approximately 2,400 acres at Santa Susana.
The ponds are dry most of the year. They fill up during rain events, then we run the water through the treatment system and discharge the treated water so we have capacity for the next rain event. This practice does not leave much opportunity (time) for infiltration. Silvernale pond, in particular, does not allow much infiltration because there is a shallow shale layer that prevents infiltration into the deeper aquifer.
The Groundwater Expert Panel has studied the groundwater contamination at SSFL for decades, and based on their analysis of hundreds of monitoring wells both on and off site, with the exception of a small TCE plume just outside Boeing property boundary in the NE corner of the site, there is no evidence that the site contaminants have impacted offsite groundwater.
In 2018, the Regional Board hosted a hearing on the City of Simi Valley’s groundwater feasibility study. During that hearing, water purveyors and groundwater experts testified that the groundwater at Santa Susana is part of a different aquifer with no direct connection to the aquifer that Simi Valley had proposed to use to supplement drinking water supplies. In addition, they testified that contamination that may exist in the Simi Valley aquifer is from local sources and not related to Santa Susana operations.