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Section 4: Unanticipated Hazardous Materials Encountered during Construction

This section covers unanticipated hazardous materials that may be encountered during construction activities, after the contract has been awarded.

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Discovery

Identifying and recognizing potential hazardous materials issues is the first step to reduce potential risk of project delay, additional costs and possible litigation. During the construction process, indicators of possible contamination include, but are not limited to:

Structures such as abandoned oil & gas lines, asbestos cement (transite) pipe and underground storage tanks also require special handling when disturbed.

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Notification and Coordination

When the contractor or TxDOT staff member encounters materials that, upon visual observation or odor, seem likely to contain hazardous materials, he/she must notify the project/Area Engineer immediately, per Item 6.10, TxDOT Standard Specifications . The Engineer must take the following notification and coordination steps to deal with hazardous materials after discovery:

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  • Secure the suspected area for worker and public safety as needed. If possible, relocate the contractor on the project to avoid or minimize construction downtime.
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  • Notify the Environmental Affairs Division (ENV) and the District Construction Office.
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  • Determine applicable regulations; ENV can assist. If notification is required or additional regulatory assistance desired, the district construction office should notify the local office of the Texas Commission on Environmental Quality (TCEQ). ENV is available to facilitate communication and coordination with the TCEQ.
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  • Confirm or evaluate whether special provisions are needed. The Engineer may contact ENV for assistance in contracting for statewide environmental engineering consultant services.
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  • If possible or practical, identify and notify the responsible parties for preventive action and/or cost recovery.

When hazardous materials are discovered, TxDOT assumes responsibility from the contractor for testing, removal or disposition. The standard provisions of the contract address compensation to the contractor for delays and work stoppages. In accordance with Item 4.4 of the TxDOT Standard Specifications, the contractor should be given the option to perform the testing, removal and/or disposition as "extra work" by a change order(s). The Engineer may need to obtain proposals and estimated costs for "extra work" from consultants and/or specialty contractors to compare with the estimate from the contractor. If the “extra work” is not an option, work should be suspended wholly or in part through proper notice to the contractor. If possible, re-deploy the contractor on the construction project to avoid or minimize construction downtime.

Another option is to arrange for an emergency contract for a specialty contractor. Some districts may have prearranged purchase orders for specialty contractors and/or laboratories. An environmental consultant may be necessary for testing or developing preventive action plans. ENV can provide statewide environmental engineering, testing, consulting, remediation and abatement contract services as needed.

Coordinate between the Construction Division (CST), the Design Division (DES), ENV, the prime construction contractor, specialty subcontractor, environmental consultant, responsible parties, and other agencies. At this time, consider "partnering" to reduce the possibility of future claims.

Coordinate the implementation of preventive action with the construction activities of the project. This may involve concurrent activities by consultants, specialty contractors, and the prime construction contractor/subcontractors.

If work is suspended, then the District Construction Office and Engineer will issue a "notice of resumption of suspended work" to the prime construction contractor when preventive action is completed.

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Characterize the Contaminant and Develop Preventive Action Plan

It may be necessary for the prime construction contractor or TxDOT to hire a consultant to identify and characterize the contamination through sampling and analytical testing. The objectives of the consultant's investigation include:

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  • Determining characteristics of the soil, groundwater and vapor, including groundwater recovery rates, vertical/horizontal extent of contamination, and chemicals of concern
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  • Assessing worker safety and public exposure concerns
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  • Determining handling and/or disposal requirements for any contaminated media unearthed during the construction process
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  • Recommending a preventive action plan to ensure the problem is not aggravated and to avoid or minimize TxDOT liability
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  • Determining necessary requirements to allow the prime construction contractor to resume work following suspension.

Consultants may also develop specifications to complete portions of the construction within contaminated environments. Data obtained from the investigation will enable the consultant to develop specifications related to groundwater treatment or filtration systems, ventilation systems, ongoing site monitoring, contaminated material disposal/reuse options, and permitting. Environmental consultants can be procured through the statewide engineering program administered by the Professional Engineering Procurement Services (PEPS) Division. Alternatively, established environmental engineering and scientific services contracts can be utilized through the ENV Division.

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Documentation

As discussed earlier, the District Construction Office and the Engineer are primarily responsible for generating and maintaining a thorough record. Appropriate reports close out the preventive action part of the work; a proper resumption order restarts the construction. The Engineer completes the records by carefully noting all the actions taken from the time the initial notification was received up to closure with regulatory agencies.


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