Hazardous Waste Cleanup: Former Hoover Company Facility - North Canton, Ohio
- Updates
- Cleanup Status
- Site Description
- Contaminants at this Facility
- Institutional/Engineer Controls
- Land Reuse
- Site Responsibility
Updates
September 2021
Maple Street Commerce has been performing cleanup of PCB contamination in the 300 block of Orchard Avenue NE in North Canton, Ohio since late March. PCBs were found in the soil during investigation on the former Hoover property for the proposed building expansion on Orchard Avenue. The work is being completed in the area immediately north of the former Hoover building, and south and east of the former stormwater ponds. The application for cleanup was approved by EPA on April 12, 2021.
The owner has also been working with Ohio EPA on the closure of the four stormwater retention ponds that were previously Hoover’s wastewater treatment ponds. Work is being completed under a Permit to Install - needed for construction or modification of existing wastewater collection, storage or treatment systems – and may also require an amendment to the PCB cleanup application. Water from the ponds is being hauled to an offsite treatment facility, and tests on the sediments and concrete will be performed after the water is disposed to determine how those materials are handled.
Construction work is being completed for the expansion, including the construction of a new stormwater detention system that will be used when the old ponds are taken out of service. The detention is being constructed north of the footprint where the new building will be constructed. Soil sampling data from the area of the detention pond is included in the 2021-06-30 Air Data Submittal through the link below. That report also includes air monitoring data from sampling conducted during the PCB cleanup activities. EPA completed a review of the vapor barrier design in connection with the proposed building expansion.
View key documents compiled since the time of the last update (March 2021), that have been added to the document collection.
At present, EPA completed a review of the RFI Work Plan Addendum 3 and related Quality Assurance Project Plan, and will post comments along with the final documents once completed.
The former Hoover Company Plant No. 1 plant joined the EPA Region 5 Facility Lead Program in November 1999 to conduct Resource Conservation and Recovery Act (RCRA) Corrective Action activities.
Cleanup Status
Groundwater Sampling – Through 2006, Hoover’s risk assessment identified volatiles as the primary contaminants in groundwater, with sampling continued to evaluate whether a reduction in contaminant levels through natural processes was occurring. Resumed assessment in 2015 and 2016 identified that concentrations of volatiles continued to decrease in off-site wells and most on-site monitoring wells. The Stark County Health Department recently assisted U.S. EPA in reaffirming that no groundwater usage is occurring within an area west of the site where groundwater use is restricted. Additional data will continue to be collected under the May 2016 Administrative Order on Consent, or AOC, to further characterize the magnitude and extent of contamination, and evaluate additional areas that were not investigated during Hoover’s past assessments, to ensure that the potential for vapor intrusion is adequately addressed.
Investigation report status – Sampling reports for groundwater, soil gas, indoor/ambient air, and soil investigations by Maple Street Commerce were completed between 2015 and the present and are available at the North Canton Public Library, along with Hoover’s past reports. Additional reports will be completed under the AOC, and the information repository at the library is updated as new information becomes available. Major documents will be added to this webpage via web links.
Air monitoring – U.S. EPA’s Air Division, ATSDR, and Stark County Health have been briefed with sampling results for indoor air samples collected in occupied and unoccupied spaces on-site. Maple Street Commerce has provided sampling results to tenants. Mitigation systems were designed for one off-site building and one on-site building where contamination in indoor air was detected. If appropriate, mitigation systems will be installed in other areas to ensure that contaminant concentrations in air remain acceptable, as required under the AOC.
Next steps – In May 2016, Maple Street Commerce signed an Administrative Order on Consent with U.S. EPA. The AOC requires that certain activities be performed and reports be submitted to demonstrate that contamination left behind by Hoover does not pose a risk to site visitors or to off-site areas.
Maple Street Commerce was directed to take appropriate action after identifying contamination in indoor air at one off-site property. In addition, Maple Street Commerce has prepared a work plan for the installation of a Sub-slab Depressurization System (SSDS) in one of the redevelopment buildings to prevent contaminated vapors in the ground from entering the building. U.S. EPA approved the report with conditions to expedite and facilitate the on-going redevelopment activities. Since the system will include below-ground components, it will likely be installed before the construction is completed.
Under the AOC, Maple Street Commerce will continue to complete investigation activities to determine the nature and extent of contamination, and appropriate controls to address contamination. Additional investigation activities were proposed in a revised RFI Work Plan, dated July 31, 2018, which was approved by EPA. Multiple phases of RFI work have been completed, leading to further evaluation of the sewers in on-site and off-site areas (air sampling results from certain sewers are shown in the January 2020 Sewer Gas figure below).
Site Description
The former Hoover Co. Plant No. 1 joined the U.S. EPA Region 5 Facility Lead Program in November 1999 to conduct Resource Conservation and Recovery Act (RCRA) Corrective Action activities. As required by the program, Hoover
- conducted a facility investigation to determine if any areas of the site have released hazardous constituents to the environment,
- evaluated U.S. EPA's Environmental Indicator forms,
- conducted effective public involvement, and performed interim measures to mitigate unacceptable threats to human health and the environment.
Since the time of Hoover’s work, the property was sold, and Maple Street Commerce in continuing the Corrective Action work initiated by Hoover to prevent unacceptable risks under an Administrative Order dated May 24, 2016.
Additional Site Information:
In the late 1980s, Hoover conducted investigation activities in connection with the closure of their hazardous waste drum storage area. The investigation identified solvent contamination, and additional phases of investigation were performed. In the late 1990s, Hoover entered into a Voluntary Corrective Action Agreement with U.S. U.S. EPA to complete Corrective Action for the identified site-wide impacts using a risk-based approach. Sampling results included in a 2003 Final Corrective Measures Proposal identified primarily PCE, TCE and degradation products in the on-site soil and groundwater, extending off-site to the west, in addition to PCBs and other contaminants in on-site soils. A groundwater use restriction was developed by Hoover and implemented by the Stark County Health Department (Resolution #3-2002) to prevent the ingestion of contaminated groundwater. On-site soil contamination was addressed through:
- active soil removal in several areas of the site;
- capping;
- the operation of a soil vapor extraction system in one area of the site; and,
- the operation of a dual-phase extraction system near the former drum storage area to address soil and groundwater contamination.
The SVE/DPE systems were operated until the company achieved a calculated risk reduction goal, at which point the systems were shut down. The Final Corrective Measures Proposal concluded the risks could be addressed by implementing combinations of land-use restrictions as institutional controls on certain portions of the property. A Statement of Basis was prepared by U.S. EPA in 2004 based on Hoover’s information, and the company entered negotiations with U.S. EPA on institutional controls for the Hoover property. The property was subsequently sold several times before purchase by Maple Street Commerce in 2008. In 2010 concerns arose regarding the potential for vapor intrusion at the site, and over the next several years, various correspondences were prepared, negotiations occurred, and sampling was performed, ultimately resulting the execution of an AOC for Corrective Action in May 2016.
Contaminants at this Facility
Major contaminants of concern are trichloroethene (TCE), cis-1,2-dichloroethene (1,2-DCE) vinyl chloride and tetrachloroethene (PCE) in groundwater and soil.
Institutional and Engineering Controls at this Facility
Controls were proposed in the 2003 Corrective Measures Proposal. At present, no controls have been finalized, but will be included as part of the expected Corrective Measure Proposal.
Land Reuse Information at this Facility
Proposed Mixed-Use Redevelopment (Hoover District).
Site Responsibility at this Facility
Corrective Action activities at this facility have been conducted under the EPA, with support from the Ohio Environmental Protection Agency.