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

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Friday, February 8, 2008

Scottsdale/PV water scare catches Washington's attention (AZ, DC)
by Neil Fischbein on Friday, February 8, 2008 [Permalink] [0 Comments]
According to the East Valley Tribune (CA):
Two recent drinking water contamination scares that affected Scottsdale and Paradise Valley customers were unprecedented in Arizona, and possibly the nation, federal environmental regulators said Thursday.

“I do not believe that it has happened in the rest of the country,” said Keith Takata, Environmental Protection Agency Superfund Division director.

At the behest of U.S. Rep. Harry Mitchell, D-Ariz., the House Subcommittee on Water Resources and Environment, held a hearing in Washington Thursday involving the trichloroethylene, or TCE, scares at a private drinking water facility that serves residential and commercial customers in Scottsdale and Paradise Valley.
Read the full story here.

Thursday, February 7, 2008

TCE contaminated water may be dumped in Arizona Canal (AZ)
by Neil Fischbein on Thursday, February 7, 2008 [Permalink] [0 Comments]
When the Motorola-hired Arizona American Water Company experienced system failure several weeks ago and piped dangerously TCE-contaminated water to residents through their supply system, they set a plan to collect some of the TCE-contaminated water they were processing so that it did not reach homes.

Now the company has 300,000 gallons of water in its reservoir that is contaminated with low levels of TCE. Since the levels are reportedly below the federal MCL of 5ppb for TCE, the company is plotting to dump all 300,000 gallons into the Arizona Canal:
There are municipal water treatment plants downstream from the contamination site - two in Phoenix and one each in Tempe, Glendale and Peoria - that treat water for use in their supplies, according to Salt River Project, which operates the canal. Mark Shaffer, Arizona Department of Environmental Quality spokesman, said Arizona American has the option of discharging treated water into the canal, provided it meets government purity guidelines.

Arizona American has taken out advertisements in local newspapers, including the Tribune, in attempt to reassure customers that potentially contaminated water consumed during the breakdown is unlikely to cause adverse health effects.
In some ways, it's hard for us to know what to make of this. After all, we are not experts in alternative uses of 300,000 gallons of tainted water. That said, at least two questions spring immediately to mind in reading this story:
  • If they are so certain the water is "unlikely" to cause adverse health effects, why not deliver it to customers?
  • If the company won't supply this water directly to customers, why is it safe to dump in a canal upstream from other water supply sources?
Remember, even low level TCE exposure can cause health problems, including immune system changes.

Friday, January 25, 2008

Motorola hired Arizona American Water Co. (AZ)
by Neil Fischbein on Friday, January 25, 2008 [Permalink] [0 Comments]
The East Valley Tribune (AZ) reveals:
The investigation into last week’s drinking water scare in parts of Scottsdale and Paradise Valley has expanded to include Motorola, potentially leaving the electronics giant open to federal fines, environmental officials said Wednesday.

Meanwhile, Arizona American Water Co. — the private utility with whom Motorola contracts to treat groundwater pumped from a local Superfund site — is considering what to do with up to a half-million gallons of potentially contaminated water in a reservoir underneath its treatment plant.

[...]

Motorola is one of four companies charged with dumping TCE into Scottsdale’s groundwater supply beginning in the 1950s. Motorola hired Arizona American to pump and treat that groundwater, and could be held responsible for mishaps, Takata said.
A few things about this story make us wonder: As always, well keep you posted if we learn more. Meantime, read the full story here.

Thursday, January 24, 2008

Scottsdale weighs water options after most recent mishap (AZ)
by Neil Fischbein on Thursday, January 24, 2008 [Permalink] [0 Comments]
The East Valley Tribune (AZ) reports:
Scottsdale officials Tuesday ordered a study into the possibility of taking over water service to about 1,200 city residents from a private water utility after a hazardous chemical pollutant entered the company's water supply twice in three months.

The City Council voted unanimously to begin an investigation of the city's options in securing safe water for Scottsdale customers on Arizona American Water Co.'s system. Those options could include buying or condemning the Scottsdale portion of the private utility's system, or running parallel water lines to connect those customers to Scottsdale's municipal system, said Ron McCullagh, the councilman who raised the discussion.

"As Scottsdale residents and taxpayers, they deserve the same safe and reliable water delivery service that we give to other residents of this city," McCullagh said.
We learn from the editor of Random Musings that Mccullagh is a customer of Arizona American Water Company, the private utility in question. After attending the meeting, Random Musings had this to share:
I don't think this will actually go anywhere; it seemed to be more an exercise in "showing the voters that we're on top of things" than anything else. The council members seemed to hope that the [study] will say that the problem has been dealt with and no one needs to worry any more.
For East Valley Tribune coverage, see here. For the inside scoop from Random Musings, see here.

Saturday, January 19, 2008

Ban lifted; Scottsdale/PV water approved for all uses (AZ)
by Neil Fischbein on Saturday, January 19, 2008 [Permalink] [0 Comments]
Good news folks, the ban has been lifted. Customers of Arizona American Water in Scottsdale/Paradise Valley may return to using their tap water as normal. According to a press release on Arizona American's website:
Impacted customers may wish to run their water briefly to flush their systems, as well as remove water from their hot water tanks. Hot water tanks could contain affected water.

Earlier in the week, Arizona American Water took its treatment plant offline, and then flushed the system to reduce the levels of TCE in the water. Robust sampling has confirmed that the water now meets or surpasses all standards for drinking water. The company is investigating what the malfunction was at the plant and will take all corrective measures.

Arizona American Water is notifying customers today via automated phone calls that the water is now acceptable to drink. Customers with questions may e-mail infoaz@amwater.com or call 800 383 0834.
Amazing. They tout that they are going to use the same broken system - the one that leaves out 35% of its customers - to alert customers to the ban lift. Priceless.

Map of the affected service area - Scottsdale/Paradise Valley
by Neil Fischbein on Saturday, January 19, 2008 [Permalink] [0 Comments]
The East Valley Tribune (AZ) has a link to this helpful map of the affected service area (click the image to enlarge):


Arizona American tap water ban in effect indefinitely
by Neil Fischbein on Saturday, January 19, 2008 [Permalink] [0 Comments]
The Arizona Republic is reporting that the Scottsdale/Paradise Valley tap water ban has been extended indefinitely. It was previously set to expire on Friday, January 18.

Until more is known, we caution readers from the affected area against any use of the contaminated water - whether for bathing, washing, cooking, feeding pets, etc since TCE can cause harm whether ingested, inhaled, or absorbed through the skin.

In the meantime, we're in the process of obtaining reliable information about in-home water filtration and will post it here as soon as we have it.

Update: We have learned that EPA's official position is that people shouldn't drink the water, but are OK to shower in it. We feel this as an irresponsible recommendation since EPA knows that showering in contaminated water results in exposure comparable to that from drinking tap-water. As the Children's Environmental Health Project reminds us:
Dermal absorption is also a route of exposure to contaminants that are found in soil, air and water. For example, exposure may occur via bathing, showering or immersion in contaminated natural swimming water and, therefore, through direct skin absorption. There has been considerable study concerning the exposure in bath, shower and chlorinated pool water to chlorine disinfection by-products. Inhalation and dermal absorption are the two most likely routes of exposure to certain of these substances.
Similarly, ATSDR confirms:
Dermal absorption of contaminants in water occurs during bathing, showering, or swimming and may be a significant route of exposure depending on the substance-specific characteristics.

[...]

In some model shower experiments, about 40–60% of tricholoroethylene (TCE) in water was volatilized to the air, depending on water temperature and other factors (Andelman 1985). A one-compartment exposure model used by Maslia et al. (1996) indicated that exposure to TCE by inhalation during shower is nearly identical to that of ingesting water contaminated with TCE.
Though the levels of contamination have reportedly dropped below the 5ppb MCL, we still advise against any use of the water until it is officially cleared for drinking.

Friday, January 18, 2008

Local blog keeping Scottsdale/Paradise Valley water customers updated (AZ)
by Neil Fischbein on Friday, January 18, 2008 [Permalink] [0 Comments]
Random Musings, a blog maintained in Arizona, is keeping folks abreast of the latest Scottsdale/Paradise Valley water developments. Most recently, they report that the faulty water treatment facility at Miller Road (MRTF) has been shut down. They learned this from Vicki Rosen of the EPA who sent another email. This time she says:
Hello CIG,

I learned a few more bits of information regarding the failure(s) at the MRTF. Specifically, this deals with the legal relationships between EPA, the State of Arizona, the County, the Participating Companies (PCs) and the AZ American Water Co.

EPA and the State of Arizona signed a Consent Decree (CD) with the PCs, not the water company. The PCs are responsible for extracting and treating groundwater contaminated with TCE. The PCs chose the water company to do this, but the PCs are not responsible for the operation & maintenance of the plant. EPA has no direct authority over the water company under the CD.

The AZ American Water Co. is subject to the Safe Drinking Water Act (SDWA) which EPA has delegated to the State and the State has delegated to the County. All three entities (fed, state, county) may take enforcement action against the water company. The PCs are not subject to the SDWA.
Read more at Random Musings.

Water company comes clean; Apologizes for failure to warn of TCE (AZ)
by Neil Fischbein on Friday, January 18, 2008 [Permalink] [0 Comments]
The East Valley Tribune (AZ) has just called bullsh*t on American Arizona Water company for suggesting that all customers had been warned about its recent TCE leak. In response to customer complaints about their failure to notify and their failure to be truthful about it, AAW's spokesperson fessed up:
Todd Walker, Arizona American spokesman, acknowledged the company’s reverse 911 notification system, which sends automated alert messages to customers, only reaches about 65 percent of those households.

“We apologize that we were unable to reach every single customer individually,” Walker said. “We recognized that it was an imperfect system going into it. No system is able to contact 100 percent of the people 100 percent of the time.”
Read the full story.

Contrary to reports, Arizona American Water fails to notify customers about TCE (AZ)
by Neil Fischbein on Friday, January 18, 2008 [Permalink] [0 Comments]
Over the past few days, news reports coming out of Scottsdale and Paradise Valley have suggested that all Arizona American Water customers were notified of the failure that caused elevated levels of TCE to pour through their taps.

According to EPA (emphasis added),
AZ American Water and the PCs went into response mode and notified all customers who would have gotten that water;
According to news reports (emphasis added):
Private water utility Arizona American Water Co. advised its nearly 5,000 customers in Scottsdale and Paradise Valley Wednesday to drink bottled water after discovering a malfunction that may have allowed a suspected cancer-causing chemical into their tap water.
The TCE Blog has learned that these statements simply are not true. As we have learned from residents, many were not notified by the water company. Two examples of the comments and emails we have received follow below:
I am a customer of AZ-american water, and I was not informed of the risk today. I have lived in the same house since 1986, and have had the same phone number, so I question whether everyone was informed. I did not learn about it until the 10 o'clock news.
Please update your blog so that it accurately reflects that AW did NOT notify "all consumers through its automated-feature call" as they told the media. In fact, Kiva Elementary School and all the residents [we] have spoken with in our neighborhood...did not learn about the TCE contaminated water supply from American Water, but from our local evening news. Many of our neighbors were still unaware of the situation the next day until we informed them. Moreover, there are likely many elderly individuals who to this day are not aware that they should not be consuming the TCE-contaminated water.

American Water has been far less than candid with its consumers and the public. This company has a poor track record when it comes to accurately reporting TCE contamination. Please don't give AW credit for notifying customers when in fact it did not.
Meantime, a number of folks have written to us asking about the safety of using TCE-contaminated water for bathing or washing clothes (or other uses not explicitly warned against by the water company). Since TCE can be absorbed through the skin and since TCE can vaporize and get into the air people breathe, the TCE Blog recommends against any use of water that is contaminated above the federal MCL (5ppb). Sadly, it's no surprise to us that locals aren't hearing this from the water company...

As always, we'll try to keep you posted as more develops.

Thursday, January 17, 2008

Update from EPA on Scottsdale/Paradise Valley water filter failure (AZ)
by Neil Fischbein on Thursday, January 17, 2008 [Permalink] [0 Comments]
A friend of the blog just sent this in. Note: CIG stands for Community Involvement Group. These are members of the community that represent citizen interests in the investigation and clean-up of the North Indian Bend Wash superfund site (more on this to come...).
----- Forwarded message from Rosen.Vicki@epamail.epa.gov -----
Date: Thu, 17 Jan 2008 14:33:18 -0800
From: Rosen.Vicki@epamail.epa.gov
Subject: Another failure at the Miller Road Treatment Facility

Hello CIG members,

You may have already read about this week's failure at the MRTF in the newspapers, but this note is to let you know what EPA knows so far about what happened.

Yesterday (Wed. Jan. 16), Jamey received a call from Dennis Shirley, consultant to the Participating Companies (PCs), advising that there had been another release. Jamey immediately informed all the appropriate people at EPA, but it was late in the day so that's why this message wasn't sent sooner.

This is what we got from Dennis:

The release was discovered yesterday by Arizona American Water at 6:30 am. A blower on Tower 3 (which treats water from well PCX-1) had shut off. That shutoff could have happened as early as the day before (Tues, Jan. 15) at 2:30 pm. There may have been 16 hours when untreated water entered the system.

Athough controls were supposed to be in place that would shut down the system in such an event, this did not happen. Untreated water containing TCE was discharged into the drinking water system. Sampling has found that levels of TCE at approximately 20 parts per billion (ppb) were distributed into the system. Sampling continues at the point of entry and throughout the system.

The MRTF was immediately shut down as soon as the failure was discovered. It is currently not operating.

AZ American Water and the PCs went into response mode and notified all customers who would have gotten that water; this was done through a reverse-911 system of phone calls to each household telling people to not drink the water. People were also told that free bottled water would be available at a particular location.

Top managers at AZ American Water have supposedly already briefed Congressman Harry Mitchell directly.

This is what we know so far. EPA is consulting with a number of parties to assess the situation and what should be done. In the meantime, almost all of our NIBW team is out of the office until at least next Tues (Jan. 22). Jamey is spending time with his brand new baby boy (their first), so it may be a while before you hear directly from him. I'm actually out of the office today having just had minor surgery, and I will not be in tomorrow either. If I get any emails from any of you, you may not get a response until next week. Monday is a federal holiday.

I will be back in touch with everyone as we learn more. We will also start to look at when we can get together in person to discuss these important issues.

Vicki
----- End forwarded message -----
We'll keep you posted as we learn more.

TCE seeps into Scottsdale and Paradise Valley water supply...again (AZ)
by Neil Fischbein on Thursday, January 17, 2008 [Permalink] [0 Comments]
The East Valley Tribune (AZ) is reporting:
Private water utility Arizona American Water Co. advised its nearly 5,000 customers in Scottsdale and Paradise Valley Wednesday to drink bottled water after discovering a malfunction that may have allowed a suspected cancer-causing chemical into their tap water.

It’s the second time in about three months the company has had problems with excess trichloroethylene, or TCE, potentially entering drinking water from the Miller Road Treatment Facility, at Miller Road and McDonald Drive.

Customers of Scottsdale’s municipal water system are unaffected.

...

The company is making bottled water available free of charge to all customers at 6215 N. Cattle Track Road in Scottsdale and at the Paradise Valley Town Hall, 6401 E. Lincoln Dr., [American Arizona spokesperson Todd Walker] said.
Further in the article, we learn there was a similar problem not too long ago:
The EPA in mid-November announced that water containing 9.2 parts per billion of TCE had been introduced into American Water’s drinking water supply after workers at the Miller Road Treatment Facility shut down one of the plant’s towers for inspection and shifted operations to a third, unused tower. The federal maximum for TCE in drinking water is 5 parts per billion.

Arizona American officials said that the tainted water was blended with TCE-free water, lowering TCE concentrations to within federal mandates.
Gotta love that blended water... Read the full story here. To read about the mid-November contamination referenced above, see here.

Sunday, April 1, 2007

Assessment of Scottsdale/Tempe cancer rates requested (AZ)
by Neil Fischbein on Sunday, April 1, 2007 [Permalink] [0 Comments]
According to the East Valley Tribune (Scottsdale, AZ), a former Scottsdale resident petitioned the ATSDR to determine if cancer rates in the area are elevated:
“Those of us who were developing children in the NIBW [the North Indian Bend Wash Superfund site] would like to know definitively if there is a higher rate of cancer among our population,” Oberlender wrote in a request to the Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease Registry.

The petition, submitted in January, is being reviewed to determine if more evidence is needed, said Charles Green, a disease registry spokesman. A response is expected in early April.

The Superfund site is 13-square-mile area in Scottsdale and Tempe. It is bounded roughly by the Salt River on the south, Chaparral Road on the north, Scottsdale Road on the west and Loop 101 on the east.

TCE, or trichloroethylene, was used to clean circuit boards beginning in the 1950s. It was dumped down dry wells, sewers and into leaching beds for three decades until it was discovered in 1981 in five drinking water wells that serve Scottsdale.

The wells, three of which were owned by Phoenix until Scottsdale purchased them in 1987, were closed immediately, but concentrations of TCE were as high as 390 parts per billion near the time they were shut, according to the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency. The federal standard for drinking water is less than 5 parts per billion.

Four companies — Motorola, GlaxoSmithKline, Salt River Project and SMI Holding, formerly Siemens — have claimed the lion’s share of the more than $100 million in cleanup costs. Between 1981 and June 2006, an estimated 61.3 billion gallons of groundwater from the site were pumped and treated to remove an estimated 56,800 pounds of TCE.

It is expected to take 20 more years to clean up 90 percent of all the TCE in the groundwater, said Dennis Shirley, project coordinator for the companies.

[...]

Oberlender, who lives in Blacksburg, Va., particularly takes issue with a Superfund fact sheet Scottsdale posts online that says “trace” amounts of industrial chemicals, primarily TCE, were found in two of Scottsdale’s drinking water wells. Three wells owned by Phoenix that supplied water to Scottsdale residents for decades were some of the most contaminated. But the city does not reference those in its fact sheet, Oberlender said.

“Some Scottsdale residents are under the false impression that they did not drink the contaminated water because they paid their water bills to the city of Phoenix,” she said.
Read the full story here.

Saturday, July 22, 2006

Trial Lawyer of the Year award goes to TCE team
by Neil Fischbein on Saturday, July 22, 2006 [Permalink] [0 Comments]
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.

Wednesday, July 12, 2006

Tucson airport to build TCE treatment plant (AZ)
by Neil Fischbein on Wednesday, July 12, 2006 [Permalink] [0 Comments]
The Arizona Daily Star reports:
In the last chapter in a decades-long story, Tucson International Airport will begin building a second treatment plant to remove toxic chemicals from an unused groundwater source at the airport.

The Tucson Airport Authority board on Tuesday voted Tuesday to award the Ashton Co. a $3.5 million contract to construct the cleanup facility on the west ramp of the airport. This is the last portion of land needing to be treated, according to the Environmental Protection Agency.

The plant, which will be designed to remove chemicals like trichloroethylene, or TCE, is scheduled to begin operations in early 2007, according to TAA spokeswoman Paula Winn.

[...]

The chemical was found to be the responsibility of several Air Force contractors who worked on the land from 1940-1970, Winn said.

Several residents of the South Side said they have lost family members to various TCE-linked cancers and diseases. Several lawsuits were filed by South Side residents, with the last one settled last month for a total of $49 million.
Read more here.

Wednesday, June 28, 2006

Toxin concerns persist on Tucson's south side (AZ)
by Neil Fischbein on Wednesday, June 28, 2006 [Permalink] [0 Comments]
Exposure to cancer- and disease-causing beryllium has become a concern, despite the state's reassurance that there is nothing to fear.

Sunday, June 11, 2006

Latest Tucson TCE settlement: $49 Million (AZ)
by Neil Fischbein on Sunday, June 11, 2006 [Permalink] [0 Comments]
The Arizona Daily Star reports:
South Side residents affected by contaminated water wells more than 25 years ago will receive $49.5 million in a settlement with an insurance company that once covered the city and Tucson Airport Authority.

The residents met Saturday with attorneys Fred Baron and Richard Gonzales, who outlined the proposed settlement with Associated Aviation Underwriters during three different private sessions at Sunnyside High School. A fourth session is scheduled today for the remaining plaintiffs.

Baron, of the Dallas-based firm Baron & Budd, declined to release details of the settlement, citing attorney-client privilege.
Read more

History of recently settled TCE lawsuit in Tucson (AZ)
by Neil Fischbein on Sunday, June 11, 2006 [Permalink] [0 Comments]
The Tucson Citizen (AZ) reports:
They were told when they started getting sick that it was because of the chilies and beans they ate.

Rose Augustine remembers how bureaucrats told neighbors in a largely Hispanic South Side community they were getting sick because of their ethnicity, not because of an industrial solvent contaminating their water.

"They tried to put the blame on the community that's affected," she said.

After 25 years of lawsuits, settlements, appeals and judgments in their favor, Augustine and 1,600 others who sued over trichloroethylene (TCE) contamination will be presented with a deal to end the litigation that netted them and their lawyers more than $130 million.

Hughes Aircraft and the city of Tucson were accused of dumping TCE in the water table for 29 years, beginning in 1952. A lawsuit against the city was settled in 1981 for $31 million, and in 1991 a suit against Hughes Aircraft was settled for $84.5 million.

Plaintiffs have received payments from Hughes, but three city insurance companies claimed they weren't liable. Two have since settled.
Read more here.

After 15 25 years, Tucson TCE suit settles (AZ)
by Neil Fischbein on Sunday, June 11, 2006 [Permalink] [0 Comments]
AZstar.net reports:
After more than 15 years of litigation and appeals, lawyers reached a settlement with an insurance company for those affected by contaminated water on Tucson's South Side more than 25 years ago.

The details of the settlement were not released by the lawyers for the case because those with claims have not agreed to the terms yet, said Fred Baron, a lawyer from Dallas who has been working on the case.

The lawyers will meet with about 1,200 of the 1,618 plaintiffs in the case this weekend at Sunnyside High School to discuss the details of the settlement. If the clients agree to the amount their claim was settled for, they could have their share of the money within a few weeks, said Baron, who worked with local attorney Richard Gonzales.

[...]

The suit, against Associated Aviation Underwriters, was brought by people who lived on the South Side when water supplies there were contaminated with trichloroethylene, or TCE, an industrial cleaning chemical used as a degreaser for airplanes.

Associated Aviation Underwriters insured the airport from 1960 to 1972. TCE was found in South Side wells in 1981.

[...]

The residents of the area started suffering from illnesses, but didn't know they were extraordinary or that they could have been linked to the contamination, residents said.

"I watched the people that just died. As a young woman there, I didn't understand it, I thought all of America was dying of cancer," said Joe Lanier, 71. Lanier is a plaintiff in the case and lived on the South Side with her children and near her parents at the time the contaminated wells were discovered.

"We knew we had a lot of illnesses, but we thought that what we had everybody had," said Rose Augustine, another plaintiff in the case. "It was quite shocking when we found out what had happened to our water."

Thursday, April 20, 2006

State will draw gases from soil at Tucson business site (AZ)
by Neil Fischbein on Thursday, April 20, 2006 [Permalink] [0 Comments]
The Arizona Department of Environmental Quality will soon begin the clean-up of TCE and PCE contamination beneath the old Oliver's Cleaners building at 300 E. Seventh St.

Update: The Tucson Citizen is also carrying this story and includes a pretty picture of the contamination area:

Friday, March 31, 2006

State will clean up tainted Gilbert water (AZ)
by Neil Fischbein on Friday, March 31, 2006 [Permalink] [0 Comments]
The East Valley Tribune (Serving Mesa, Scottsdale, and Gilbert/Chandler, Arizona) reports that "State officials are preparing to clean contaminated groundwater near Guadalupe and Cooper roads in Gilbert in an effort to prevent future drinking water hazards."

They also provide a handy link to the Arizona DEQ website where you can run a search for Gilbert facts and news. There you'll find all sorts of neat stuff -- like the Cooper and Commerce Water Quality Assurance Revolving Fund Site fact sheet (PDF, 212K) for instance.

Update: We reviewed the Gilbert site fact sheet above. It does not specify contamination levels in Gilbert. Why would they omit this fact?? The sheet just says contaminants (TCE and PCE included) are known to be present in the groundwater above regulatory levels. Perhaps the contamination levels are available elsewhere, but what good is a fact sheet if it's missing such an important fact?

Thursday, March 30, 2006

LA Times: TCE, Health, and Community Impact (Part II of II)
by Neil Fischbein on Thursday, March 30, 2006 [Permalink] [0 Comments]
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."

Related Posts (on one page):

  1. San Gabriel Valley a Hotbed of TCE Contamination (CA)
  2. LA Times: TCE, Health, and Community Impact (Part II of II)
  3. LA Times: The politics of TCE (Part I of II)

LA Times: The politics of TCE (Part I of II)
by Neil Fischbein on Thursday, March 30, 2006 [Permalink] [0 Comments]
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.


Monday, July 11, 2005

Contamination persists at site of future commerce park in Mesa (AZ)
by Neil Fischbein on Monday, July 11, 2005 [Permalink] [0 Comments]
Steve Owens, director of the Arizona Department of Environmental Quality, said Motorola is continuing cleanup efforts to remove TCE, a cancer-causing solvent, from the groundwater. He said there is no threat to public health because the groundwater is not being used as a drinking-water source.

Construction on the first phase is scheduled to start within a couple of weeks, said Todd Starkovich, a project superintendent with Hardison/Downey Construction.
Read the full story in the Arizona Republic.

Tuesday, June 28, 2005

Final list of reps and letter to the EPA
by Neil Fischbein on Tuesday, June 28, 2005 [Permalink] [0 Comments]
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

Thursday, June 16, 2005

If your state representative wants to support better protections...
by Neil Fischbein on Thursday, June 16, 2005 [Permalink] [0 Comments]
...to keep people safer from TCE, please encourage them to contact:



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





Saturday, June 4, 2005

Does TCE cause heart defects in children?
by Neil Fischbein on Saturday, June 4, 2005 [Permalink] [0 Comments]
The news about Arizona's continuing study struck us, especially the casual mention of the heart defects finding late in the story (the line we so blatantly bolded in the post). We're not sure we'd seen the background on this study before. So we dug it up.

Here's what the U of A website says:
"In 1980, researchers noticed an abnormally high number of children being born with congenital heart defects. Many of the children were born to mothers who lived in Southern Arizona, in just one zip code. In 1981 after drinking water wells contaminated with Trichloroethylene (TCE) were closed, the rate of heart defects decreased.

Epidemiological studies confirmed an association between women in their first trimester who were exposed to drinking water contaminated by TCE and an increased prevalence of heart defects in their children. Once the contaminated wells were closed, the rate of heart defects decreased..."
Read more. Or you can check out all of Google's references to it.

Related Posts (on one page):

  1. TCE and heart defects
  2. Does TCE cause heart defects in children?

Major contaminant study by University of Arizona (AZ)
by Neil Fischbein on Saturday, June 4, 2005 [Permalink] [0 Comments]
Water quality a major focus of $14 million grant to the University of Arizona

The detection, remediation and prevention of water contamination in the Southwest and its human health effects will be a major thrust of The University of Arizona's Superfund Basic Research Program (SBRP) in the next five years. Another aspect of the program will investigate ways to reduce airborne contamination from abandoned mine tailings.

Nine research projects will focus on two major types of contaminants: arsenic, a naturally occurring contaminant in surface and ground waters throughout the West, and halogenated organic solvents such as TCE, or trichloroethylene. Five of the projects will examine the human health effects of the contaminants and four will develop better ways to detect and clean up contaminated sites.

"We are recognized nationally for our research on both TCE and arsenic contamination and their associated health effects," said A. Jay Gandolfi, a professor of pharmacology and toxicology at The University of Arizona in Tucson and director of UA's SBRP. The program involves about 70 researchers and spans five UA colleges and 10 departments.

Previous environmental studies done by UA's SBRP, which began in 1989, developed technology to detect and clean up contaminants. It's time for the next step, Gandolfi said. "Now we're ready to take the technology from the lab and hone it so it can be applied to these problems."

The earlier research is also starting to pay off in term of treating the health effects of contaminants, he said. "Now our work is aimed at applying biomarkers to identify susceptible people and propose potential treatments."

[...]

Because contaminant removal can't happen overnight, half the SBRP research projects are dedicated to elucidating the health effects of TCE and arsenic. SBRP scientists have already shown that exposure to TCE may cause heart defects in newborn children. Now the researchers are determining exactly how TCE causes such damage, with the hope of preventing the damage to future generations.
Read the full story in Medical News Today

Saturday, May 28, 2005

Williams clean-up at standstill; Air Force at odds with EPA (AZ)
by Neil Fischbein on Saturday, May 28, 2005 [Permalink] [0 Comments]
We don't find it surprising that the Air Force is clashing with the EPA over clean-up issues. We find surprising that a chairman of the Air Force's own clean-up advisory board would so blatantly cite limited budgets as their driver when the EPA is declaring a risk to human health and environment right now.

The Arizona Republic (Mesa, AZ) reports:
After at least 15 years of cooperation on a toxic waste cleanup at Williams Gateway Airport, two federal agencies are butting heads about the Air Force's decision to drop plans to remove millions of gallons of fuel in the groundwater at the former Air Force base.

The airport was shuttered as an Air Force facility in 1993. It now is considered a key component for future economic development in the southeast Valley. It was ranked in a May 12 report by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency as one of the 10 dirtiest among 34 former bases that need cleanup because of poor environmental practices decades ago.

[...]

Michael Wolfram, the EPA site manager for the William cleanup, said he was shocked when the Air Force spent $3 million to design and build a remedy for removing the jet fuel but decided in February not to fund the program as the EPA and the military had agreed in 1999. The Air Force says it scrapped the plans for a complicated fuel extraction program - thermally enhanced extraction - because it's expensive and doesn't work.

"We're unwilling to pump money into an inefficient use of science. The taxpayers deserve a sure deal for their money," said Lisa Geissinger, an Air Force spokeswoman at McClellan Air Force Base in Sacramento.

[...]

"Both sides are right, but there has to be a compromise. There's only so much money in our defense budget," said Len Fuchs of Gilbert.

Fuchs is a retired Marine Corps colonel and co-chairman of the Williams Air Force Base Restoration Advisory Board, a civilian advisory panel that has oversight of cleanup efforts.

[...]

"We consider it a risk to human health and the environment right now," [Wolfram] said. "Right now, no one is directly exposed. We don't want them to get contaminated in the future."

[...]

Wolfram said tests show the contamination is flowing off the airport's grounds and that levels of trichloroethylene, a cancer-causing solvent, are rising.
Read the full story. Or you can check out the EPA's website for the Williams AFB Superfund site. Or Air Force's web page devoted to the Williams clean-up. Or download the Arizona DEQ fact sheet (15KB PDF).

Update: Just about a week ago, papers were reporting that standards for the clean-up have changed (thanks to CPEO for the tip):
The U.S. Air Force scrapped an innovative plan to clean up toxic chemicals at Williams Gateway Airport because Bush administration officials decided the contamination isn't likely enough to give residents cancer, an Air Force representative said.

The Air Force was planning to use new technology to extract pollutants from a 20-acre jet fuel spill at the Mesa airport in late 2004 when top military advisers handed down a revised policy, said Anthony Wong, environmental coordinator for base realignment and closures at the Air Force Real Property Agency.

The policy change places restrictions on the amount of money that can be spent decontaminating former military installations if the risk of causing cancer in humans is less than 1 in 10,000.

Saturday, March 26, 2005

State by state: Contaminated sites awaiting an EPA decision, not on Superfund list
by Neil Fischbein on Saturday, March 26, 2005 [Permalink] [1 Comments]
More from the GAO Report, as promised. Please bear in mind:
· 85% of the sites below were discovered 15 yrs ago or more
· over 60% of the potentially eligible sites and over 35% of all sites below report no clean-up activities
---
Table IV.1: Sites Classified as Awaiting an NPL Decision in Each State, by Eligibility for Listing and Status of Cleanup Progress
+
Table VI.1: State Officials’ Assessments of States’ Financial Capabilities to Clean Up Potentially Eligible Sites

State Number of sites classified as awaiting an NPL decision Number of sites unlikely to become eligible for the NPL Number of potentially eligible sites with some cleanup activities Number of potentially eligible sites with no reported cleanup activities Number of sites for which no surveys were received State officials’ assessment of state’s financial capability to clean up potentially eligible sites
Alabama 25 10 7 8 0Very poor
Alaska 28 14 8 6 0Excellent
Arizona 34 16 10 8 0Excellent
Arkansas 4 3 0 1 0Good
California a 189 64 51 74 0Fair
Colorado 30 12 10 6 2Very poor
Connecticut 290 74 98 118 0Poor
Delaware 1 1 0 0 0Excellent
District of Columbia a 1 0 0 1 0
Florida 269 74 85 110 0Fair
Georgia 74 39 8 27 0Poor
Guam 2 2 0 0 0
Hawaii 17 12 4 1 0Fair
Idaho 16 5 5 6 0*
Illinois 207 95 43 69 0Fair
Indiana 54 21 15 18 0Very poor
Iowa 3329 4 0 0Very poor
Kansas 37 28 4 5 0Very poor
Kentucky 20 15 2 3 0Good
Louisiana 10 6 4 0 0Poor
Maine 56 28 17 11 0Poor
Maryland 20 8 4 8 0Other b
Massachusetts a 201 11 19 1710Fair
Michigan 50 22 18 10 0Excellent
Midway Island 1 1 0 0 0
Minnesota 17 6 6 5 0Good
Mississippi 9 4 1 2 2Very poor
Missouri 91 73 7 11 0*
Montana 11 2 7 2 0Very poor
Navajo Nation 14 0 0 14 0
Nebraska a 36 16 4 15 1Very poor
Nevada 12 8 3 1 0Poor
New Hampshire 42 24 9 9 0Poor
New Jersey 172 60 49 63 0Good
New Mexico 15 7 6 2 0Very poor
New York a 192 135 15 41 1*
North Carolina 57 18 21 18 0Poor
North Dakota 4 2 1 1 0Poor
Northern Mariana Islands 1 0 1 0 0
Ohio 79 25 23 31 0Very poor
Oklahoma 7 4 1 2 0Very poor
Oregon 29 7 6 16 0Fair
Pennsylvania 73 35 18 20 0Excellent
Puerto Rico 16 3 4 9 0
Rhode Island 121 14 23 84 0Poor
South Carolina 45 32 8 5 0Good
South Dakota 8 6 2 0 0Other b
Tennessee 102 51 19 32 0Poor
Texas 21 18 1 2 0Poor
Utah 48 17 8 16 7*
Vermont 30 16 5 9 0Poor
Virginia 22 8 2 12 0*
Washington 28 11 8 9 0Fair
West Virginia 11 7 4 0 0Other b
Wisconsin53 34 8 11 0Excellent
Wyoming 1 1 0 0 0
Total 3,036 1,234 686 1,103 13

a California, the District of Columbia, Massachusetts, and Nebraska did not respond to surveys. For these states, the data in table IV.1 are based on EPA’s survey responses alone and, for that reason, may be less reliable than for states having responses from both EPA and states. New York provided responses to only a few questions in our survey.

b “Other” indicates that the respondent was uncertain about the state’s financial capability.

* State officials in Idaho, New York, Missouri, Utah, Virginia, and Wyoming declined to participate in [the] telephone survey.

Related Posts (on one page):

  1. State by state: Contaminated sites awaiting an EPA decision, not on Superfund list
  2. Waiting for clean-up: Unaddressed risks at potential Superfund sites

Friday, March 25, 2005

EPA Region 9's air standards for TCE
by Neil Fischbein on Friday, March 25, 2005 [Permalink] [4 Comments]
U.S. EPA's Region 9 (serving Arizona, California, Hawaii, Nevada, and the Pacific Islands) recently clarified the health standard they are using for TCE in indoor air. You can read about it here. Thanks to CPEO for the tip.

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