Enter your email address:

Delivered by FeedBurner

Post Categories

TCE at Montgomery Zoo (AL)

WSFA TV in Montgomery (AL) reports:


City officials say they found a chemical known as TCE while testing ground water recently at the Montgomery Zoo. They had hoped to use the water in the zoo’s new elephant exhibit, but the discovery forced a change in plans.

The underground wells in question are no longer in use. Instead, the water surrounding the elephant exhibit is coming from city pipes.

TCE is the same substance found in 2001 under several nearby subdivisions. The state department of transportation admitted to dumping the chemical years ago.

[...]

“We are monitoring the health of the elephants on a regular basis,” said city spokesman Michael Briddell. But he admits the elephants never came in direct contact with the chemical. Even if they had, Briddell says the concentration level would not have harmed them.

“You and I can go swimming in water that’s 500 parts (of TCE) per billion. We can eat fish in water that’s 70 parts per billion,” Briddell explained. “The water that came from the well was 40 parts per billion and it dissipated in concentration once it hit the atmosphere.”

This might be the most bizarre statement on TCE we’ve ever heard from a public official.

LA Times: TCE, Health, and Community Impact (Part II of II)

Here’s another important piece on TCE From the LA Times (CA) with national scope/importance. This was on Thursday’s front page:


Cancer Stalks a ‘Toxic Triangle’

Scientists disagree about the risks of TCE. But residents near a former air base are dead certain.

By Ralph Vartabedian

Times Staff Writer

March 30, 2006

SAN ANTONIO — On nearly every block surrounding the former Kelly Air Force Base, small purple crosses sprout from front lawns, marking the homes where cancer has struck.

The residents call their neighborhood the “toxic triangle,” alleging that the Air Force poisoned it with an industrial solvent, trichloroethylene, or TCE. It was casually dumped at the base for decades and spread for miles through a shallow aquifer under 22,000 nearby houses.

Texas health authorities have found elevated rates of liver cancer among residents, as well as higher-than-normal rates of birth defects. Though state health officials say it is impossible to prove that TCE causes the sickness here, this blue-collar community has little doubt about the connection.

“We are dying day by day,” said Robert Alvarado Sr., who has lived in a small clapboard home for 36 years that sits about 14 feet over the TCE plume. “I have kidney failure, my wife has thyroid cancer, my neighbor just died of breast cancer.”


If your state representative wants to support better protections...

…to keep people safer from TCE, please encourage them to contact:

Jody Milanese (millaneese) in Congresswoman Sue Kelly’s office at 202-225-5441