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Union Pacific Railway suspected in residential contamination in Eugene (OR)

KVAL Channel 13, a CBS station in Eugene, OR, has the following story posted on their website:


From 2004 to 2006, air samples were taken from homes in the Trainsong area. The results showed crawl-spaces filled with high amounts of cancer-causing agents from tainted groundwater.

Precautionary measures were taken for those homeowners. Now comes the task of determining if those measures worked.

“I didn’t know there was a problem until last year,” said Trainsong resident, Glenda Carroll.

Carroll lived in the Trainsong neighborhood with her husband for almost twenty years. She says he died last last January from kidney failure.

“They say kidney failure is one of the things that this causes. I can not tell you how many cats I’ve had that have died of kidney failure in this house,” said Carroll.

Carroll lives in one of ten homes being tested for the presence of the chemicals TCE and PCE.

Officials reportedly believe the contamination came from Union Pacific Railway maintenance that was conducted across the street from the affected area. For the rest of the story, see here.

Why not study the company-wide TCE exposures at View-Master? (OR)

Anybody with an interest in documenting the connection between TCE and disease should know that important lessons may lie with View-Master, where a single contaminant – TCE – poisoned a single, private water supply and exposed an entire company to TCE as a result. So why won’t the federal government prioritize a thorough study of the View-Master workers?

The following piece was published in The Oregonian on Thursday, June 14th and authored by Tom Griffith, professor emeritus of physics at Pacific University and secretary of the View-Master Citizens Advisory Group. We’re reprinting this in full with Tom’s permission:

The exposure that needs more exposure


Thursday, June 14, 2007

In 1998, high levels of the organic solvent trichloroethylene — known as TCE — were discovered in the drinking water of the View-Master plant in Beaverton. The levels were 300 times the maximum established as safe at that time by the Environmental Protection Agency. It’s estimated that as many as 25,000 workers were exposed, some of them to high levels of TCE for 30 years or more.

TCE is a probable carcinogen and is known to produce health effects besides cancer with high enough exposures. It was a commonly used degreaser and dry-cleaning fluid from 1950 to 1980, and there are more than 3,000 sites around the country where it is present in groundwater. But very few of these sites have produced levels of exposure anywhere near those at View-Master.

Since discovery of the contamination, the Oregon Department of Environmental Quality has implemented a remediation plan for cleaning up the groundwater beneath the site. This cleanup is ongoing and will take at least 20 more years to complete.

The Oregon State Public Health Division completed a limited mortality study of the site in 2004, designed to determine whether a more thorough study was called for, and it more than met that goal. It showed death rates for kidney cancer in women workers at the plant were roughly six times higher than the rates for other Oregon residents of similar age. It also found high rates for a few other cancers.

Since then, however, efforts to conduct a more thorough study have been stymied by a lack of money. It’s been almost 10 years since the initial discovery of the TCE contamination, and nothing definitive has been done.

In the meantime, former View-Master workers are left in a fog regarding what health problems they might face and what they should do about it. Some of these workers clearly face an increased risk of cancer and other ill effects. The number potentially harmed is large. Some have already died.

The irony is that the View-Master workers represent an ideal population to gain better knowledge of the effects of exposure to TCE, a national problem. These workers were exposed at high levels to essentially a single contaminant over a long period of time. And their numbers are large enough to provide reliable statistics. In other words, studying them has a high probability of producing definitive results that will be useful in assessing the effects of TCE exposure at other sites.

So why has such a study not been funded? It’s a complicated story, but the problem lies, at least in part, with bureaucratic buck-passing among the federal agencies that could provide the money to pursue it. No one in the vast alphabet soup of federal agencies seems to have a clear mission to fund epidemiology research of this nature.

But the state of Oregon is not blameless either. The Public Health Division has no direct funds allocated for such research. The state scientists in the epidemiology department must find external money through grants to get anything accomplished.

Those charged with protecting our health and safety need to step up and see that the appropriate scientific work is done at View-Master. Otherwise, the funds already spent will have been wasted and the former View-Master workers will be left with no good information. Just as importantly, our nation will have missed an opportunity to learn something definitive about a national concern.

So who will step up as the buck passes along? The View-Master workers aren’t getting any younger.

Next time a politician or federal representative (EPA, ATSDR, NIOSH, etc) tells you that they would like nothing better than to study the link between TCE and disease (but laments that it is oh so hard to find a good study population), make sure to ask them why they refuse to study View-Master.

Dr. Austin to discuss TCE and cancer at View-Master Health Study Citizens Advisory Group meeting Tuesday (OR)

We recently received the following announcement from our friends at VOTE – Victims of TCE Exposure in Oregon:


Meeting Notice

View-Master Health Study Citizens Advisory Group (VMHS CAG)

Tuesday, June 12, 2007, 6:00-7:30 p.m.

Conference Room, Beaverton Library [Google map]

(SW Hall and Fifth St.)

Tentative Agenda:

1. Introductions (5 min.)

2. Approval of minutes of the April meeting. (5 min.)

3. Quick Reports (charter, letters). (10 min.)

4. Discussion with Dr. Don Austin. Dr. Austin is an M.D., an epidemiologist, and a co-investigator on the proposed View-Master health study. He will discuss with us the formation of the Oregon Cancer Registry, and talk about a few specific cancers thought to be associated with TCE. (50 min.)

5. Next meeting: September (probably Thursday, Sept. 27) (5 Min.)

Please notice that we are meeting on a Tuesday evening in order to accommodate Dr. Austin’s schedule. We are meeting at 6:00, our customary time, because the library closes at 8:00.

Support Victims of TCE Exposure at the Punk Rock Circus (OR)

Victims of TCE Exposure (VOTE) are hosting a punk rock circus (as a fundraiser) this Saturday:


PRESS RELEASE —————————————————

A FUNDRAISER CONCERT FOR VICTIMS OF TCE EXPOSURE:

SCOTT KELLOGG’S BIG

PUNK ROCK CIRCUS

SATURDAY 22 JULY 2006, 8 PM

THE TONIC LOUNGE

3100 NE SANDY BLVD

PORTLAND [OR] 97232

8 BANDS FOR 8 BUCKS!!

THE BANDS:

THE NEINS – 8 FOOT TENDER – DIRTY LOWDOWNS – MS 45 – MUDDY RIVER NIGHTMARE BAND – SK AND THE PUNKASS BITCHES – THE LEGEND OF DUTCH SAVAGE – HOWIE AND THE HOTKNIIVES

A FUNDRAISER CONCERT FOR VICTIMS OF TCE EXPOSURE … A LASTING LEGACY
A 501(c)3 NON-PROFIT ORGANIZATION COMMITTED TO HELPING WORKERS AND
FAMILIES GET THE COMMUNITY SUPPORT, MEDICAL INFORMATION, AND LEGAL
INFORMATION THEY NEED TO COPE WITH THE ENORMOUS ADVERSE HEALTH RISKS
OF LONG-TERM TRICHLOROETHYLENE (TCE) EXPOSURE SUFFERED IN THE HOME OR
AT THE WORKPLACE.

CONTACT:

Amanda Evans

tcein3d@yahoo.com , (503) 615-5963

VICTIMSOFTCEEXPOSURE.ORG

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

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


Cancer Stalks a ‘Toxic Triangle’

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

By Ralph Vartabedian

Times Staff Writer

March 30, 2006

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

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

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

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


LA Times: The politics of TCE (Part I of II)

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.


Letter to EPA from Senator Clinton et. al.


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

Clinton, six other senators urge EPA to issue more protective TCE standard

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]

Test results in Albany reveal contamination has spread (OR)

KVAL 13 News in Oregon reports:


Water test results are in from homes and an elementary school that officials fear are contaminated with toxic chemicals. The chlorinated solvents include Trichloroethene, Carbon Tetrachloride, and other associated breakdown products of these chemicals.

These chemicals have historically been used as solvents in such processes as metal degreasing and dry-cleaning. Some of these chemicals can also be found in common household products such as white out, spot remover, and dry-erase ink. Long-term exposure to these toxic chemicals are probable human carcinogens.

The Department of Environmental Quality started sampling the water after finding chlorinated solvents in the groundwater near the Albany Research Center. All of the homes and Liberty Elementary School are within a two-block radius of the Research Center.

After sending out roughly 300 surveys, the DEQ tested 22 wells in the area and the school. Officials found some TCE beneath the school property, but Geoff Brown with the DEQ says they are not posing a riks to the students or staff. “We’ve determined that in a couple ways, sampling ground water nearest the school and background levels of TCE in outdoor and indoor air near Albany. And also by sampling gas within the soil to make sure these vapors aren’t coming up through the soil and getting in through the building, ” he said.

Meantime, the DEQ found that 17 of the 22 wells contained high levels of the toxic solvents. Ten of those wells are used for drinking water. The DEQ is going to provide some residents with bottled water until they can clean up the water.

Read more.

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

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

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

Liberty Elementary trichloroethylene test results available online (OR)

According to the Albany Democrat-Herald (OR), the Department of Environmental Quality has placed online the TCE test results from Liberty Elementary. We had a chance to peek at them and here’s what we saw:

It appears testing is planned to continue into the summer.

Profiled: Amanda Evans, Founder of Victims of TCE Exposure (VOTE)

by the Pasadena Star News.

Testing expands around Albany Research Center (OR)

KVAL 13 from Eugene, OR reports:

The Department of Environmental Quality has been investigating the Albany Research Center as the source of the toxic trouble. The DEQ found that the chemical TCE, a solvent used to clean machinery, seeped into the groundwater and spread across the street to the school. But now the problem could be worse than originally thought.

“Our initial concern when we found out about the TCE problem was Liberty Elementary School, and now we’re getting a sense for what’s going on at Liberty so we need to make sure no one else in the area is getting exposed to TCE by drinking it in their water wells,” says Geoff Brown of the DEQ.

Brown says they are going to start testing the wells within a two block radius of ARC in the middle of June.

Read the full story here.