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Like Mike Partain, Bill Smith is a male breast cancer survivor who was exposed to toxins at Camp Lejeune, NC. Bill was kind enough to share his story with us:
After graduating from Florida State University with a journalism degree, William J. P. Smith, Jr. served in the USMC from 1956 until 1959, stationed at Camp Lejeune, NC, the majority of the time with the Globe as sports editor and acting editor of the largest Corps newspaper at the time. While there, he married, residing at the trailer park on the base and later in Midway Park, while fathering two girls.
In 1994, Bill was diagnosed with breast cancer, and had a radical modified mastectomy with 30 lymph nodes removed from his left side. He was treated with Tamoxifin for five years, and has had no reoccurance. It should be noted that there was no history of any kind of cancer in the Smith family. His former wife and two girls have had no symptoms of the disease.
On behalf of women, Bill has been a fund raiser and is the subject of two books, Living with Breast Cancer, the Story of 39 Women and One Man by Perry Colemore and Lisa Adelsberger, and Messages from Somewhere, Inspiring Stories of Life After 60 by Harriet May Savitz. He has also written an autobiographical screenplay on his experience.
The irony of all of this is that Bill was part of the team at Xerox Corporation that introduced xeroradiography for the early detection of breast cancer in 1969 at Hutzel Hospital in Detroit. Every once in a while, he takes the press kit from his library shelf and shares it with his students, who find it hard to believe that men can contract the horrific disease.
Today, Bill resides in Tallahassee, FL with his wife Kathy, teaches at FSU and runs an integrated marketing communications consultancy, Huckleberry Finn Tomorrow.
There are now at least 4 men known to have developed breast cancer after exposure to toxins at Camp Lejeune. With fewer than 2,000 new cases of male breast cancer diagnosed each year, we wonder:
- What are the odds of finding 4 cases of male breast cancer from the same contaminated military base?
- How many other military men have developed breast cancer?
As we learn more, we’ll keep you posted.
Last week’s Sarasota Herald-Tribune (FL) reports:
During the last 20 years, Tallevast residents say dozens of their neighbors have died prematurely. Others are still fighting cancer and beryllium-related health issues.
But a draft Florida Department of Health report on the community blighted by more than 200 acres of polluted ground water found just four cases of cancer.
The report could hardly be more different from a survey by residents that showed about 90 cases of cancer or beryllium-related diseases in the mainly black community.
DOH officials who met with the neighborhood group FOCUS on Monday agreed that their numbers, based on a state database and figures from a local hospital, were wildly off the mark. They also admitted they had studied the wrong ZIP code.
Although Tallevast has a post office, most Tallevast residents live in a Sarasota ZIP code.
“That’s one of the problems of dealing with a statewide database,” said Randy Merchant, a DOH administrator. “It’s hard to get a handle on what is happening in so small an area.”
The results left community leaders upset that state officials had not worked more closely with them to ensure errors like this did not happen.
“We’re angry,” said Wanda Washington, vice president of FOCUS. “We’re just not sure what road to take. No one ever came into the community to do a study. If you are doing it from behind a desk, you’re going to miss a lot.”
FOCUS’ figures on incidences of cancer came from a door-to-door survey quizzing families about their medical histories.
The community of about 80 homes sits above more than 200 acres of polluted ground water left behind by the former American Beryllium Co., which built parts for nuclear warheads for the federal government for nearly 40 years.
State officials said they will likely get an epidemiologist to conduct a similar door-to-door survey.
The cost would be about $125,000, they said.
State Rep. Bill Galvano, R-Bradenton, said if the DOH cannot fund it he will look for other funding sources.
“I’ve committed myself to help see that that happens so that the question can be answered and a more accurate picture developed,” Galvano said.
Residents in Tallevast have asked Lockheed Martin, the company responsible for the cleanup of the site, to pay for them to move. They have also filed several lawsuits against Lockheed and other companies that operated at the site seeking damages for health issues and falling property values.
Lockheed became the owner of the Tallevast site after the company acquired the former Loral company in 1996. It shut down the plant and sold the property, but not before discovering soil and ground-water pollution on and around the site.
In 2000, Lockheed notified county and state officials of the pollution, which included trichloroethylene, or TCE, a compound linked to liver and kidney cancer and other ailments.
Residents, who were not informed for almost four more years, continued to use well water. Their homes were switched to the county drinking water system in 2004.
FOCUS leaders said they would welcome state officials’ repeating their survey.
“We think the state will be better at it,” Washington said. “You need to put your feet on the ground and come out here and collect that information.”
Mike Partain is a breast cancer survivor. He was diagnosed years after his exposure to toxins at Camp Lejeune, NC. Tallahassee.com tells his story:
Poisoned at Camp LeJeune, snookered by Uncle Sam
Bill Berlow
Associate Editor
Mike Partain, son and grandson of Marine Corps veterans, grew up steeped in traditional American values — a rock-solid Reagan Republican whose life, even before birth, began among the few, the proud, at Camp LeJeune, N.C.
But for the past year, the 40-year-old Tallahassee insurance claims adjuster’s faith in his government has been shaken to its core.
He’d always assumed that Uncle Sam, first and foremost, had the health and welfare of U.S. citizens at the top of his priority list — especially if they’d worn the uniform.
Now he’s much less sure.
Partain’s crisis of doubt began a year ago, when his wife gave him “a hug that changed my life.” She found a lump, which turned out to be a cancerous tumor. A 14-inch surgical scar where Partain’s right breast used to be is the physical evidence of his breast cancer.
Less obvious is the psychological scar — both as a cancer survivor still undergoing treatment and as one who feels his government betrayed a trust.
Not long after he learned he had cancer, Partain found out that his recurring rash since birth and his breast cancer — rare among men, particularly those with no family history of the illness — probably stemmed from his exposure during fetal development and the first year of his life to water contaminated with tetrachloroethylene, a solvent used in dry cleaning.
Just two months after Partain’s wife felt the lump, the federal Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease Registry acknowledged that Marines and their families who between 1957 and 1987 lived in the LeJeune neighborhood where his family lived, drank water contaminated with extremely high levels of the carcinogenic chemical.
Partain and a network of former LeJeune residents who believe their serious health problems are due to the poisoning point out, however, that the government first knew of the contamination in the early 1980s — but did little or nothing to let the former Marines and their families know they were at risk.
“At this time last year, I was dying and I didn’t know,” Partain said. “The government knew I was dying and didn’t tell me. That burns me up.”
The LeJeune families can’t sue the feds, since the government hasn’t waived its sovereign-immunity protection. The military, meanwhile, is protected by the Ferris Doctrine, a 1950s-era ruling that protects the armed services from legal action by the men and women who serve — the idea being that if a soldier was wounded in battle because of a commanding officer’s dumb decision, the country would be worse off if the government had to battle personal-injury lawyers as well as foreign enemies.
I first met Partain in the fall of 2006, several months before his diagnosis. He was the adjuster for an insurance claim we filed. A former teacher from Winter Haven, where he grew up, he and I talked of his deep regret about having to give up teaching to support his wife and four children. That conversation even helped inspire a column about ex-teachers in November of that year.
Last year, after he told me his illness motivated his involvement in a crusade to reveal the truth behind the LeJeune environmental debacle, the Tallahassee Democrat reported his story on July 9, a few weeks after a congressional hearing on the LeJeune families.
A congressional investigation is still under way, and Partain has gotten help from U.S. Rep. Allen Boyd, D-Monticello, who called Partain’s story and that of other LeJeune families “deeply troubling, to say the least.”
Boyd’s office, which has tried to navigate the federal and military bureaucracies for Partain, said he is one of seven constituents in the congressman’s North Florida district who are seeking more information related to the LeJeune contamination.
Now Partain reluctantly acknowledges that he’s an activist, a word he’s still not comfortable with because of his conservative upbringing and beliefs.
When I likened the experience of the LeJeune Marine families to military victims of Agent Orange during the Vietnam War, Partain agreed.
“Defend, deny and delay,” he said, describing the government’s strategy in the face of claims that Agent Orange was responsible for a slew of veterans’ illnesses. “And that’s what they’re doing to us.”
Partain (strashni@comcast.net) was to share his story last night with vets at the American Legion post on Lake Ella. Even though he doesn’t realistically expect compensation from the government, it’s part of his personal commitment to spread the word about those exposed to the poison, estimated to number upwards of a million Americans.
It’s one more example of a government’s betrayal — always shocking, but, sadly, no longer surprising and, as Partain says, quickly forgotten.
The South Florida Sun-Sentinel reports:
A dry-cleaning shop on busy U.S. 1 has been proposed as a federal Superfund site after tests found nearby soil and groundwater contaminated with hazardous chemicals.
An Environmental Protection Agency official said the site presents no immediate health risk, but Broward County’s pollution prevention chief said he isn’t so sure.
Flash Cleaners, at 4131 N. Federal Highway [map], polluted the ground with a variety of chemicals used in the dry-cleaning business, most likely through spills and disposal of waste through a septic system, according to the Environmental Protection Agency. Tests of soil and groundwater found concentrations of several chemicals exceeding federal safety standards, including dichloroethene, trichloroethene, tetrachloroethylene and vinyl chloride.
Although the shop still takes in dry cleaning, it no longer processes it on site.
Barbara Schuster, project manager for the EPA, said there’s no immediate danger to public health. Eight drinking-water wells, serving Hillsboro Beach and other portions of northern Broward County, are within a mile of the site. But Schuster said there is little danger to the wells because they lie northwest or southwest of the site and the groundwater flows east, away from the wells.
Jeff Halsey, Broward County’s director of pollution prevention and remediation, said there is not enough information to determine how much danger is posed by the underground spread of hazardous chemicals. Among the possible health effects of these chemicals are liver and kidney damage, neurological diseases and cancer, according to the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
“Until we can get an assessment done and know exactly where the plume is going, we’re going to be very, very concerned,” he said.
The exact cause of the contamination is unknown, although environmental inspectors documented unsafe practices at the shop, according to EPA records. They found machinery and waste containers on a bare concrete floor without secondary containment. Wastewater from the dry-cleaning work was discharged into an on-site septic tank, which caused contamination of soil and water, according to the EPA.
The Superfund program, established after the discovery of thousands of tons of hazardous waste in the Love Canal neighborhood of Niagara Falls, N.Y., takes on the most serious contaminated sites. Under the program, the EPA tries to find the parties responsible for the pollution and make them pay for cleanup. Failing that, the Superfund pays, although its funds have dwindled since the expiration of a special tax on industries that pollute.
The owners of the shop, John and Susan Ferrel, say they didn’t cause the contamination and can’t afford to pay for cleaning it up. They bought the store in 1977 after working there for a year, and they’ve worked there ever since. They said they disposed of the waste properly and have been forced to pay for a preliminary environmental study because a state inspector found a small amount of dry-cleaning chemicals at the bottom of an unused machine.
“Because of that one thing, we spent a lot of money over the years trying to do what the county wanted and what the EPA wanted,” Susan Ferrel said, speaking from their home in Sebastian. “We just can’t afford this. It will take all our retirement.”
The EPA will conduct a study of the site and figure out a cleanup plan. Among the most likely options are digging up the soil and taking it to a landfill or pumping up the water and treating it to remove the contaminants. It is unknown what will happen to the business.
The one-story, peach-colored shop stands just back from the noisy traffic of Federal Highway. An American flag hangs in the window. A sign in the door states that it is closed Monday. Behind the shop is the Beacon Heights neighborhood, consisting of small apartment buildings and one-story houses.
“This is the first I’ve heard of it,” said Bob Manko, standing on the porch of his house on Northeast 42 Street. “If there’s something bad there, it ought to be cleaned up.”
But he said he hoped a small business wouldn’t be harmed by having to spend an excessive amount, unless the cleanup is necessary.
“Common sense should prevail,” he said.
David Fleshler can be reached at dfleshler@sun-sentinel.com or 954-356-4535.
Each of these stories deserves its own post and and, almost certainly, some commentary. Until we get more time for this, please be sure to check them out directly via the links below. All of them come courtesy of the Google. (Sorry to do it this way, we’ll try to get the full versions up soon. That reminds us, we’re still looking for local correspondents).
- Sen. Schumer calls on EPA to clean up local TCE sites
Times Herald-Record, NY
- Schumer: Sidney sites contaminated
The Daily Star, NY
- Get it right – Tallevast cleanup must be thorough
Bradenton Herald, FL
-
Experts claim plan to clean up Tallevast flawed
The Bradenton Herald, FL
- Schumer wants EPA to clean up dangerous water contaminant
Herkimer Evening Telegram, NY
href=”http://news.google.com/news/url?sa=t&ct=us/5-0&fp=4684bdbd3d60ce1a&ei=Z5CERrK2B4KcrQPkmc3YDg&url=http%3A//www.politicalaffairs.net/article/articleview/5493/1/268/&cid=1117655826″>
Hawaiian Activists Fight US Military Bases
Political Affairs Magazine, NY
- Schumer: Feds dragging their feet setting tougher drinking water and clean-up standards
Little Falls Evening Times, NY
-
Schumer blasts EPA over handling of pollutant
Poughkeepsie Journal, NY
-
IBM workers’ records pushed for TCE study; Researcher cites worldwide interest
Press & Sun-Bulletin, NY
- IBM Cancer Study Could Apply to Endicott
WCIZ TV News, NY
Protect Victor residents from poison
Rochester Democrat and Chronicle, NY
- Victor needs swift cleanup
Rochester Democrat and Chronicle, NY
- Leaders seek action on TCE, cite Victor
Rochester Democrat and Chronicle, NY
State to open cancer cluster study in Victor
Rochester Democrat and Chronicle, NY
href=”http://news.google.com/news/url?sa=t&ct=us/6-0&fp=4684445378348abb&ei=ZZGERriAL4z2qgOGiqTNDg&url=http%3A//defense.iwpnewsstand.com/showdoc.asp%3Fdocid%3D6262007_june26a&cid=1117656704″>
Democrats Stepping Up Scrutiny of DOD Environmental Compliance
InsideDefense (subscription), DC
EPA settles for $1.7M in CA groundwater cleanup of San Gabriel Valley Area 2 Superfund Site
Water Technology Online, NY
- Village of Hempstead feud lingers
Newsday, NY
- Study works on bacteria-eating toxin
United Press International -
- TI faces toxics lawsuit re: Hamilton Park, TX
EETimes.com
Victor pollution clues come up dry
Rochester Democrat and Chronicle, NY
- US EPA settles with Poway firm for $63100 over toxic chemical
WebWire (press release), GA
-
Council waives water cleanup in three districts
Fort Worth Star Telegram, TX
- Interview with Dr. Michael Gros, a victim of water contamination at Camp Lejeune
World Socialist Web Site, MI
The Sarasota Herald Tribune (FL) posted this excellent graphic of the Tallevast clean-up (includes map, geohydrological layers, explanation of pump and treat, and more). Unfortunately, the accompanying news is less excellent:
Cleaning up the majority of the polluted ground water in Tallevast could take 30 years, and getting it all could take a century, Lockheed Martin officials say. But some experts fear that the Tallevast pollution will never be cleaned up completely.
Read more.
Last week, The Bradenton Herald (FL) reported:
The investigation of the Tallevast toxic waste plume is over, state environmental regulators announced Monday. Lockheed Martin Corp., the state decided, has adequately defined the plume.
The Florida Department of Environmental Protection has approved Lockheed Martin Corp.’s latest plume maps as final despite objections raised by independent reviews of the defense giant’s data.
The approval was good news for Lockheed scientists who have been trying to define the plume to state requirements for the past six years.
[...]
Those impacted by DEP’s decision – Tallevast residents and businesses – have 21 days to appeal the DEP decision with the Department’s Office of General Counsel in Tallahassee. Failure to file an appeal within the 21-day period would constitute a waiver of any right to an administrative hearing, the approval letter said.
The clock started ticking, DEP said, with the receipt of the letter from William Kutash, professional geologist administrator for DEP’s Southwest District.
Copies of Kutash’s letter addressed to Tina Armstrong, Lockheed’s program manager for the Tallevast site, were sent via e-mail Monday to leaders of FOCUS – Family Oriented Community United Strong -a resident advocacy group in Tallevast.
[...]
Independent experts, some county officials and Tallevast residents united under FOCUS have consistently questioned Lockheed’s data on the plume.
Those questions over the past two years- including a review by Wilma Subra, an environmental advocate and chemist who studied Lockheed’s data for the Herald – pushed the DEP to require Lockheed to do additional testing that led to the current estimate of the plume’s size at 200 acres.
Originally Lockheed maintained that the plume covered just 50 acres and was confined to the plant site.
[...]
Washington said FOCUS would send the letter to the legal team representing more than 300 Tallevast residents and former residents in a lawsuit against Lockheed and others that claims damage from the plume.
[...]
Lockheed has maintained from the beginning that the plume poses no health risk to residents and will have minimal if any impact on property values.
Read the full story here.
For extensive coverage of the ongoing situation in Tallevast, be sure to see The Bradenton Herald’s library of ongoing coverage.
Also visit HelpTallevast.com.
Back from a longer than expected break and lots to catch up on. We’ll start here:
Yesterday’s Orlando Sentinel (FL) reports that Dow Chemical and 18 other manufacturers have been sued by the operator of a Lake Mary, Florida plant around which TCE has been discovered at dangerous levels in soil/groundwater:
MONI Holdings LLC alleges the companies that sold the solvents — not the ones that bought and used them — are responsible for the pollution.
It says solvent manufacturers told customers to discard the chemical — trichloroethene, or TCE — by spreading it on the ground and allowing it to evaporate, according to the suit.
The results, according to the suit, were disastrous.
[...]
“MONI is wholly without fault for the contamination of the groundwater with TCE . . .,” according to the suit.
Wholly without fault?!? Is this the “they made us do it” defense? If so, this is finger-pointing the likes of which we’ve never quite seen from an accused polluter. But it sure is interesting.
You may recall that back in June, Dow lost a major verdict in Modesto, CA where they were found guilty of failing to warn dry cleaners about the dangers of PCE and forced to compensate the city for its cost of installing water filters. The Lake Mary suit seems based on a very similar pattern of alleged behavior. However, the recent Lake Mary suit takes things one step further. Not only does it say the manufacturers failed to warn their customers, it appears the manufacturers may have encouraged the pollution.
Before we draw hasty conclusions about who did what, at minimum this article and the lawsuit raise a number of questions:
- Did Dow and others tell customers to dump TCE in the ground? If so, did they do so in writing?
- Is MONI conceding that they did, indeed, dump TCE in the ground?
- Since litigation is pending over TCE-induced diseases resulting from the Lake Mary plant, could manufacturers be held liable for causing these diseases?
- Could manufacturers be held liable for TCE-induced disease caused by other contaminated sites across the country?
- Could manufacturers also be held liable for nation-wide clean-up costs?
As we learn more, we’ll be sure to keep you posted. Meantime, you can read the full story about the recent lawsuit here.
Late last week, Family Oriented Community United Strong (FOCUS), the community group advocating for the people in Tallevast, FL, launched a website. From the main page of HelpTallevast.com:
The people of Tallevast are in serious trouble. For the past three years, the members of this small community in Florida have been fighting for their lives against Lockheed Martin Corp. – one of the world’s largest defense contractors. In 2000, the company discovered that a faulty sump at a former beryllium plant had leaked toxins, contaminating the community’s water and soil. While Lockheed has agreed to clean up the mess, they refuse to move the residents out of the area, leaving them to fend for themselves. For years residents have been struggling to uncover the truth about the damage to their community – to protect their health, and the health of their children.
[...]
The residents of Tallevast need to be moved. Not only has it taken a toll on their health and emotional wellbeing, but the contamination has significantly decreased their property value leaving them stranded. Since these people cannot afford to move themselves out of harms way, there needs to be an intervention. According to the Bradenton Herald, Manatee County has agreed to facilitate a buyout of the Tallevast property owners if Lockheed Martin Corp. is willing to help relocate residents. Lockheed has refused. So now it is up to us to show them that this is not acceptable. Please go the the Take Action section and help the people of Tallevast.
The website contains section for history, Q&A, environmental reports, news, and, as indicated above, a page where you can help take action (they have contact information for local, state and federal officials as well as pre-written letters that you can copy/paste and customize). They’ve also graciously added our link on their site for folks who want to learn more about TCE.
To anybody reaching us via HelpTallevast.com, welcome. Please let us know if there is any way we can be of assistance.
Last week’s Bradenton Herald (FL) reported:
A third review found Lockheed Martin Corp.’s latest assessment of the Tallevast plume failed to fully describe the extent of the contamination as the defense giant claimed.
Moreover, Lockheed was premature in its conclusion that risk of human exposure to the contamination is not a concern, said Michael Graves, a geologist and principal consultant for Environmental Sciences and Technologies (EST) of Lakeland.
[...]
“We now have three reviews of Lockheed’s data that all reach the conclusion that there is still critical work to be done,” said Wanda Washington, vice president of FOCUS. “How much more time will it take? Lockheed has been at it for so long. Time is important. Our lives are at stake. The dangers don’t go on hold because of Lockheed’s timing.”
Graves’ criticism echoed two other reviews of the Sara III report – a review by Tim Varney, the independent consultant advising Tallevast residents, and a review by environmentalist and chemist Wilma Subra, who analyzed the data for The Herald.
[...]
Ed Cottingham, lead attorney for more than 300 Tallevast residents who have filed a lawsuit against Lockheed, said he had not had a chance to study Graves’ report.
[...]
Washington hopes DEP and Lockheed will hold public meetings to address the SARA III report.
She also hopes people take notice of the three reviews of Lockheed’s data.
“How much more will it take for someone to step forward and say, ‘Hey, these people are in trouble,’ ” Washington said. “The more time passes, the more people could be harmed.”
Read the full story here.
[Thanks, JM, for this tip]
Wilma Subra is a technical adviser for the Louisiana Environmental Action Network. Subra reviewed environmental reports from Lockheed Martin at the request of the Brandenton Herald (FL).
Recently, the Herald published Subra’s resume and key findings from Subra’s report. The key findings are below. You can also click here [MS WORD, 69KB] for a detailed timeline of what has transpired in Tallevast.
Key Findings:
1. According to Lockheed Martin Corp., Addendum 3 to the Site Assessment Report contains sufficient information for the Florida Department of Environmental Protection (DEP) to base an approval of the Site Assessment phase. Such an approval by the DEP will allow Lockheed to proceed with the preparation of a Final Remedial Action Plan. However, the latest report lacks key information and in some cases includes inaccurate information. It should not be the basis on which to proceed to a Final Remedial Action Plan phase.
2. DEP must require that the lacking information be generated, the inaccurate information corrected, and a fourth Addendum to the Site Assessment be issued and available for public comment, prior to consideration of allowing Lockheed to move to the Final Remedial Action Plan phase…
3. One of the objectives of the Site Assessment is to evaluate current exposure and potential risks of exposure to humans and the environment, including multiple pathways of exposure. The site assessment failed to include information on vapor intrusion and volatile organics being transported into homes in the residential areas, churches, businesses and the community center from Volatile Organic Chemicals (VOCs) in the shallow groundwater.
4. The VOCs in the shallow groundwater pose a risk to human health through inhalation. That exposure pathway must be evaluated as an important part of the site assessment.
5. Lockheed has acknowledged that although VOCs in the groundwater are a potential concern, inhalation is not considered to represent a significant exposure pathway because air concentrations are presumed to be low. Presumption of low concentrations of toxic chemicals is not acceptable.
6. Lockheed used the low concentrations presumption to omit the study of groundwater vapor intrusion into homes.
7. Lockheed used the lack of human exposure to groundwater contaminates to justify not considering relocation of residents since the community supposedly no longer uses individual water wells.
8. Lockheed failed to evaluate the vapor intrusion pathway of the toxic off gassing of VOCs into residential homes.
9. If the FDEP does not require the vapor intrusion pathway and indoor air quality to be investigated as a part of the Site Assessment, the Remedial Action Plan will fail to address a critical human health exposure pathway and continue to allow the community to be exposed to the toxic chemicals of concern.
10. The groundwater table beneath the residential area is less than 5 feet below the ground surface. Toxic volatile organic chemicals in excess of criterion are present in the shallow groundwater beneath the residential areas at depths of 0 to 30 feet below ground surface in the Upper Surficial Aquifer System and 35 to 45 feet below ground surface in the Lower Surficial Aquifer System.
11. The Upper Surficial Aquifer System groundwater 15 to 20 feet below ground level in the residential areas contains 1,4-Dioxane, PCE, TCE, cis-1,2-DCE, 1,1-DCE and 1,1-DCA in concentrations in excess of Screening Criteria.
12. The Lower Surficial Aquifer System groundwater 35 feet below the ground surface in the residential area contains 1,4-Dioxane, PCE, TCE, cis-1,2-DCE, 1,1-DCE and 1,1-DCA in excess of Screening Criteria.
13. FDEP must require that the transport of volatile organic chemicals from the shallow groundwater beneath the residential areas into the homes of people living on top of the groundwater plume and the human exposure pathway be evaluated as part of the Site Assessment.
14. It is critical to evaluate this human health pathway during the Site Assessment phase and not allow the Remedial Action phase to proceed until the magnitude and extent of human health exposure is defined.
15. This evaluation could lead to an additional recommendation in Section 5.2 of the Site Assessment Report that would require an evaluation of groundwater off gassing impacts to human health that could result in relocation of residential areas over the groundwater plume.
16. One of the significant findings of the Site Assessment Report is that the horizontal and vertical extent of COCs above GCTLs in site groundwater has been delineated. But the vertical extent of the groundwater contamination plume has not been determined for the entire plume area. There are not adequate wells below groundwater strata exceeding GCTLs throughout the plume to define the vertical extent of the plume.
17. Two other significant findings of the Site Assessment Report are that the vertical extent of chemicals of concern or COCs above GCTLs in site groundwater is limited to within approximately 200 feet below ground surface water and in the Lower Arcadian Formation Sands and Floridan Aquifer System is not impacted with site COCs above groundwater cleanup targeted levels.
18. These findings fail to present the fact that chemicals of concern have migrated into the Lower Arcadian Formation Sands and Floridan Aquifer System as documented by testing of the minimal number of monitoring wells installed in the two water bearing zones.
19. Chemicals of concern including TCE and PCE are present in groundwater formations deeper than 200 feet below ground surface and have been detected in groundwater to depths of 365 to 385 feet below ground surface.
20. Chemicals of concern have impacted the Lower Arcadian Formation Sands and the Floridan Aquifer System.
21. Samples of private water wells were collected and analyzed as part of the Site Assessment process. Lockheed made a decision to not include some of the results in the Site Assessment report and will submit the data to the DEP under separate cover. This is not acceptable.
22. The 2006 Private Well Survey Data that was submitted to DEP under separate cover on May 22 indicates that samples from several wells to the north and east of the Booth well showed contamination, yet those wells, in particular Well 98 on Trey Desenberg’s property, arenot within the plume. This indicates that both the horizontal as well as vertical extent of the plume has not been defined and needs further study.
23. Test results of private wells not included in the Site Assessment contained concentrations of 1,4-Dioxane, TCE and cis-1,2-DCE in concentrations, in some cases, in excess of groundwater targeted cleanup levels.
24. Lockheed has suggested that these private wells were beyond the limits of site impacted groundwater and beyond monitoring wells which had non-detectable concentrations of the chemicals of concern found on the former American Beryllium Company site.
25. There are many individual plume maps for specific chemicals within the overall composite plume map. Examination of individual plume maps indicate that other plumes traced back to the plant may be contaminating those private wells.
26. The entire Private Water Well Data set must be required to be provided in the Site Assessment Report and the DEP must require that Lockheed do additional testing to delineate groundwater contamination outside the current plumes and determine if the source material for the plumes of the unreported private water wells are interconnected to the former beryllium facility plumes or originated from the former plant.
27. Only one on-site surface water sample has been collected and analyzed throughout the testing and evaluation phases of the former ABC facility site. No on-site or off-site sediment samples have been collected and tested for COCs. This constitutes a lack of data on which to fully characterize the former ABC facility site and the surrounding area known to be impacted by the contaminated groundwater plume.
28. Sediment sampling and analysis for COCs must be performed in order to complete the characterization needed to finalize the Site Assessment phase.
29. DEP should require a more proactive remedy than the cleanup strategies proposed by Lockheed in the site assessment. That proactive remedy should include: relocation, contaminated groundwater removal or bioremediation at hot spot areas in addition to the Interim Remedial Action, and removal of contaminated soil from on the industrial site and from the residential yards.
SOURCE: Wilma Subra, Subra Company, “Comments on Site Assessment Report Addendum 3, Former ABC Facility, Tallevast, Florida, submitted to DEP by Lockheed Martin on April 26.”
Last week’s Bradenton Herald (FL) reports:
Attorneys representing Tallevast residents have requested documents from Lockheed Martin Corp. covering virtually every aspect of operation and handling of hazardous materials [i.e. TCE] at the former Loral American Co. plant.
In a response filed with the court on Tuesday, Lockheed’s attorneys called the discovery demands overly broad, vague and inconsistent with Florida law.
[...]
Tallevast residents have long suspected that the contamination at 1520 Tallevast Road is linked to the American Beryllium plume Lockheed now says covers more than 200 acres. Furthermore, Tallevast residents believe that there may a link between Lockheed and the beryllium plant that predates the defense giant’s acquisition of Loral in 1996.
Not true, said a Lockheed spokeswoman Thursday.
[...]
Bruce Denson, of the St. Petersburg law firm of Whittemore Denson and a member of the Tallevast legal team, said the requests for discovery documents are well within Florida law.
“Everything we have asked for we consider to be relevant or will lead to relevant information,” Denson said Thursday.
Read the full story here.
Sorry for the error folks. We were wrong (though still unsure how we missed this). As the Bradenton Herald (FL) reported almost one year ago, toxic vapor intrusion dangers have been ruled out by government experts:
Posted on Mon, Aug. 29, 2005
Tests: Vapor levels too low
Skeptics question the methodology used in the study
DONNA WRIGHT
Herald Staff Writer
TALLEVAST – Contradicting residents’ fears that their health is endangered from a 131-acre plume of toxic pollution under their community, state and local health experts report no evidence of poisonous indoor vapors in Tallevast.
Read the full story here. Though this doesn’t appear to be the last word on vapor intrusion in Tallevast, we are sorry for our oversight.
In light of the recently revealed financial stakes of further TCE regulation for the world’s most powerful polluter and the LA Times series on TCE’s politics and community impact, we found the following article, entitled “Pollution Cleanups Pit Pentagon Against Regulators,” both interesting and disturbing. From everyone’s favorite color newspaper, USA Today, in October 2004:
Across the nation, the Pentagon is taking extraordinary steps to limit the military’s accountability for a 50-year legacy of pollution, a USA TODAY investigation finds…
Since 2001, Pentagon officials have stalled cleanups at scores of military sites where contamination from training and manufacturing has fouled soil and water. They’ve used their political clout to sidetrack new regulations that could force the services to spend hundreds of millions of dollars more to deal with pollution. And they’ve challenged state and federal regulators’ power to make the military obey existing environmental laws…
Four years after President Bush campaigned on a pledge to make the military “comply with environmental laws by which all of us must live,” the White House is the Pentagon’s chief ally in pushing for relief from such laws.
Within the administration, “it’s no secret that the EPA is running into this wall with the Pentagon,” says Linda Fisher, who served two years as Bush’s deputy EPA administrator — the agency’s second-in- command — before returning to private work last year.
“Is the Department of Defense taking (regulatory disputes) to the White House more often? Absolutely,” says Fisher, who has held environmental jobs in every Republican administration since Ronald Reagan’s. “Is the Department of Defense more powerful than the EPA? Yes.”
Defense officials say state and federal environmental agencies have too much power to demand costly and intrusive cleanups on military land. The Pentagon wants to cut its $4 billion a year in environmental costs — less than 1% of defense spending — by gaining more authority over where and how cleanups will be done.
“Some of these regulators are doing wrongheaded things based on poor scientific evidence,” says Raymond DuBois, deputy undersecretary of Defense for installations and environment. “Shouldn’t we, as stewards of the taxpayers’ money, decide how we’re going to clean up?”
Ummm. No.
The article goes on to highlight key findings of the USA Today investigation:
•The Pentagon is thwarting environmental agencies’ efforts to set cleanup rules.
Since 2001, the armed services have delayed more than 70 federal cleanup agreements that would dictate the scope and timing of restoration at contaminated military sites…
The Pentagon also is fighting EPA efforts to set new pollution limits on two military contaminants: perchlorate, a munitions ingredient, and trichloroethylene (TCE), a solvent. After military officials complained to the White House that the EPA’s studies overstated the chemicals’ health risks, the agency opted to wait for years of additional study before making new rules.
State environmental regulators are facing military resistance, too. In Colorado, California, Ohio and Minnesota, the services are fighting state efforts to restrict the future use of contaminated military property. In California, Florida, Hawaii and Alaska, the military has challenged the authority of state officials to fine the armed forces for pollution problems.
•The EPA is cutting efforts to make the military comply with environmental laws.
•The Pentagon is spending less on cleanups.
If you check out the full article, you can read more about places like Lowry Air Force Base where AF appears to be deciding for itself whether toxic clean-up is really necessary. Or you can check out USA Today’s nifty Flash presentation in which you can view the clean-up status of 130 military-owned Superfund sites in 39 states, state by state (OK, we cheated, you can launch it from here. <— warning, must have flash installed to view).
note: If any readers have a ton of time on their hands, here’s a project idea. We’d like to post a list of these 130 military EPA Superfund sites, by state. We’ll make it a point to extract all the names and descriptions from the USA Today preso and will post it here when it’s complete. It may be some time before we get to this. If anyone wants to get a jump on it in the meantime, we promise we will not complain. We might even be willing to publicly thank you for your effort. If you’ve got any interest in this project, please let us know.
The Bradenton Herald (FL) has posted a link to this plume map of the Tallevast contamination (click image to enlarge, or here to download as PDF for better detail):

Through the magic of Google and Photoshop, we have overlayed street labels so you can get a better sense of the location (click image to enlarge):

Last week, a Lockheed Martin report indicated that the size of the growing plume in Tallevast now covers up to 200 acres, having grown to 8 times the original estimated size of 25 acres since a year ago. It seems each time a new Lockheed report is submitted, this plume has grown in size. Nevertheless, Lockheed doesn’t miss the chance for their own positive spin:
“It’s not a growing plume,” Lockheed spokeswoman Gail Rymer said. “It’s that, as we were able to install more monitoring wells, we were better able to delineate the plume. We feel confident that we’ve reached the edge of the plume.”
It appears others are not so confident:
Representatives from Family Oriented Community United Strong, or FOCUS, a residents’ advocacy group, say they’ve heard before that the edge of the plume had been defined but then subsequent reports from Lockheed to the Florida Department of Environmental Protection showed a larger area.
“It was no surprise that (the plume) has grown,” said Wanda Washington, vice president of FOCUS. “If Lockheed says it’s grown to 200 acres, I’d be willing to believe that it’s grown to 300 or more.”
…
Washington said FOCUS wants Lockheed to fund another study, this time by a FOCUS-hired geologist.
“We’ll be satisfied when our guy tells us he thinks he’s found the end of it,” Washington said of the plume. “We’re not trying to make a bad situation worse, we’re just looking for the truth. We don’t have the trust in Lockheed or their data.”
Read the latest updates from The Bradenton Herald (FL) here and here.
We don’t suggest the possiblity lightly, but we wondered it aloud nearly a year ago when we failed to find reports of vapor intrusion testing in an area that seemed to warrant it. TCE has since been discovered in shallow groundwater as close as 10 ft from the surface within this ever-growing TCE plume that has now* spread over 130 acres underneath a residential community. We know that shallow groundwater contamination by TCE above 5ppb at this depth ought to trigger immediate consideration of vapor intrusion (according to US EPA) but still see no record of any such considerations in Tallevast. Who is responsible for testing indor air in Tallevast and why aren’t they doing this now??
In today’s Bradenton Herald (FL), an editorial entitled Tallevast might not have borders reminds us that an independent expert has reviewed the data and says the plume is far more dangerous than either Lockheed or government regulators have admitted. We also learn that Manatee county seems to have backed away from plans to protect the contaminated area from risky development after succumbing to outcries of community members opposed to such safety measures. Finally, the editorial ends with this plea:
Everyone in Manatee County should be concerned about the scope and potential impact of the toxic plume under Tallevast and . . .That’s the point. We don’t know the boundaries or depth yet. And we deserve to know. And remedies must begin immediately.
Indeed. And, we’d add, vapor intrusion must be ruled out quickly, lest whomever would be responsible for leading these tests prefers to knowingly leave this community exposed.
* Nearly 1 yr ago, Lockheed Martin suggested that residents should not be concerned by the then-quadrupling of the known size of the plume. To this day, Lockheed is still trying to find the growing plume’s borders.
A reader forwarded us the following article from today’s Orlando Sentinel (FL):
More than three dozen former workers at a defunct telecommunications plant say they were poisoned by contaminated water they unwittingly used for everything from making coffee to washing their hands. The water came from the ground below them, polluted by toxic chemicals used to make phone equipment but then dumped on the property, according to a series of lawsuits. The chemicals worked their way into the drinking-water supply that was pumped back into the building, according to the suits.
The employees became seriously ill, all but a few with cancer. At least four have died during the plant’s 35-year history.
So far, 13 workers or their survivors are suing, but they are not suing the suspected polluters. They are trying a different legal tactic, one designed to get money without assigning blame. Their lawyers say that is necessary because several companies operated the plant through the years. One of those companies made them seriously ill, but they don’t know precisely which, their lawyers say. “You can’t really prove on which day which exposure caused them to get cancer,” said Steve Eichenblatt, a lawyer representing the group.
[...]
The now-idle plant, at 400 Rinehart Road, was run by at least five companies or business ventures after General Dynamics Corp. built it for subsidiary Stromberg-Carlson Corp. in 1968 in a former orange grove. Successors include United Technologies Corp., Marconi Communications Inc. and Siemens AG. Siemens operated the plant for more than a decade before closing it in 2003, according to court records, though about 200 employees still work in an office building on the edge of the site. Although the owners changed, the work force of about 2,000 at any given time manufactured the same thing through the years: telephone-network switches.
[...]
Nearly all of the 13 who are suing were diagnosed with cancer, including kidney cancer and leukemia, said Paul Byron, a partner of Overchuck, De Marco, Byron, Overchuck, P.A., one of the Orlando-area law firms representing the employees.
Check out this graphic of the contamination area or read the full story here.
(Thanks, T.S., for the tip.)
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.”
What’s happening in this neighborhood of modest low-slung homes, crisscrossed by railroad tracks and dominated by aircraft hangars on the horizon, has been playing out for years at other cities that are home to military bases, industrial plants, nuclear weapons laboratories and NASA centers.
Hundreds of communities with major TCE contamination have waited more than a decade for scientists to explain the cancer risks created by exposure to TCE. The clear solvent used to take grease off metal parts is officially branded as a probable carcinogen by half a dozen state, federal and international agencies. It is most often linked to liver and kidney cancer, as well as birth defects and childhood leukemia.
But scientists representing major polluters, particularly the Department of Defense, have successfully delayed action on scientific assessments that TCE is a far graver threat to public health than recognized by federal standards. When the Environmental Protection Agency drafted a TCE assessment in 2001, finding that it was far more toxic than originally believed, the issue was wrested from the EPA’s control.
A panel of elite scientists organized by the National Academy of Sciences will issue a report this summer that is supposed to shape government policy on TCE. The report is all but certain to intensify the battle — no matter what it says.
If the academy endorses the view that TCE is a big risk, it would lay the groundwork for stricter cleanup standards across the nation and probably lower permissible levels of TCE in the environment. If it rejects the EPA’s earlier research, it will trigger a political rebellion by exposed communities.
“If the national academy comes out with some kind of a weaker standard, it is going to ignite this all over again,” said Sen. Barbara Boxer (D-Calif.), who has fought regulatory delays along with other Democrats and Republicans in Congress. “We are headed for a battle.”
The national academy has been working on its report for more than a year and is now as much as six months behind schedule. One member of the group, Harvard University professor Thomas J. Smith, said the group was dealing with many missing pieces of a difficult puzzle and many bits of data that don’t seem to fit anywhere. “It is a complicated picture,” Smith said.
Even after the national academy issues its report, the matter will go back to the EPA for another risk assessment that could take another two years. Any further regulatory action to reduce public exposure to TCE could take several more years. The EPA first began amassing scientific data in the mid-1990s and began assessing the risks in 1997.
It is a pace that has left TCE exposure victims disheartened and angry.
Anne Elizabeth Townsend died a month ago in Moscow, Idaho, the result of liver disease and TCE exposure, according to her death certificate and a liver biopsy.
She was married to Tom Townsend, a former major in the Marine Corps who was based at highly polluted Camp Lejeune in North Carolina, after returning seriously injured from combat duty in Vietnam in 1965.
The Townsends lived at the Paradise Point housing complex, which was served by a base water-supply system that carried 1,400 parts per billion of TCE, a later investigation by the federal Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease Registry would disclose.
The current EPA limit on TCE in drinking water is 5 ppb. The standard might have dropped to 1 ppb had the risk assessment conducted by the EPA in 2001 been adopted, experts say.
In 1967, the Townsends had a son born with cardiovascular birth defects. He lived only three months.
“We had an autopsy done and there wasn’t a system in his body that wasn’t screwed up,” said Townsend, a retired college administrator and a former city councilman. “That autopsy report had 10 pages of findings. It was a mercy that he didn’t last.
“They wiped out two members of my family,” Townsend, 75, added. “I am proud that I served in the Marines, but there are some days I want to forget that I did.”
The Marine Corps was alerted to the TCE contamination in 1980, but did not disclose the pollution or make any changes to its water system until 1985. It was a five-year period in which thousands of Marines were exposed.
At the request of Sen. Elizabeth Dole (R-N.C.), the Government Accountability Office is investigating whether the Marine Corps covered up the TCE problems at the base.
“Nearly 20 years have elapsed since the last contaminated well was closed at Camp Lejeune, and we are still unable to address the related concerns of former residents,” Dole wrote in 2004.
“We have an obligation to provide them with definitive answers to their questions regarding the circumstances and extent of the contamination as well as the likely adverse health effects.”
Among Dole’s concerns is the slow pace of a study by the Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease Registry, part of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. A still-incomplete study of 12,598 children born at the base from 1968 to 1985 found 103 cases of cancer and birth defects, including 22 cases of leukemia, double the national average. No studies have been conducted of the adult men or women who drank the base water.
Jerry Ensminger, a former Marine drill sergeant, lived at the base in the 1970s and his wife gave birth to a daughter in 1976. Their daughter, Janey, died of leukemia at age 9.
He has been fighting to force the Marine Corps to notify tens of thousands of Marines, their families and civilian employees exposed to TCE. He formed a group, “The Few, The Proud, The Forgotten,” — along with a website (www.tftptf.com) — to reach out to Marine families.
“The Marine Corps has done everything in its power to not notify the people who were exposed,” Ensminger, 53, said. “There is something wrong with our government.”
TCE is the most widespread water contaminant in the nation, present at 1,400 Defense Department pollution sites, according to Air Force documents.
The Defense Department contends that scientific evidence that TCE causes cancer is weak and that the EPA needs to conduct more studies before tightening its standards or ordering tougher cleanups.
Certainly, not all TCE contamination was caused by government agencies. It is estimated that at least hundreds, perhaps thousands, of current and former industrial sites across the nation have TCE pollution.
When the National Academy of Sciences held a public hearing at UC Irvine last year, Amanda Evans showed up carrying an urn with her father’s ashes. Gary Evans died of liver cancer in 2002, after working as a vice president at a View-Master factory in Beaverton, Ore., owned by Mattel Inc. The company acquired the manufacturing plant in its 1997 merger with Tyco Toys and closed the factory in 2001.
The plant used TCE extensively to degrease metal parts for the stereoscopic viewers produced there, though TCE use had ceased long before Mattel acquired the plant. The TCE was released into the soil, where it contaminated an aquifer that supplied the plant’s drinking water. A later government investigation found the aquifer had TCE levels of 1,670 ppb.
As many as 25,000 workers were exposed to TCE at the plant since the mid-1960s, according to a 2004 report by the Oregon Department of Human Services. Based on a list of about half of those workers, the study found nearly triple the expected rate of kidney cancer and double the expected rate of pancreatic cancer.
Evans, who works in the entertainment industry, founded Victims of TCE Exposure and hopes to produce a documentary on TCE. When she showed up in Irvine with her father’s ashes and what she calls the “Wall of 300 Victims at View-Master,” national academy officials refused to allow her to set it up.
“I told them I don’t have a PowerPoint presentation, I have this wall,” Evans said. Campus police were called but declined to take any action.
Evans said she was suing Mattel, but the matter must first go through a workers compensation claim. Donald Stewart, a former U.S. senator from Alabama representing Evans, acknowledged that such toxics litigation was complex and not always successful. “But you have good people on juries who recognize that these substances do cause harm,” Stewart said.
Civil suits involving TCE have typically wilted because it is difficult to prove that illnesses result directly from exposure.
In “A Civil Action,” author Jonathan Harr recounted the prodigious efforts of an attorney from a small Boston law firm who tried — but largely failed — to prove two major U.S. corporations had caused health havoc in a New England town after releasing TCE into the water supply. The story was later made into a movie starring John Travolta as attorney Jan Schlichtmann.
In San Antonio, the former Kelly Air Force Base ranks among the nation’s largest TCE sites, with contamination that migrated several miles past the base boundary.
So far, the Air Force has spent more than $300 million on the cleanup and expects to spend another $155 million over the next 15 years. Residents want the cleanup completed much sooner, though Air Force officials say the plume is shrinking.
The community that lives over the contaminated water has about double the expected rate of liver cancers, said Melanie Williams, senior cancer epidemiologist at the Texas Department of State Health Services. A twofold rate of excess cancer is “not a huge margin,” Williams said, but she noted that the excessive cancers have continued for 10 years.
“The consistency is a concern,” she said.
Despite the huge petrochemical industry in Texas and all of the environmental health issues that go with it, Kelly is one of the highest-priority toxics sites in the state, Williams said.
In addition to cancer, the department has found excessive rates for three types of birth defects involving the heart, stomach and lungs, according to Peter Langlois, a birth defects epidemiologist at the department. The birth defect rates range from two to three times higher than expected.
But Williams and Langlois said they could not establish any definitive link to the TCE contamination in the community. Kelly was a major repair depot for the Air Force and used TCE to clean oil and grease from metal parts. Giant tanks of TCE were drained directly into the ground, former workers have said.
The TCE contaminated a shallow aquifer about 14 feet below the surface. The aquifer is not used by the city and little proof has surfaced that the TCE-tainted water ever penetrated down to the 1,000-foot-deep water drawn for the municipal drinking supply, said Dr. Fernando A. Guerra, director of the San Antonio Metropolitan Health District.
Mark A. Weegar, senior project manager at the Texas Commission on Environmental Quality, said it was impossible for the contaminated water to migrate from the shallow aquifer into the city’s water supply.
But residents say Guerra and Weegar have consistently underestimated their exposure. Dozens of unauthorized shallow wells were sunk into the TCE-contaminated water and used for drinking, bathing and gardening, according to residents and federal officials. The Air Force has capped 75 such wells in the last decade.
“We know that people used the wells in the shallow aquifer for drinking water,” said George Rice, a hydrologist who has studied the neighborhood’s problems. “You have to assume that people used those wells to water their lawns, wash their cars and the children used those hoses the way kids use hoses.”
The Air Force also dumped TCE and other chemicals into open pits on the base for years, which periodically flooded during heavy Texas rainstorms and sent the overflow through surrounding neighborhoods that lacked storm drains, said Yolonda Johnson, a community activist who lives a few blocks from the base boundary. Johnson’s daughter and two of her granddaughters have kidney disease.
No air monitoring tests inside homes have been conducted for TCE, even though the contamination is in a shallow aquifer. Soil tests for vapors indicated there was no cause for concern, Texas authorities concluded.
Outside health experts say the shallow contamination alone should have prompted air monitoring tests long ago.
Adam G. Antwine, the civilian who manages the local cleanup for the Air Force, suggested that some “pathways” might have potentially exposed the community to TCE.
“I don’t know that we want to totally dismiss any potential pathways,” he said.
“This is a low-income minority population and that raises concerns of environmental justice.”
The base shut down in 2001 after 80 years of operation. Because the latency period for many cancers is 10 years or more, higher TCE levels long ago might only now be causing illness.
Former Kelly workers describe conditions inside the base during its heyday as an abysmal toxic nightmare.
Mary Lou Ornelias, a frail 59-year-old woman, worked in the Kelly plating shop for 18 years.
With her bare hands, she would dip cotton cloths into buckets of TCE and then wipe grease from aircraft parts. The air in the plating shop was a steamy, solvent-rich brew that turned the walls yellow and had a stench that made visitors wince, she said. The exposure made her dizzy and caused outbreaks of scaly rashes.
“I would scratch and scratch the sores,” recalled Ornelias, who has no claims or suits against the government.
The sores would not be her last or biggest problem. Ornelias tires easily, looks gaunt and sometimes falls down — all part of her life with liver cancer.
“In 2002, I started throwing up blood,” she said.
Outside the plant, community activists have pushed for a faster cleanup, but say progress has been slow and the problems have festered.
“Living in this contamination area is a miserable burden,” said Armondo Quintanilla, a former employee at Kelly who has spent most of his life in the neighborhood. “It is shameful. People deserve better.”
The following story appeared on the front page of Wednesday’s LA Times. While we normally just excerpt, this is such an important piece that it has been produced in its entirety (click on show full article for the rest of the article):
How Environmentalists Lost the Battle Over TCE
By Ralph Vartabedian
Times Staff Writer
March 29, 2006
After massive underground plumes of an industrial solvent were discovered in the nation’s water supplies, the Environmental Protection Agency mounted a major effort in the 1990s to assess how dangerous the chemical was to human health.
Following four years of study, senior EPA scientists came to an alarming conclusion: The solvent, trichloroethylene, or TCE, was as much as 40 times more likely to cause cancer than the EPA had previously believed.
The preliminary report in 2001 laid the groundwork for tough new standards to limit public exposure to TCE. Instead of triggering any action, however, the assessment set off a high-stakes battle between the EPA and Defense Department, which had more than 1,000 military properties nationwide polluted with TCE.
By 2003, after a prolonged challenge orchestrated by the Pentagon, the EPA lost control of the issue and its TCE assessment was cast aside. As a result, any conclusion about whether millions of Americans were being contaminated by TCE was delayed indefinitely.
What happened with TCE is a stark illustration of a power shift that has badly damaged the EPA’s ability to carry out one of its essential missions: assessing the health risks of toxic chemicals.
The agency’s authority and its scientific stature have been eroded under a withering attack on its technical staff by the military and its contractors. Indeed, the Bush administration leadership at the EPA ultimately sided with the military.
After years on the defensive, the Pentagon — with help from NASA and the Energy Department — is taking a far tougher stand in challenging calls for environmental cleanups. It is using its formidable political leverage to demand greater proof that industrial substances cause cancer before ratcheting up costly cleanups at polluted bases.
The military says it is only striving to make smart decisions based on sound science and accuses the EPA of being unduly influenced by left-leaning scientists.
But critics say the defense establishment has manufactured unwarranted scientific doubt, used its powerful role in the executive branch to cause delays and forced a reduction in the margins of protection that traditionally guard public health.
If the EPA’s 2001 draft risk assessment was correct, then possibly thousands of the nation’s birth defects and cancers every year are due in part to TCE exposure, according to several academic experts.
“It is a World Trade Center in slow motion,” said Boston University epidemiologist David Ozonoff, a TCE expert. “You would never notice it.”
Senior officials in the Defense Department say much remains unknown about TCE.
“We are all forgetting the facts on the table,” said Alex A. Beehler, the Pentagon’s top environmental official. “Meanwhile, we have done everything we can to curtail use of TCE.”
But in the last four years, the Pentagon, with help from the Energy Department and NASA, derailed tough EPA action on such water contaminants as the rocket fuel ingredient perchlorate. In response, state regulators in California and elsewhere have moved to impose their own rules.
The stakes are even higher with TCE. Half a dozen state, federal and international agencies classify TCE as a probable carcinogen.
California EPA regulators consider TCE a known carcinogen and issued their own 1999 risk assessment that reached the same conclusion as federal EPA regulators: TCE was far more toxic than previous scientific studies indicated.
TCE is the most widespread water contaminant in the nation. Huge swaths of California, New York, Texas and Florida, among other states, lie over TCE plumes. The solvent has spread under much of the San Gabriel and San Fernando valleys, as well as the shuttered El Toro Marine Corps base in Orange County.
Developed by chemists in the late 19th century, TCE was widely used to degrease metal parts and then dumped into nearby disposal pits at industrial plants and military bases, where it seeped into aquifers.
The public is exposed to TCE in several ways, including drinking or showering in contaminated water and breathing air in homes where TCE vapors have intruded from the soil. Limiting such exposures, even at current federal regulatory levels, requires elaborate treatment facilities that cost billions of dollars annually. In addition, some cities, notably Los Angeles, have high ambient levels of TCE in the air.
An internal Air Force report issued in 2003 warned that the Pentagon alone has 1,400 sites contaminated with TCE.

Among those, at least 46 have involved large-scale contamination or significant exposure to humans at military bases, according to a list compiled by the Natural Resources New Service, an environmental group based in Washington.
The Air Force was convinced that the EPA would toughen its allowable limit of TCE in drinking water of 5 parts per billion by at least fivefold. The service was already spending $5 billion a year to clean up TCE at its bases and tougher standards would drive that up by another $1.5 billion, according to an Air Force document. Some outside experts said that estimate was probably low.
After the EPA issued the draft assessment, the Pentagon, Energy Department and NASA appealed their case directly to the White House. TCE has also contaminated 23 sites in the Energy Department’s nuclear weapons complex — including Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory in the Bay Area, and NASA centers, including the Jet Propulsion Laboratory in La Cañada Flintridge.
The agencies argued that the EPA had produced junk science, its assumptions were badly flawed and that evidence exonerating TCE was ignored. They argued that the EPA could not be trusted to move ahead on its own and that top leaders in the agency did not have control of their own bureaucracy.
Bush administration appointees in the EPA — notably research director Paul Gilman — sided with the Pentagon and agreed to pull back the risk assessment. The matter was referred for a lengthy study by the National Academy of Sciences, which is due to issue a new report this summer. Any resolution of the cancer risk TCE poses will take years and any new regulation could take even longer.
The delay tactics have angered Republicans and Democrats who represent contaminated communities, where residents in some cases have elevated rates of cancer and birth defects but no direct proof that their illness is tied to TCE.
Half a dozen members of Congress last year wrote to the EPA, demanding that it issue interim standards for TCE, instead of waiting years while scientific battles are waged between competing federal agencies. EPA leaders have rejected those demands.
“The evidence on TCE is overwhelming,” said Dr. Gina Solomon, an environmental medicine expert at UC San Francisco and a scientist at the Natural Resources Defense Council. “We have 80 epidemiological studies and hundreds of toxicology studies. They are fairly consistent in finding cancer risks that cover a range of tumors. It is hard to make all that human health risk go away.”
But Raymond F. DuBois, former deputy undersecretary of Defense for installations and environment in the Bush administration, said the Pentagon had not been willing to accept whatever came out of the EPA, though it cared a great deal about base contamination.
“If you go down two or three levels in EPA, you have an awful lot of people that came onboard during the Clinton administration, to be perfectly blunt about it, and have a different approach than I do at Defense,” DuBois said. “It doesn’t mean I don’t respect their opinions or judgments, but I have an obligation where our scientists question their scientists to bring it to the surface.”
The military has virtually eliminated its use of TCE, purchasing only 11 gallons last year, said Beehler, an attorney who used to head environmental affairs for Koch Industries Inc., a large industrial conglomerate in Wichita, Kan.
In its fight against the 2001 risk assessment, the Pentagon has gone to the very fundamentals of cancer research: toxicology, the study of poisons; and epidemiology, the science of how diseases are distributed in the population. This scientific approach has worked better than past arguments that cleanups are a costly diversion from the Pentagon’s mission to defend U.S. security.
A few months after the 2001 draft risk assessment came out, an Air Force rebuttal charged that the EPA had “misrepresented” data from animal and human health studies.
It said “there is no convincing evidence” that some groups of people, like children and diabetics, are more susceptible to TCE, a key part of the EPA’s report. And it said the EPA had failed to consider viewpoints from “scientists who believe that TCE does not represent a human cancer risk at levels reasonably expected in the environment.”
But comments such as these are outside the scientific mainstream. Other federal agencies have also expressed grave concern about TCE and some experts say it is only a matter of time before the chemical is universally recognized as a known carcinogen.
“Do I think TCE causes cancer? Yes,” said Ozonoff, the Boston University TCE expert. “There is lots of evidence. Is there a dispute about it? Yes. Whenever the stakes are high, that’s when there will be disputes about the science.”
The 2001 risk assessment found TCE was two to 40 times more likely to cause cancer than was found in an assessment conducted in 1986, a wide range that reflected many scientific uncertainties. Because cancer risk assessments are not an exact science, federal regulators have historically exercised great caution in protecting public health.
The California EPA, the nation’s largest and best-funded state environment agency, assessed TCE in 1999 and also found reason for concern. Its risk assessment fell in the middle of the EPA risk range, according to the study’s author, Joseph Brown.
Rodents fed TCE develop liver and kidney cancer, and humans exposed to TCE show elevated rates of many types of cancer and birth defects. But industry experts fire back that evidence on TCE is still weak. Just because rats and mice get cancer from high levels of TCE doesn’t prove that humans will get cancer from low levels of TCE, they say. And the epidemiological research is less convincing than animal studies, they say.
The U.S. still uses about 100 tons of TCE annually, a fraction of the consumption before the mid-1980s, when it was first classified as a probable carcinogen. It was once widely used in consumer products, such as correction fluid for typewriters and spot cleaners.
“If TCE is a human carcinogen, it isn’t much of one,” said Paul Dugard, a toxicologist at the Halogenated Solvents Industry Alliance Inc., which represents TCE manufacturers. “People exposed at low levels shouldn’t be concerned.
“EPA’s philosophy is still one of being super conservative and that is being pushed back against.”
EPA officials were braced for such a controversy when the TCE assessment was issued and quickly convened a scientific advisory board to review the work. The board included public health officials at state agencies, academics and chemical industry scientists.
About one year later, the board issued its findings, praising the risk assessment and urging the EPA to implement it as quickly as possible. But the board also suggested some changes, including stronger support for its calculations of TCE’s health risks and a clearer disclosure of its underlying assumptions.
The report, particularly the request for additional work, was interpreted as a serious problem by Gilman, the EPA research director.
He said the board’s findings represented a “red flag” and “raised very troubling issues,” all of which were key arguments by Gilman and others for stopping the assessment.
But members of the scientific advisory team dispute Gilman’s interpretation, saying they felt the 2001 risk assessment was good science and their recommended changes amounted to normal commentary for such a complex matter.
“I thought by and large we supported the EPA and that its risk assessment could be modified to move forward,” said Dr. Henry Anderson, the chairman of the scientific advisory board and a physician with the Wisconsin Division of Public Health. “That movement to shuttle the issue to the National Academy of Sciences was nothing like what we had in mind.”
By 2004, the matter was out of the EPA’s hands. The National Academy of Sciences received a $680,00 contract from the Energy Department to study TCE — a decision dictated by a working group at the White House. The briefings to the national academy on how to evaluate TCE were given by White House staff as well as the EPA.
The White House originally formed the working group — made up of officials from the Pentagon, Energy Department and NASA — in 2002 to combat the EPA’s assessment of another pollutant, perchlorate. That group stayed in business to fight the TCE risk assessment. The group was co-chaired by officials in the Office of Management and Budget and the White House Office of Science and Technology Policy. The officials declined requests for interviews.
Given the controversy and stakes involved, the issue was bound to end up with National Academy of Sciences, said Peter Preuss, director of the National Center for Environmental Analysis, the EPA organization that produced the 2001 risk assessment. “It got very difficult to proceed,” Preuss said.
The lead author of the 2001 health risk assessment, V. James Cogliano, agreed that the findings ran into trouble when Defense Department officials went to the White House. “Most of it was behind the scenes,” said Cogliano, now a senior official at the International Agency for Research on Cancer in Lyon, France.
He added: “The degree of opposition was not surprising given the degree of economic interests involved.”
The political maneuvering marked a significant change, Cogliano said. In the 1980s, Defense Department officials accepted every possible safeguard recommended by the EPA for incinerators to burn nerve gas and other chemical weapons, he recalled.
At that time, Defense Department officials said, “You put in every margin of safety, because we want to be sure it will be safe,” he said. “There was no argument. There is a different spirit today.”
Every health risk assessment is also getting more technically complex and more bureaucratically difficult, Preuss said.
When the EPA issued its first health risk assessment in 1976, it ran four pages and it was based in large part on studies that counted “bumps and lumps” on animals subjected to possible carcinogens. By contrast, EPA scientists now must show not only that a substance causes tumors, but the internal biological processes that are responsible. And the work is subject to greater scrutiny.
“It is true that there is more interagency review now of our work,” Preuss said. “We have a couple steps where we send our assessments to the White House and they distribute them to other agencies. Each year, additional steps are taken.”
All of the EPA’s travails — the toughened scientific demands, the loss of authority, the interagency battles — have clearly taken a heavy toll and diminished the agency’s stature.
“Inside the Beltway, it is an accepted fact that the science of EPA is not good,” said Gilman, now director of the Oak Ridge Center for Advanced Studies in Tennessee, which conducts broad research on energy, the environment and other areas of science. Gilman said an entire consulting industry has sprung up in Washington to attack the EPA and sow seeds of doubt about its capabilities.
The delays in assessing TCE have also left many contaminated communities with few answers.
“My constituents who live at a recently named Superfund site … are forced to live everyday with contaminated groundwater, soil and air and can’t afford to wait the years it would take for the results of your outsourced re-review,” Rep. Sue W. Kelly (R-N.Y.) told EPA officials at a hearing last year.
“I have talked to a lot of sick people,” said Rep. Maurice D. Hinchey (D-N.Y.), whose district includes hundreds of homes contaminated by TCE vapors, traced to an IBM Corp. factory. IBM has paid for air filtration systems for 400 homes, but has balked at more funding based on uncertainty over the health risk. “These people are deeply frustrated and increasingly angry,” Hinchey said.
Meanwhile, many environmentalists are discouraged by what they view as a virtual emasculation of the EPA in this battle.
“The general public has no idea this is happening,” said Erik Olson, a lawyer at the Natural Resources Defense Council. “The Defense Department has succeeded in undermining the basic scientific process at EPA. The DoD is the biggest polluter in the United States and they have made major investments to undercut the EPA.”
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