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The ATSDR has delivered yet another report concluding that a contamination site poses “no apparent public health risk.” Just toss it in the pile. Feel free to roll your eyes. (For those who don’t know, ATSDR is notorious for producing these reports)
There is “no apparent public health risk” at the North Brunswick Township High School and its surrounding areas associated with the soil contamination found in 2003, according to a preliminary public health assessment.
Last Thursday, township officials and representatives from the New Jersey State Department of Health and Senior Services and the U.S. Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease Registry held a meeting to discuss the remediation project that resulted from the expansion of the high school in 2003. The primary concern for the school, Veterans Park, Judd Elementary School, a PSE&G easement and six nearby residences was arsenic in surface soil, lead in settled dust and tetrachloroethylene (TCE) [sic] in groundwater.
In July 2003, waste material consisting of pharmaceutical and laboratory wastes, glass vials, bottles and an unidentified dark brown material were uncovered near and within the Oval area of the high school, which is where the current auditorium sits. It is believed that the site was used as a municipal dump between the 1940s and 1960s. Approximately 9,200 cubic yards of waste materials and soil were excavated and removed, according to the report.
Since that time, officials said 54 soil samples and 18 interior surface samples were taken from the high school, and 10 interior surface samples were collected from Judd, with follow-up tests conducted. The high school perimeter and football field, as well as the neighboring park and residences at block 143, lots 94.01 and 95.01 were also examined.
Although remediation is still needed at Veterans Park and efforts will continue to oversee and limit any possible groundwater and vapor contamination, the report states that there are no cancer or noncancer health risks associated with the project.
We note that the story seems to confuse TCE and PCE. It is not clear which of these is the contaminant of concern referenced above. No matter which it is, residents were reportedly suspicious of the report’s findings:
One parent claimed his son “lived in the dirt” for 18 years as an athlete and developed a brain tumor, although he is not positive there is a correlation. A student noted that the epidemiology report is only calculated through 2001, but statistics may have changed through 2008. Another person mentioned that the cancer rates should be evaluated specific to the area surrounding the high school and not broadened out to the general population, since any health effects will involve North Brunswick.
Also, residents are concerned that there could have been inhalation of chemicals since the investigation and remediation phase began, and that sites that have not been remediated, such as the high school perimeter, the overused football field and Judd school, could have contaminants in the soil that become disturbed and loosened as time goes on. One parent is concerned that no additional testing was done at Judd before the current expansion and renovation project began.
Read the full story in the North Brunswick Sentinel (NJ).
Update: Strangely, the report above fails to mention that ATSDR conducted a separate public health assessment re: exposure to Arsenic and TCE at 3 nearby residences in 2005 (yeah, we confirmed the contaminant is TCE and not PCE). They reported TCE contamination in groundwater at levels up to 140 ppb, TCE in indoor air in homes at levels of 12μg/m3, and arsenic dust that coated indoor air surfaces. They concluded that past exposure posed a public health hazard and, at the time, ongoing exposure posed an indeterminate public health hazard.
We suspect we’re going to be hearing more on this story. As always, we’ll try to keep you psted.
Big day in the TCE world today, marked by 1 word: LEGISLATION.
Okay, maybe two words: PROPOSED LEGISLATION
Today, Senators Clinton, Dole, Boxer, Lautenberg, and Kerry introduced a bill that proposes to:
Amend the Safe Water Drinking Act to protect the health of susceptible populations, including pregnant women, infants, and children, by requiring a health advisory, drinking water standard, and reference concentration for trichloroethylene vapor intrusion, and for other purposes.
Cited formally as the “Toxic Chemical Exposure Reduction Act of 2007″ (get it? “TCE Reduction Act”?) the Senators have proposed that EPA revise the national standard for allowable TCE levels in public drinking water, create a national standard for allowable TCE in indoor air, and enforce nationwide monitoring and cleanups based on these new standards. All of this is proposed to occur within the 3-18 months of the bill’s enactment.
Since the details of the bill are interesting and worth comment, we’ll post them here shortly. For now, we’ll say this: We think this bill, if passed and enforced, could go a long way towards better protecting the public from TCE.
Of course, if the EPA chooses to or is forced to play politics, we also envision ways that they could still stagnate change even if the bill is passed…
As we said, more to come from us on this. Meantime, you can download the full bill here.
Lastly, we are in the process of contacting Senators from our home state, Connecticut, to ask for their support for this legislation. We strongly urge readers to contact their state Senators as well.
(If any readers do contact their Senators for support, please consider letting us know the kind of feedback you receive. If we’re able to keep track of whom has pledged their support, we’ll keep readers posted by running updates on this blog. What could possibly be more exciting?)
UPDATE: For the official press release from Senator Clinton announcing the proposed legislation, see here.
According to this report in New Jersey’s The Times:
Though the former Mercer Rubber Plant allegedly dumped cancer-causing agents into nearby waterways for more than 100 years, testing thus far shows the drinking water in the area is not contaminated.
[...]
The check of the drinking water is part of the environmental testing near the defunct Mercer Street plant, where controversy erupted several weeks ago over whether neighborhood residents have developed cancer as a result of pollution from the company.
While the drinking water is considered safe, DEP officials said the shallow groundwater that rests closer to the soil may hold volatile chemicals that could pose a danger to residents.
[...]
Public well records between 1987 and 2006 provided by Aqua New Jersey, formerly Garden State Water, show sporadic detection of TCE in four public wells near the site, including one that exceeded the state’s volatile toxin standards, said Edward Rapciewicz, vice president of operations until his retirement last week.
[...]
Though contamination in the drinking water has been ruled out, the potential pathway of vapor intrusion that could expose residents to the cancer-causing agents has not yet been addressed.
If volatile chemicals are spilled onto the ground or dumped into water sources, the toxins are capable of “evaporating” into the soil’s air pockets and sinking into the groundwater, said Michael Aucott, research scientist with the DEP Division of Science and Research.
“The soil has pores, or spaces between particles, that are normally filled with air and water. If a volatile substance is in the area, some of that will get into the pores just like air would,” Aucott said. “If there are cracks in the foundation it’s possible for the vapor of contaminants to seep into homes through basements and the flooring.”
[...]
While testing the groundwater is helpful, geological factors need to be examined to rule out as a health threat, Aucott said.
For example, the type of soil in an area can show whether vapor intrusion is more likely and the typical travel direction that contaminants would follow, he said.
Whereas a clay sediment makes it harder for toxins to re main underground, sand particles are larger and allow volatile organic chemicals to travel through more easily. Because toxins can stay in soil for an extended period of time — depending on the soil and depth — testing the groundwater alone may not be enough, Aucott said.
“Different soils have different abilities to transmit vapors or liquids,” Aucott said. “Shallow groundwater might tell you a lot, but unless all of the other situational variables are known, it’s hard to definitely say there is no contamination.”
Read the full story here.
The Jersey Journal reports
With the consent of the court, the state Department of Environmental Protection can now enter a Bayonne industrial property to check out suspected contaminants such as trichloroethylene, chloromethane, methylene chloride and acetone whose source is still a mystery to the DEP.
But DEP says it’ll likely take until December before it’s ready to tackle the job.
The DEP sought judicial help after it alleges it tried – since late last year – to get an OK from the owners of the 14-acre Duraport Realty site on East Second Street to get onto the property.
The two sides were due in court earlier this week, but the hearing was canceled after they reached an agreement to allow the DEP to inspect the site.
Read the full story.
In an article entitled, “Rebirth from a Toxic History,” Localsource.com reports:
General Electric’s former factory, sandwiched between Lawrence Street and North Arlington Avenue — and straddling the border of Bloomfield and East Orange — is a testament to Bloomfield’s former industrial heyday.
What was once a thriving factory that employed thousands of workers during the first half of the 20th century has had mixed and eclectic industrial uses for the last 20 years.
But the large and mostly-unused buildings on the site could soon give way to the newest wave of residential development. The 767-unit proposed development on the border of the two municipalities, called “Parkway Lofts,” would include converting the six-story main building into a complex of condominium lofts, then tearing down the rest of the buildings on the 21-acre site, and then constructing in their place mid-rise apartment buildings, townhouses and other residential units spread over the rest of the property.
But the site, formerly a General Electric factory where electronics were manufactured, has shown itself to be in need of environmental remediation throughout its history, even up to the present time. Some of those problems, it appears, are still waiting to be remediated.
[...]
Because of its history, the site falls under Industrial Sites Recovery Act, or ISRA, status. There have been several incidents and tests that have indicated that pollution problems on Lawrence Street persist, even decades after the closing of the factory.
In July of 1999, there were leaks detected in several underground storage tanks on the site. Three 25,000 gallon fuel oil tanks were replaced and a fourth was abandoned on-site after highly-elevated levels of petroleum hydrocarbons were detected; there were also elevated levels of polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons, or PAH’s, a group of contaminants that are known to cause cancer and to affect reproduction in laboratory mice. Another oil spill also occurred from a transformer malfunction three years later, in 2002.
However, there have been other, more serious spills of volatile organic compounds found at the site. On March 31, 2004, an unknown liquid containing at least one kind of carbon tetrachloride was released into the ground; those family of substances are also proven carcinogens, and can cause damage to the liver, kidneys, or central nervous system.
The Nutley Haz-Mat squad responded to a smoke and chemical combustion situation in August of 2001, when an oil tank began smoking after nearby clay had been added to the petroleum compounds there.
In 2004, Stericycle acquired a reading of radioactive material in its waste, which was later determined to be from an doctor’s office that used X-rays.
But some of the lingering, long-term contamination has been blamed on the runoff from other, adjacent industrial sites. In December of 2001, chlorinated and volatile organic compounds were detected in the ground water monitoring wells on the General Electric site. However, the property owners subsequently claimed that the contamination was mostly due to ground water flow from the Westinghouse site to the northeast — a site known to have uranium and tricholoethylene, or TCE, contamination among other substances, and which has natural seepage toward Lawrence Street due to underground strata of bedrock and its naturally higher elevation. However, the samples from General Electric proved to show fundamentally different results from those of Westinghouse, including the elevated levels of extra chemicals including variations of 1,1 -dicholorethene, or DCE, 1,1 – dicholoethane, known as DCA, 1,1,1 – tricholoethane, or TCA, and tetrachloroethylene, or PCE. All are in the same family of chemicals as TCE, known for their long-term health hazards. Most of these compounds derive from TCE, a commonly-found industrial solvent on many brownfields and a majority of EPA Superfund sites nationwide.
Read the full article here.
The Jersey Journal (NJ) reports:
The state Department of Environmental Protection is taking a Bayonne property owner to court tomorrow to clean up the site of suspected contamination.
Deputy Attorney General Adam Phelps will ask state Superior Court Judge Thomas P. Olivieri, sitting in Jersey City, to give the DEP the green light to access a 14.5-acre site on East Second Street, between Hobart and Ingham avenues, owned by Duraport Realty One, Two and Three, LLC.
The property supports a bulk receiving and trans-shipment facility, according to a city official who asked not to be named.
The complaint, filed Aug. 21, alleges that the property owner’s “unwillingness to give DEP and its contractor(s) access to the Duraport property is delaying DEP’s performance of a site investigation, the completion of which is essential to remediating the contamination at and from the Duraport property.”
Toxins found at the site and in surface water runoff in the Kill Van Kull, as listed in the complaint, include trichloroethylene (TCE), perchloroethylene (PCE), vinyl chloride, arsenic and thallium, all in amounts that exceed DEP’s cleanup criteria.
DEP’s Ed Putnam, assistant director of remedial response, said yesterday that under a 1998 agreement the property owner had agreed to do a remedial investigation, but he said, DEP terminated that agreement last November after the owner failed to live up to the agreement.
Putnam said the Duraport land is adjacent to the old Standard Tank parcel, where contaminants have also been found in the groundwater, and “we’ve always been back and forth as to where (the toxins) were coming from.” Even now, Putnam conceded, “we don’t know the source.”
Read the full story.
Two weeks ago, the Trenton Times (NJ) reported:
HOPEWELL BOROUGH — As state officials scramble to determine if
contamination from Hamilton’s former Mercer Rubber plant caused cancer
in hundreds of residents, another case of contaminated groundwater has
quietly simmered in nearby Hopewell Borough.
Residents of Somerset and La fayette streets in this placid borough have
been living with the knowledge that groundwater run ning under their
homes has been contaminated with Trichloroe thene (TCE) from the former
Rockwell Industries plant on Hamilton Avenue.
According to state Department of Environmental Protection officials, TCE
levels as high as 400,000 parts per billion were found in the
groundwater near the former plant. The state cleanup standard for TCE in
drinking water is 1 part per billion.
[...]
As many as 18 homes have either been tested or will be tested, said John
Persico of Blasland Bouck and Lee, a private Cranbury environmental
consulting firm. So far, vapor removal systems have been installed in
three homes and the company has purchased two homes on Somerset Street,
rather than attempt to remediate them. Those lots, at 19 and 21 Somerset
St., will be the site of a filtration plant designed to clean the
groundwater.
Levels of TCE in the vapor ranged from about 8 micrograms per cubic
meter to 50. The state standard for a safe amount of TCE in the air is 3
micrograms per cubic meter.
Read the full story here.
In a follow-up story just last week, the paper also reported on the impact the contamination has had on the sale of homes within the contaminated area:
Brenda Goeke thought she had found the house of her dreams: a two-bedroom bungalow on a quiet street in desirable Hopewell Borough. Little did she know that her Somerset Street home was sitting on millions of gallons of polluted groundwater that could take decades to clean up.
Now Goeke, along with neighbors of the former Rockwell Industries plant that polluted the land, want the company to buy out their homes because they charge that the contamination has turned their slice of bucolic Mercer County into a worthless investment that no one will want to buy — at least not for years to come.
“The bottom line is, the reason I can’t sell my house is the contamination,” said Goeke, whose home will sit next door to the soon-to-be built toxic groundwater filtration plant. She said she has been trying to sell her home at 29 Somerset St. for nearly six months. “It’s worthless on the market. How could it not be with all that has gone on.”
[...]
Now several of the remaining homeowners along Somerset Street are demanding that Rockwell also purchase their homes because the contamination will likely scare away buyers for years to come. In order to clean up their homes from the vapor intrusion, Rockwell has installed ventilation systems to remove the gas, and the company plans to pump out millions of gallons of groundwater to clean out the chemical. That process could take as long as 50 years, neighbors say they have been told.
“Pay us money for the house and give us some money for our inconvenience and we will be gone,” said Somerset Street resident Harry Agin, who has lived on the road for more than 20 years. “I’ll sell it to them at the assessed value and I won’t even bicker with them. This is crazy.”
Karen Merlini, who bought her Somerset Street house four years ago, said she had no idea the contamination existed when she purchased and will lose everything if she can’t sell her property.
Read (the second) full article here.
Thanks to CPEO for both tips.
The Daily Record (Parsippany, N.J.) reports:
The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency is investigating whether vapors from dry cleaning chemicals that seeped into the ground and groundwater beneath a former dry cleaners on Morris Street are entering nearby homes or businesses…
Spokeswoman Pat Seppi said the EPA’s Pre-Remedial Group has been checking several sites throughout the state and in New York that have been home to businesses such as dry cleaners that use chemicals. “We were concerned that some of the buildings are older there and have cracks, and (fumes) have ways to get into homes and businesses,” Seppi said. “We don’t feel anybody right now is in danger, but it’s something we want to find out about,” Seppi said. “You just can’t let this go.
Dry cleaners use chemicals in their processes known as volatile organic compounds, the agency said. Compounds include tetrachloroethylene or perchloroethylene, or PCE, which can break down to trichloroethylene, or TCE, and 1,2-dichloroethylene, or DCE…
Seppi said the agency began to look at the site in November and discovered some amounts of trichloroethylene and dichloroethylene.
Read the full story here
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.”
Waste News has picked up the story
October 5, 2005
The Honorable Stephen L. Johnson
Administrator
United States Environmental Protection Agency
Ariel Rios Building – 1101A
1200 Pennsylvania Avenue, N.W.
Washington, D.C. 20460
Dear Mr. Johnson:
We are writing to urge the United States Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) to establish health-protective “interim standards” for vapor intrusion of trichloroethylene, better known as TCE. TCE is a widespread contaminant found in at least 325 of the 1,242 EPA-listed Superfund sites, and is known to cause cancer and damage the nervous and immune systems. Children and seniors are especially vulnerable to TCE’s toxic effects.
As you are aware, the EPA’s Office of Research and Development (ORD) published a TCE Health Risk Assessment report in August 2001, which included a reassessment of existing and recent scientific studies. This report, which was peer reviewed and lauded by the EPA’s own Science Advisory Board, found that TCE is considerably more harmful to human health than previously believed and proposed to increase protections against TCE. The EPA incorporated the Assessment’s findings into its Draft Guidance for Evaluating the Vapor Intrusion to Indoor Air in November 2002. Unfortunately, the EPA appears to have abandoned the 2002 TCE Vapor Intrusion Guidance recommendations. Instead, the EPA is in the process of again reevaluating TCE’s toxicity through the National Academies of Science, which may take years.
Delaying a national standard is a major constraint in evaluating potential health concerns at toxic waste sites. Some current federal and state TCE standards are more than two orders of magnitude less protective than the EPA’s 2001 reassessment concluded was needed to protect human health. Today, thousands of Americans may be exposed to unhealthful levels of TCE.
We, therefore, strongly urge the EPA to adopt health-protective “interim standards,” or provisional screening levels set forth in the 2002 Draft Guidance and use technologies that detect TCE at such levels. The EPA should protect public health by eliminating TCE resulting from vapor intrusion in homes, as field experience suggests that the costs of mitigation and monitoring are comparable.
TCE is a widespread pollutant in the United States and vapor intrusion is known to be a significant pathway of exposure. Guidelines have been established to address this important environmental and health problem. The EPA needs to act now to establish safe, protective “interim standards” in order to ensure the health and safety of our children and our communities.
Thank you very much for your attention in this matter. We look forward to your response and action.
Sincerely,
Hillary Rodham Clinton
Barbara Boxer
Christopher J. Dodd
Frank Lautenberg
Joseph I. Lieberman
Gordon Smith
Ron Wyden
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
October 5, 2005
Contact: Press Office
202-224-2243
SENATOR CLINTON URGES EPA TO ISSUE PROTECTIVE STANDARD FOR TCE
Washington, DC—Senator Hillary Rodham Clinton sent a letter to the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) today calling on them to issue a health-protective “interim standard” for trichloroethylene (TCE) vapor intrusion in order to protect the health and well-being of our communities. Endicott, Hopewell Junction and Ithaca are known to be contaminated with volatile organic compounds where TCE is also known to be present.
In addition to Senator Clinton, six other senators signed onto this letter including Senators Barbara Boxer, Christopher Dodd, Frank Lautenberg, Joseph Lieberman, Gordon Smith, and Ron Wyden.
[Please see attached letter]
Thanks to CPEO for the tip:
June 24, 2005
The Honorable Stephen L. Johnson
Administrator
U.S. Environmental Protection Agency
Ariel Rios Building (1101A)
1200 Pennsylvania Avenue, NW
Washington, DC 20460
Dear Administrator Johnson:
Millions of Americans are exposed to trichloroethylene (TCE) every day
in their water and air. Many scientists believe TCE to be carcinogenic,
immunotoxic, and neurotoxic. As you know, EPA drafted a Human Health
Risk Assessment in 2001 that determined TCE is 5 to 65 times more toxic
than previously believed. The Assessment received a positive review
from EPA’s Science Advisory Board, which commended EPA for its
“groundbreaking” work. Based upon the Assessment, EPA regions developed
new, more protective provisional screening levels, and some even began
using these provisional standards in the field.
However, other federal agencies considered the new levels overly
conservative, and EPA agreed to send the scientific issues raised by the
Assessment to the National Academy of Sciences’ National Research
Council for re-review. Gradually, EPA’s regions de-emphasized the more
protective screening levels. When Members of Congress wrote letters to
EPA asking that the protective standards be used, Henry L. Longest, II,
Acting Assistant Administrator for EPA’s Office of Research and
Development, responded, “EPA is current evaluating a number of interim
approaches for screening levels while awaiting a final TCE risk
assessment.” Acting Assistant Administrator for the Office of Solid
Waste and Emergency Response, Thomas Dunne, wrote, “For vapor intrusion
issues … EPA has not developed national guidance.”
It is expected that it will be years before EPA finalizes its TCE risk
assessment, and Americans are constantly being exposed to this and
similar toxic substances. We therefore strongly urge EPA to adopt a
protective “interim approach.” EPA should use provisional screening
levels based upon the 2001 Human Health Risk Assessment until a new risk
assessment is completed. For example, based upon work done by several
EPA regions, the screening level for TCE in air would be about .02
micrograms per cubic meter.
EPA personnel developing or overseeing the development of remediation
and mitigation strategies should consider those levels. Most
immediately, vapor exposure investigations should use sampling
technologies designed to detect TCE down to those provisional levels.
We appreciate your attention in this matter, and we look forward to
hearing your response.
Sincerely,
Susan Kelly (R-NY)
Frank Pallone, Jr. (D-NJ)
Raul M. Grijalva (D-AZ)
Sheila Jackson Lee (D-TX)
Jerrold Nadler (D-NY)
Major R. Owens (D-NY)
Elijah E. Cummings (D-MD)
Anna G. Eshoo (D-CA)
Katherine Harris (R-FL)
Dennis J. Kucinich (D-Ohio)
Maurice Hinchey (D-NY)
Carolyn B. Maloney (D-NY)
Howard L. Berman (D-CA)
Update: NY press covers the story here and here
Representative Frank Pallone, Jr. has agreed to sign on to Sue Kelly’s letter.
Thank you, Congressman.
…to keep people safer from TCE, please encourage them to contact:
Jody Milanese (millaneese) in Congresswoman Sue Kelly’s office at 202-225-5441
According to the New Jersey Herald:
The source of a possibly harmful chemical found in at least nine Byram wells is still being investigated and additional testing in the area will be scheduled, state officials said Thursday.
At a meeting Wednesday night, Byram residents learned that higher-than-recommended levels of an industrial solvent known as TCE was found in household wells on Brookwood and Ross roads. Trichloroethylene is a common industrial solvent that used to be found in many common household items including whiteout, according to Mark Herzberg, a spokesman for the state Department of Environmental Protection.
[...]
Anyone looking for more information about their well’s possible contamination can call Herzberg at 609-633-1369.
Read the full story.
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