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EPA recently added twelve new contamination sites to its Superfund list. TCE is a known contaminant of concern at at least five of the twelve sites. These five TCE sites include:
Read more here. For new readers arriving here in search of information about TCE contamination at these sites, welcome.
According to this report from Midland Reporter-Telegram (TX), the Midessa Ground Water Plume may soon be added to the Superfund list:
The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency is looking for a responsible party or parties in west Midland County groundwater contamination and will make them pay for the cleanup if they are found, an EPA official says.
Remedial Project Manager Vince Malott of Dallas said the public comment period ended in November and his agency may put the project on its national “Superfund” list in late March or April.
“We have an enforcement officer working with the Texas Commission on Environmental Quality on potential leads to where the (contamination) source originated,” Malott said on Monday. “We’re still searching for the likely source and don’t have a lead we can announce.
“Once we get to that point, we will send the responsible party a notice and give them an opportunity to reply. We’re avoiding using taxpayers’ dollars if we can find viable financially responsible partners.”
[...]
When the situation was first announced in September, [well] water was reported to contain MCLs of dichloroethene, trichloroethene, dichlorothane and tetrachloroethene — all solvents that possibly had been used for degreasing or breakdown products disposed of unsafely.
TCEQ said the water supplies of 168 people were contaminated, including residents of Midessa Oilpatch RV Park and private wells just east of the Midland-Ector County line.
Read the full story here.
Note: Though EPA’s website is light on details, it tell us that PCE was detected in wells at concentrations as high as 1200ppb. Like TCE, the federal action level for PCE in water wells is 5ppb. As though this wasn’t bad enough, there were 3 other toxins found in these wells, including TCE (at what levels, the EPA does not say). Perhaps more revealing, however, is EPA’s note that:
There is no muncipal city water supply available to this rural sector of Midland county currently, or for the foreseable future. TCEQ has not yet defined the outer boundary of the plume.
Makes us wonder what the affected residents are drinking, bathing, and cooking with. Then there’s the question of how safe their air is. With significantly elevated levels of toxins running underground and seeping into wells, surely vapor intrusion must be a concern. What are the chances residents have been warned?
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
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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
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Schumer blasts EPA over handling of pollutant
Poughkeepsie Journal, NY
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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
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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 Houston Chronicle (TX) reports:
A jury will resume deliberations Monday in a criminal air pollution case that accuses Citgo Petroleum Corp. of knowingly breaking federal air quality laws at its Corpus Christi refinery.
Lawyers presented final arguments on Friday after a grueling and technical trial that began May 18. Jurors deliberated Friday afternoon, then went home for the weekend.
The case specifically involves allegations that open-air storage tanks at Citgo’s East Plant refinery emitted illegal amounts of benzene, which research has linked to cancer. More broadly, however, the case tests criminal enforcement of the Clean Air Act.
Although other criminal indictments under the act have resulted in guilty pleas, the Citgo case is the first to go to trial alleging emissions violations, prosecutors said.
“The question is whether companies like Citgo, who blatantly violate the law over a period of time, will be held accountable,” said Justice Department lawyer Howard Stewart, lead prosecutor in the case.
The San Antonio Express-News (TX) reported earlier this week:
The other day I received a call from a 58-year-old San Antonio man who worked at Kelly AFB from 1983 to 1999. He said he recently had a cancerous kidney removed, and he wondered what I could tell him about Kelly workers’ exposure to carcinogens that cause kidney cancer.
…
A search of the Express-News archives turned up a dozen columns in which Kelly contaminants and potential kidney problems were discussed.
The first reference to Kelly contaminants and kidney cancer appeared in a March 22, 1998, column in which I reported that extraordinarily high levels of two volatile organic compounds — perchloroethylene (PCE) and trichloroethylene (TCE) — had been found in groundwater near Kelly.
For decades, TCE and PCE were used as degreasers at the base.
…
Last fall, in a summary of Kelly findings, federal researchers noted:
1. During 1990-1994, liver, kidney and lung cancer incidence rates in neighborhoods around Kelly were higher than incidence rates found in demographically similar neighborhoods in Texas.
2. Those cancers “could have been the result of past exposures” to Kelly contaminants.
It seems reasonable to conclude that the same might be said about the cancers of longtime Kelly workers.
Read the full story here.
WOAI TV in San Antonio, TX reports:
News 4 WOAI has learned that toxic waste is among the sludge contained in barrels uncovered recently at the former Kelly Air Force Base.
An unknown number of 55-gallon drums are buried under the 15th tee of the old Kelly golf course. Air Force officials confirm some of the drums contain trichloroethylene, or TCE, which can cause lung and liver disease and death.
This month, the Air Force will recommend a plan to clean up the barrels.
News 4 WOAI’s Jeff Coyle has been following this story. Click here to see his complete report.
We told you they were nominated. Now we learn they have won.
The lawyers from Baron & Budd and Richard “Rick” Gonzales of Tucson, Ariz.-based The Gonzales Law Firm, P.C., were chosen for this year’s award based on their combined work in two cases involving groundwater contamination in the Tucson area.
Congratulations to Rick and Baron & Budd. Thank you for fighting for the rights of communities exposed to TCE.
The San Antonio Current (TX) reports:
Victor San Miguel stands on the porch of his dilapidated white-frame house on Hollenbeck Avenue and points across the street. Without taking a step off his property, San Miguel provides a quick tour of his neighborhood, but it’s a grim tour, like a slow walk through a cemetery.
“The woman in that house has leukemia,” he says matter of factly. “The one next to her has breast cancer, and another one over there has leukemia.”
San Miguel, a 60-year-old retired wrecker-driver, has lived on Hollenbeck for 27 years. Three years ago, he was diagnosed with thyroid cancer and his wife also suffers thyroid problems. He walks slowly and speaks in a hoarse murmur, and his right eyelid is almost perpetually shut. But his tattooed arms are muscular and he maintains an aura of toughness, albeit a fragile toughness.
San Miguel’s home is only a couple of blocks away from East Kelly — a section of what used to be Kelly Air Force Base that recently came to be known as Port San Antonio. It’s about five blocks east of a Union Pacific Railroad crossing that divides these neighborhoods from the bulk of the former military base, an aircraft storage and maintenance facility with roots that go back to 1916. In other words, he lives smack in the middle of what residents call the “toxic triangle,” a group of more than 20,000 homes that sit above a plume of contaminated groundwater filled with chemicals dumped or leaked by Kelly employees — contaminants such as Trichloroethene (TCE), an industrial solvent used to clean machinery at the base, and Tetrachloroethene (PERC, or PCE), a paint-stripper with dangerous side effects.
If the cluster of homes in this section of southwest San Antonio constitutes the toxic triangle, Hollenbeck might be its most blighted block. Purple crosses litter many of its front yards, part of a campaign organized two years ago by the non-profit Southwest Workers Union to honor residents who have battled cancer or other life-threatening illnesses. Genaro Rendon, the SWU’s co-director, says members of his organization knocked on 350 doors in the triangle to ask if a member of the household had been diagnosed with cancer. He says half the homes qualified for a purple cross. San Miguel doesn’t know the vital statistics, but he ponders the emotional wreckage of his neighborhood and simply says: “It’s too many problems for one short block. It’s not normal.”
San Miguel voices the maddening frustration felt by residents of this area ever since a repair crew working on Quintana Road in 1989 dug up evidence of noxious jet fuel leaked from Kelly. Since then, studies have found elevated cancer rates in the toxic triangle, and the anecdotal accounts are staggering. But while Air Force authorities agree that they’re responsible for the chemical plume, and have assumed the burden of cleaning up the mess, they still view the cancer studies as inconclusive. To bitter, impatient residents, the Air Force’s reluctance to take direct blame for the incidence of disease in the area is demonstrated by what they consider to be an outrageously slow, half-hearted cleanup effort.
“What they’ve done in the community is next to nothing,” Rendon says. He notes that the Air Force‘s primary solution for residents has been to install Permeable Reactive Barriers, underground walls that contain — and theoretically filter out — harmful chemicals.
“On the base, the metal-plating shop was one of the biggest contributors to the shallow groundwater contamination,” Rendon adds. “That has some of the highest concentrations of chemicals on the base, and what they’ve done is build a cement wall around it. And this is supposed to hold the contamination. They’re not proposing to take it out or clean it up, they’re proposing to contain it there. We’re not for a containment plan. Those types of sites should be cleaned up immediately.”
For all the complaints from neighbors, however, Kelly has some high-profile defenders.
“The effort that Kelly Air Force Base and the remediation activities that they’re doing, in my opinion, are ongoing and moving in the right direction,” says Richard Garcia, regional director for the Texas Commission on Environmental Quality. “The contamination didn’t happen overnight. To clean it up is not going to happen overnight, and it’s going to go through a process. But I do know that Kelly has been working at closing out some sites, cleaning up others. It’s a big site.”
With the five-year anniversary of the Air Force Base closure approaching, the long-unresolved issues swirling in the chemical soup beneath this residential area are resurfacing (although they’ve never really gone away). The SWU plans a community march to the gates of Kelly on July 13 (the anniversary of the base-closing); activists eagerly await a report this summer by a nationally recognized scientific panel looking into the health risks of TCE, a finding expected to guide the Environmental Protection Agency’s future regulatory approach to the chemical; the Los Angeles Times devoted much of a March 30 environmental story to the fallout from Kelly’s TCE plume; and concerned parties from all sides recently completed the first of two summer roundtable conferences designed to improve dialogue and repair deeply frayed trust.
Things would be so much simpler if this conflict followed an Erin Brockovich-like, heroes-and-villains scenario. In that true-story film, a blue-collar mom becomes an environmental crusader and exposes the arrogant corporation that wantonly contaminated a community’s water supply. In this case, nothing is quite so neat or tangible. Kelly’s cleanup is being managed by people who had nothing to do with a contamination that occurred decades ago, at a military base that no longer exists, that’s creating health risks that remain open to dispute. The guilty parties are perpetually beyond the grasp of the residents and, if Air Force sources can be believed, those guilty parties (the people who actually dumped the chemicals at the base) acted more out of ignorance than recklessness.
“I don’t think it was neglect on the part of the Air Force, but I think it was the fact that there were no laws in place that governed it,” says Adam Antwine, senior representative for the Air Force Real Property Agency. “There were a whole lot of unknowns about what happens when you pour things in the ground or they leak in the ground. I think it was a combination of those things that gives people the impression that there was some cover-up.”
A couple of years ago, Dominga Adames applied for a reverse mortgage for her home. Because a reverse mortgage is a loan that the homeowner doesn’t have to repay until the house in question is sold, credit ratings are not a factor in the loan’s approval. “We were told that we were approved and everything was set,” she recalls. “Two days before the closing date, they told me that the loans go through HUD and the government doesn’t want property that has been devalued.”
Adames says her property had been devalued because it was nestled within the toxic triangle. “I told the loan officer that [the contamination] would be cleaned up in 10 years and everything would be okay,” she says, shaking her head at the memory. “He said, ‘Try 100.’”
Adames is one of many Kelly-area homeowners who feel trapped, unable to sell their homes because of their neighborhood’s stigma of contamination. Many of these area residents are low-income senior citizens surviving on fixed incomes and who are depressed to find that the homes they spent their adult lives fixing up are essentially worthless.
It’s a syndrome that Robert Alvarado compares to having his life “cut in half.” Alvarado, 64, and his wife Guadalupe moved into their peach-colored Baker Avenue house 36 years ago and raised all five of their kids there. Seven years ago, Alvarado, then a Delta Airlines employee, suffered an aneurysm that left him legally blind.
“Doctors asked me if I had been out of the country in the last year. I said no,” says Alvarado, founder of the Committee for Environmental Justice Action, a project affiliated with SWU. “Then they asked if I’d been exposed to radiation, and I said I hadn’t. I didn’t know anything about no contamination. He asked because he said that radiation could have caused it.”
Alvarado’s medical woes were only beginning. In recent years, he says his thyroid has malfunctioned and he’s also experienced kidney problems. “I was taking steroids because I was leaking too much protein into my urine,” he says. “Right now my feet are so swollen I can’t wear socks or anything. I’m retaining too much water.”
In addition, Alvarado’s wife and his 38-year-old daughter Lisa have suffered from thyroid cancer. These days, Alvarado, a short, stocky, gray-haired man with a mustache, walks with the aid of a cane and wears dark shades to protect his permanently damaged eyes. His physical disabilities forced him to retire in 2000, and because his monthly income of $760 is not enough to support his family, his wife took a job at a laundromat to help pay the bills.
Robert Alvarado stands in front of the home he’s lived in for 36 years. He is legally blind and suffers from thyroid and kidney problems. Opposite page, purple crosses litter the front yards of cancer victims in the toxic triangle.
“I wanted to finish my tour of my life and enjoy my family, and retire and take my wife on trips, or whatever,” Alvarado says. “But it all stopped when I lost my eyesight. I can’t drive, I can’t go nowhere. It makes me feel like I might lose my family because I’m not good enough to do anything. I can’t even go outside like I used to, enjoy my evening barbecuing. We feel that everything we pick up might have some kind of contamination.”
As his own health deteriorated, Alvarado began to notice that many of his neighbors were stricken with cancer. “Barbara, was a young girl, maybe 24 or 25, and she had stomach cancer,” he says. “My neighbor across the street, she also died of stomach cancer. Another neighbor, Paula, she died of breast cancer. Then there was Emma, who’s still alive, but had a kidney transplant. She worked for Kelly, and says Kelly didn’t affect her, but I know it did.”
Carmelo Casillas is one former Kelly employee who doesn’t hesitate to target the base for his health problems. Casillas, 69, worked for more than 25 years in Kelly’s plating plant and handled TCE on a regular basis. “Nobody told us it was dangerous and we had no protective masks,” he says. “They didn’t know anymore than I did about it.”
Casillas and his wife both suffer from thyroidism and his son has glandular problems. He’s grappled with health troubles for 15 years and says, “It’s not something that’ll kill you right away, but it depletes your energy.” Ten years ago, the Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease Registry began an extensive study into the effects of contaminants from Kelly and it found above-average rates for liver cancer, kidney cancer, cervical cancer, birth defects, and leukemia in various zip codes near Kelly. But it failed to provide a smoking gun, a definitive causal link between disease incidences and contaminants flowing beneath area homes.
If there is disagreement about what the numbers mean, residents also question the reliability of the numbers themselves. Patti Radle, District 5’s councilwoman, points out that some former toxic-triangle residents have moved to other parts of the city, potentially elevating disease figures in other areas and artificially reducing cancer rates near Kelly. Rendon and other members of the SWU also point to an ongoing questionaire study administered by the ALS (Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis) Association, identifying 142 potential cases of former Kelly employees contracting ALS, better known as Lou Gehrig Disease.
Antwine argues, however, that no conclusions can be drawn. “All the studies we’ve conducted to date have shown that there really is no direct correlation between the contamination in the ground water and any of the health concerns,” he says. “Obviously, a combination of environmental factors can cause all kinds of disease. Medical technology has not reached the point where it determines which combination of factors can cause cancer.”
More than 70 people gathered at Hoelscher Elementary on the morning of Saturday, June 24, to hash out environmental concerns near Kelly. Patti Radle was in attendance, as were representatives for congressmen Ciro Rodriguez and Charlie Gonzalez. Antwine brought members of the Kelly cleanup team. The Southwest Workers Union, Port of San Antonio, Texas Commission on Environmental Quality, and the City of San Antonio Metropolitan Health District also were represented.
For the first hour, attendees broke into small groups. Each table included a mix of people with diverse agendas, who compiled three or four questions that could be topics for discussion by the entire gathering. An air of nervous civility dominated the early exchanges, with Kelly reps maintaining a facade of forced cheerfulness and residents offering anecdotes, like Maria Gongora’s detailed description of brown water flowing from the faucets in her bathtub, and plants dying in her yard after being watered. About an hour after the meeting began, Antwine and his team gathered their maps and graphs and set out to answer questions posed by residents. At that point, all hints of civility collapsed like a faulty permeable reactive barrier. “We’ve been talking for 15 years and nothing has been done,” snapped one male resident.
Another man interrupted facilitator Linda Ximenez and said, “Let’s talk about the issues. We ask them when they’ll clean up the contamination, and getting information from them is like pulling their teeth. We’ve known about this since the 1980s and they still haven’t fixed this.”
Things became so testy that when an elderly man addressed the crowd to say that all of the information on Kelly’s cleanup progress was available from the Air Force, and that sitting through a Kelly presentation was a waste of time, a voice in the back hooted, “You’re wasting our time right now.”
Other residents complained that Kelly’s containment approach is based on the theory that natural attenuation will wash away the contaminants in 100 years. It was a contention that the Kelly team neither accepted nor denied.
Underlying the palpable tension was the long-held notion among residents that they’re victims of environmental racism, that Kelly would be moving with much greater urgency if the affected neighborhoods were not filled with low-income minorities.
“We want the complete cleanup, and the other thing is that we want active health care and treatment for the folks who have been living this reality for decades,” Rendon says. “You have people that have lost sons and daughters and mothers and fathers because of illness.
“What the scenario has been is study after study after study. People are sick, there’s elevated levels of cancer, but the activity to take care of these problems has not been seen. And that’s really what’s needed.”
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.”
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
…to keep people safer from TCE, please encourage them to contact:
Jody Milanese (millaneese) in Congresswoman Sue Kelly’s office at 202-225-5441
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