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62 High, Medium Risk Hazardous DOD Sites In Texas: ProPublica
ProPublica identified 40,000 sites across the U.S. polluted by the military, some of which present a risk of exploding bombs and munitions.

Texas has 309 properties or installations currently or formerly owned by the Department of Defense that have at least one hazardous site and 62 of these installations have at least one high or medium risk hazardous site, according to data released from the DOD that was acquired and published by ProPublica.
According to ProPublica, which has been documenting toxic pollution left behind by the military across the country, there are more than 40,000 such hazardous sites polluted by U.S. military operations.
Through its reporting, ProPublica found that many of these sites have extensive groundwater and soil pollution or present a risk of exploding bombs and munitions. Some of these sites are part of old facilities that may not be known locally even though a risk of exposure to contaminants may still be present. ProPublica also notes that contamination could affect an area much larger than the site itself.
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According to ProPublica, past and estimated future costs of hazardous sites cleanup in Texas is $2.69 billion.
Fort Worth Naval Air Station has four active sites where cleanup is ongoing, according to the report. The hazardous sites are rated as high risk. See the report here.
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See the other Texas sites with at least one high or medium risk site here.
ProPublica explains in its methodology that it classified entire installations as high risk even if it contained one high risk site. A site is either assigned a relative risk of high, medium or low or a priority level of 1 through 8. ProPublica simplified that into one risk level and confirmed their assessment with the DOD.
Some sites are marked as “response complete,” meaning the DOD cleanup actions are complete but that doesn’t mean there is no longer a hazard. According to ProPublica, this may mean sites are simply fenced off to the public or the DOD determined no cleanup was required by law.
Image via AP Photo/LM Otero
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