Skip to Main Content
U.S. flag

An official website of the United States government


Profile Information

Government
219007
POINT JULIA ROAD KINGSTON, WA 98346
9
47.8545947 / -122.573338
6
Harlan, Pamela
HARLAN.PAMELA@EPA.GOV
206-553-0977


Top of Page


Property Location



Top of Page


Property Progress


Top of Page


CAs Associated with this Property

CA NameCA #StateTypeAnnouncement Year
Port Gamble Indian Comm of the Port Gamble ReservationBF00J05801WAAssessment2009
Port Gamble Indian Comm of the Port Gamble ReservationBF00J05901WAAssessment2009


Top of Page


Assessment Activities at this Property

ActivityEPA FundingStart DateCompletion DateCAAccomplishment Counted?Counted When?
Cleanup Planning$30,000.0005/25/201211/20/2012Port Gamble Indian Comm of the Port Gamble ReservationN
Cleanup Planning$30,000.0005/25/201207/11/2012Port Gamble Indian Comm of the Port Gamble ReservationN
Phase I Environmental Assessment$10,000.0004/01/201011/30/2010Port Gamble Indian Comm of the Port Gamble ReservationYFY18
Phase I Environmental Assessment$10,000.0004/01/201011/30/2010Port Gamble Indian Comm of the Port Gamble ReservationN
Phase II Environmental Assessment$50,000.0001/01/201008/01/2011Port Gamble Indian Comm of the Port Gamble ReservationN
Phase II Environmental Assessment$50,000.0001/01/201108/01/2011Port Gamble Indian Comm of the Port Gamble ReservationN
Supplemental Assessment$25,000.0009/22/201104/19/2012Port Gamble Indian Comm of the Port Gamble ReservationN
Supplemental Assessment$25,000.0009/22/201104/19/2012Port Gamble Indian Comm of the Port Gamble ReservationN


Is Cleanup Necessary? Yes
EPA Assessment Funding: $230,000.00
Leveraged Funding:
Total Funding: $230,000.00


Top of Page


Contaminants and Media


Arsenic
Cadmium (Cd)
Chromium (Cr)
Copper (Cu)
Mercury
Other Contaminants
Other Metals
PAHS
Petroleum Products
NOT Cleaned up
NOT Cleaned up
NOT Cleaned up
NOT Cleaned up
NOT Cleaned up
NOT Cleaned up
NOT Cleaned up
NOT Cleaned up
NOT Cleaned up
Sediments
Soil
Surface Water
NOT Cleaned up
NOT Cleaned up
NOT Cleaned up

Cleanup Activities

Start DateEPA FundingCompletion DateCAAccomplishment Counted?Cleanup Documentation
08/01/2012Port Gamble Indian Comm of the Port Gamble Reservation


Cleanup/Treatment Implemented:
Cleanup/Treatement Categories:
Addl Cleanup/Treatment info:
Address of Data Source:
Total ACRES Cleaned Up: 9
Number of Cleanup Jobs Leveraged: 8
EPA Cleanup Funding:
Leveraged Funding: $85,000.00
Cost Share Funding:
Total Funding: $85,000.00


Top of Page


Institutional and Engineering Controls

Yes
Government Controls
No new pier allowed, no allowed beaching of barges
Yes
08/01/2014
No


Top of Page


Redevelopment and Other Leveraged Accomplishments

There are no current redevelopment activities.


Number of Redevelopment Jobs Leveraged:
Actual Acreage of Greenspace Created:
Leveraged Funding:


Top of Page


Additional Property Attributes

Point Julia is the area where the Port Gamble S'Kallam Tribe was moved to from the mill site in 1853 and a village was built where the Tribe lived for several generations before being moved up on the bluffs above and the reservation was established. Since then it has been moving back to its natural state as a large coastal wetland. We need a cleanup to occur to insure it is fully restored.

Former Use: The Property is located in Section 05, Township 27 North, Range 2 East. The Property is located at the terminus of Point Julia Road on Port Gamble Bay in the hamlet of Little Boston, within Kingston, Washington. The Property, held in trust for the Port Gamble S�Klallam Tribe, is part of the Port Gamble Reservation and is not subject to property tax. According to the 1963 (photoinspected 1973) United States Geological Survey (USGS) Port Gamble, Washington Quadrangle 7.5 Minute Series topographic map, the Property is at an elevation of between 0 and 20 feet above mean sea level (MSL). The ground surface slopes downward to the southwest towards Port Gamble Bay. Little Boston Creek drains to Port Gamble Bay in the southeast portion of the Property. A wetland exists in the central portion of the property and drains to Port Gamble Bay via a small tidal creek. From 1853 to 1935, Point Julia was a tribal village site with numerous wood-constructed homes, outbuildings, pathways, and water systems (Photograph 13). In 1935 the village site was deemed unsuitable and was burned down by the U.S. Government (Photograph 14 of Phase I report). Point Julia has been an important cultural and subsistence site to the Tribe since time immemorial.
Greenspace (2) Residential (7)
Hazardous


Top of Page