The TCE Blog
Trichloroethylene is everywhere. It causes cancer and other serious health problems. People deserve better protection.

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Sunday, February 3, 2008

Lawmakers want EPA probed for TCE 'inaction' (MD, CA, DC)
by Neil Fischbein on Sunday, February 3, 2008 [Permalink] [0 Comments]
Representatives Al Wynn (D-MD), the Chairman of the Subcommittee on Environment and Hazardous Materials, and Hilda Solis (D-CA), the Vice Chair of the Subcommittee, are calling for a probe into a number of issues that affect American's water and health. In a letter to the General Accounting Office (GAO), the lawmakers asked GAO to investigate bottled water, TCE, and the EPA's rule-setting for other contaminants.

You can read more about the full range of investigation requests in the official press release. Here, we are focused on the TCE-specific portion:
Wynn and Solis are also asking the Government Accountability Office to examine EPA’s failure to update its current drinking water standard for Trichloroethylene (TCE). An EPA 2001 assessment found TCE was far more likely to cause cancer than previously believed. Despite this assessment and a recommendation from the National Academy of Science, EPA has failed to update its national drinking water standard for TCE.

“The evidence of the dangers of TCE keep piling up and the EPA keeps failing to act,” Wynn added. “Hopefully, GAO can shed some much needed light on the reasons for EPA’s inaction.”

The EPA’s current drinking water standard for TCE allows a maximum of 5 parts per billion, but some have called for a revision of that standard to reduce the maximum amount of TCE allowed in water.
From the text of the letter sent to GAO [PDF], we learn even more:
[We] request that GAO review the EPA’s failure to update it current drinking water standard for Trichloroethylene (TCE) following its August 2001 draft risk assessment entitled “Trichloroethylene Health Risk Assessment: Synthesis and Characterization.” The EPA 2001 assessment found that TCE was far more likely to cause cancer than EPA had previously believed. We note that in July 2006, the National Academy of Science (NAS) found “that the evidence on carcinogenic risk and other health hazards from exposure to trichloroethylene has strengthened since 2001” and recommended “that federal agencies finalize their risk assessment with currently available data so that risk management decisions can be made expeditiously.” EPA does not appear, however, to have acted consistently with respect to the findings and recommendations of these major scientific studies to protect the public health.

In conducting your review of the regulatory review process, and associated issues specific to TCE, please examine the following issues:
  1. The extent to which EPA’s efforts to revise the TCE drinking water standard complies with the Safe Drinking Water Act’s requirements, and facilitate improvements to public health protection.

  2. The obstacles, if any, that have interfered with EPA’s ability to expeditiously revise its standards for TCE.

  3. The latest research and what it suggests about TCE’s effects on human health and the environment, including information from the Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease Registry’s study related to Camp Lejeune.

  4. The number of Department of Defense sites contaminated with TCE and the Department’s role, if any, in delaying or interfering with EPA efforts to update a drinking water standard for TCE.
Of course, we already know part of the publicly-accepted answer to #4: There are 1,400 military sites contaminated with TCE. We have reason to believe the actual number may be higher - more on this, and DOD's interference, another time.

Thursday, June 29, 2006

Exposed Marines want health benefits, instead get 'kicked in the teeth' (NC, MD)
by Neil Fischbein on Thursday, June 29, 2006 [Permalink] [0 Comments]
NBC news in Baltimore (MD) reports:
Capitol Hill has become a second home to Jerry Ensminger. The retired marine drill sergeant says he's still fighting for the rights of Americans.

Ensminger: "The Marine Corps has a motto -- 'Semper Fidelis.' That's Latin for always faithful."

But Ensminger and the Marine Corps are now pitted against each other.

Ensminger: "Unfortunately, I found out not only do they not live up to their motto. They won't take care of their own unless you force them to."

The battle is over water -- water that was contaminated at Camp Lejeune, North Carolina. The bad wells were shut down by early 1985. The problem came from a dry cleaning chemical called tetrachloroethylene and a metal degreaser called trichloroethylene.

Simms: "We wanted to visit Camp Lejeune. Our request was denied. The Marine Corps says the contamination has been widely publicized since 1984 when it was discovered and it's an old story. But Ensminger and others couldn't disagree more."

They believe thousands of people could now be ill and Ensminger wants the Marine Corps to admit there's a link. He's trying to force the Corps to notify thousands of people who lived or worked at the base between 1968 and 1985. And he says the Department of Veterans Affairs should be providing health benefits to people like Nick Geiger of Baltimore.

Geiger: "I just feel like I'm getting kicked in the teeth by the government I served... They're waiting for us to either get fed up with it and go away or gradually die off so they don't have to pay the claims."

Ensminger: "I swore I'm not going to let these people get away with this... When you pat me in the face with a shovel and blow taps over me. I said that's when I'll stop this fight or until you do what's right."
Read the full story here.

Saturday, June 10, 2006

Ft. Detrick, TCE and PCE contaminated and expanding (MD)
by Neil Fischbein on Saturday, June 10, 2006 [Permalink] [0 Comments]
An article being carried by a number of papers (see here , here, and here...and here) about the likely ignition of a bio warfare arms race reminds us that Ft Detrick, the alleged site of said arms race ignition, through expansion into "the largest bio-weapons facility in the world," has a history of nearby TCE and PCE contamination:
[I]n the 1991 it was discovered that water supplies surrounding Ft. Detrick contained high levels of cancer causing agents, TCE and PCE. The Washington Post reported: “The Maryland Department of the Environment and the Frederick County Health Department tested 33 wells at homes near Area B. Half were contaminated with the two agents, six so badly that the water was unfit to drink. In a few wells, concentrations of the two chemicals exceeded Environmental Protection Agency limits many times over. In an Army monitoring well nearest the dump, the chemicals were so concentrated, "you could smell it," said Joseph Gortva, an engineer who is managing the cleanup.”

To read earlier posts in this category (if there are any), please see our archives below: