General Industry News

Electroplating Shop Cleanup Begins

The EPA Region 5 announced that work will begin to clean up hazardous materials at the site of Paw Paw Plating in Paw Paw, Mich.

An abandoned building on the site in Paw Paw, Mich., contains chemicals used in the electroplating process. The EPA expects contractors to complete the cleanup within 90 days. Paw Paw Plating began custom electroplating in the 1950s and stopped operating in December 2009. The Michigan Department of Natural Resources and Environment referred the site to the EPA for cleanup.

Heavy metals including cadmium, chromium, copper and cyanide were used in the electroplating process. The company also performed metal processing such as machining, polishing and painting as well as using trichloroethylene (TCE) as a metal degreaser.

There are a variety of hazardous materials remaining in the building, including plating baths containing heavy metals, drums of plating feed stocks, drums of hazardous waste, and a number of different size containers with a wide variety of chemical compounds.

The EPA will inventory and evaluate the hazardous substances on site; consolidate and package hazardous substances, pollutants and contaminants and transport them off-site for disposal in accordance with EPA rules; and conduct a comprehensive assessment of the property for contamination.

Workers will be required to wear personal protective equipment in order to remove the hazardous materials. The agency will monitor the air during the cleanup to ensure there are no releases of hazardous materials. Chemicals will be segregated, characterized and placed into proper containers for transport to permitted treatment facilities and/or landfills. For more information, look at this URL site, or visit the Paw Library at 609 West Michigan, in Paw Paw.

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Roy D. Bigham has been the editor of Pollution Engineering since 2002. Bigham attended Eastern Michigan University where he majored in chemistry and computer science with an associates degree in mathematics. He has worked as a laboratory technician at a research laboratory, managed an electroplating operation and an associated analytical laboratory. He spent three years overseeing environmental operations of five domestic and five overseas operations for a major manufacturer in the Detroit area. He then managed a field services department for an environmental analytical laboratory before moving on to a position as an environmental engineer for a construction aggregates company.

Bigham won a design award for a waste water treatment system for a landfill in the Detroit area from the State Chamber of Commerce. He has been active in the environmental field since 1980.

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