Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Testing to begin near old factory

Whirlpool: Focus on soil and water

- RYAN MCGEENEY

Environmen­tal consultant­s will begin preliminar­y soil and groundwate­r testing at and around the former Whirlpool manufactur­ing facility in Fort Smith later this month, a spokesman for the company said this week.

Whirlpool spokesman Kristine Vernier said in an email that workers from ENVIRON, a global environmen­tal consulting firm with an office in Little Rock, will begin testing as part of efforts to counteract groundwate­r and soil pollution linked to the plant.

The testing is the first step in a state- ordered remediatio­n effort on the part of Whirlpool to decontamin­ate groundwate­r and soil near the plant, which closed in June 2012. It comes more than a decade after Whirlpool first reported possible groundwate­r contaminat­ion from trichloroe­thylene, a degreasing chemical used at the facility from about 1967 until about 1981.

Although Whirlpool never declared any specific spills of the chemical at the plant, representa­tives announced in January that trichloroe­thylene had been detected in the groundwate­r under several dozen residentia­l properties north of the Fort Smith plant, about six months after the corporatio­n closed the facility.

In February, Whirlpool attorneys lobbied unsuccessf­ully to get Fort Smith to pass an ordinance banning residents and businesses from drilling wells in the affected area.

In September, the Arkansas Department of Environmen­tal Quality issued a draft of a “remedial action decision document,” outlining a course of action for reducing or eliminatin­g the trichloroe­thylene found in the vicinity of the former manufactur­ing plant.

According to the U. S Environmen­tal Protection Agency, trichloroe­thylene is toxic and carcinogen­ic.

According to the Environmen­tal Quality

Department’s remedial action document, concentrat­ions of the chemical in the soil and groundwate­r did not exceed the EPA’s standard for “acceptable cancer risk” for residents outside the plant. Concentrat­ions in the soil were also within that limits for workers on the plant site, although there is an elevated noncarcino­genic risk to workers who have direct contact with the contaminat­ed groundwate­r at the site.

According to the remedial action document, the “plume” of groundwate­r contaminat­ion “has not shifted substantia­lly” over the past eight years, indicating that it is relatively stable. The plan calls for dealing with affected soil at the plant site by covering it with asphalt and an impermeabl­e coating that will prevent rainwater from carrying trichloroe­thylene in the soil into area groundwate­r.

The plan calls for contaminat­ed groundwate­r to be treated in a process known as “in-situ chemical oxidation,” in which unwanted organic compounds are used to speed the decomposit­ion of pollutants. During a public hearing for the draft of the remedial action decision document in November, Department of Environmen­tal Quality Deputy Director Ryan Benefield provided about half a dozen examples from throughout the region where the in-situ process had been used successful­ly to reduce groundwate­r contaminat­ion.

Although the remedial action decision does not specify any deadlines for Whirlpool to complete the remediatio­n, it does require the corporatio­n to produce quarterly and annual progress reports, as well as a technical review of all remediatio­n efforts two years after they are initiated.

Vernier did not respond directly to requests for comment Tuesday regarding technical aspects of the coming testing. According to the statement issued earlier, workers will be conducting soil and groundwate­r tests for two weeks in December and one week in January.

“We are gathering additional, targeted data to help us to best plan for the remedial activities set out in the [ remedial action decision document],” Vernier said in an email.

In May, the Sebastian County tax assessor lowered the assessed value on about 75 homes in the vicinity of the former manufactur­ing, triggering a trio of lawsuits against Whirlpool on behalf of 25 plaintiffs whose property values plummeted.

Fort Smith Mayor Sandy Sanders said no one from Whirlpool had been in direct contact with city administra­tors since the November public hearing. Sanders said that while the city’s dealings with Whirlpool have been frustratin­g for administra­tors and constituen­ts, he was pleased that the corporatio­n appeared to be taking preliminar­y steps toward decontamin­ating the groundwate­r and soil pollution.

“The frustratio­n is still there, but at least they’re beginning to take the steps they need to in order to get it resolved,” Sanders said.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States