Dioxin dust found at 2 schools
8/14/05
By WSAZ NewsChannel 3 WSAZ-TV USA - CHARLESTON, WV -- Dioxin has been linked to
cancer, birth defects, and heart problems. And a new study found the dust is in
two local schools.
Experts found dioxin dust in Nitro High School, Nitro Elementary and the
Community Center.
The tests were performed back in May.
The Kanawha County Board of Education received the results last week.
Board members say the amount of dioxin is higher than the state thinks is
appropriate and they're trying to figure out what to do.
Earlier this week, the Environmental Protection Agency announced it would
investigate claims the former Monsanto plant sent dioxins into the air, water
and land.
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Dioxin fuels Nitro fears
*Chemical residue found in some homes; Monsanto lawsuit prompts EPA inquiry
West Virginia Gazette July 24, 2005
By Ken Ward Jr. Staff writer
Behind a chain-link fence in a far corner of Nitro, workers continue to tear
down and clean up what is left of the former Monsanto Co. chemical plant.
A month ago, rusted old chemical tanks littered the site along the Kanawha
River. Today, it is mostly piles of concrete and other rubble
Across town, other remnants of Monsanto's 50-year history remain hidden in the
dust inside residents' homes and in the dirt of their backyards.
Dozens of homes in this community are polluted with what residents fear are
dangerous levels of the toxic chemical dioxin, according to records filed in
court and with government agencies.
Tests also show that some longtime residents have measurable amounts of dioxin
in their blood.
"The town of Nitro is contaminated," said Charleston lawyer Stuart Calwell.
In December, Calwell sued Monsanto and several related companies to try to force
a cleanup.
Calwell also is trying to get medical testing and compensation for people like
Jimmy Agee, a 69-year-old former Union Carbide worker and lifelong Nitro
resident.
"My house is basically worthless," Agee said. "It's full of dioxin. This place
is eaten up with it. Who wants to buy a house with this stuff in it?"
Nobody knows what this dioxin contamination is doing to residents. Nobody has
really tried to find out.
In Minnesota, federal regulators found much lower levels of dioxin in household
dust near a former wood-treatment plant. Two months ago, the U.S. Environmental
Protection Agency ordered the company to clean up the homes.
But in Nitro, nobody has done anything - until now.
Last week, the EPA asked another federal agency, the Agency for Toxic Substances
and Disease Registry, to study the matter.
EPA officials also said their staff scientists will examine dioxin samples that
Calwell provided after collecting them as part of his lawsuit against Monsanto.
"We're concerned about people's health," said David Sternberg, a spokesman for
the EPA's regional office in Philadelphia.
"If data comes in, we would evaluate it to determine if we have to take action
or perform more evaluation," Sternberg said.
A new molecule is born
On Dec. 23, 1917, Nitro was born as a literal World War I boomtown.
That day, the federal government broke ground on the first of 27,200-bed
barracks at the site of the present Nitro city park, according to a history of
the town by William D. Wintz.
The site, about 15 miles from Charleston, became home to one of the War
Department's large gunpowder plants. The name "Nitro" came from the chemical
term Nitro-Cellulose, which was the type of gunpowder to be produced.
When the war ended, private companies took over the government buildings, and
converted them into chemical plants.
Monsanto Co. acquired its Nitro site from Rubber Services Industries. The
company made rubber chemicals for the tire industry.
In about 1947, Monsanto's agricultural division designed a new molecule. In its
pure form, this molecule was called 2,4,5-trichlorophenoxyacidic acid, or
2,4,5-T.
This new substances killed plants. It made their roots outgrow their leaves.
Plants destroyed themselves through defoliation.
In 1949, Monsanto started making this powerful herbicide ingredient in Nitro.
Workers cooked batches of it in large pots, called autoclaves, rather than
making it through a continuing production stream.
Monsanto made 2,4,5-T in Nitro for more than 30 years.
In its best-known use, the federal government bought 2,4,5-T to make Agent
Orange, the defoliant deployed widely in the Vietnam War. About 11 million
gallons of Agent Orange was sprayed on the jungles of Vietnam, Vietnamese
citizens and U.S. soldiers.
But 2,4,5-T was contaminated. Every batch of it contained 2,3,7,8
tetrachlorodibenzo-para-dioxin. This chemical is also known as 2,3,7,8 TCCD -
or, more commonly, as dioxin.
Dioxin has been linked to cancer, birth defects, learning disabilities,
endometriosis, infertility and suppressed immune functions. The chemical builds
up in tissue over time, meaning that even small exposures can accumulate to
dangerous levels.
In the December lawsuit, filed in Putnam Circuit Court, Calwell explained that
much of the dioxin waste from the Monsanto plant made its way into the Kanawha
River. Residents are urged not to eat certain fish because they contain unsafe
levels of the chemical.
But, the lawsuit alleged, Monsanto also was the source of dioxin-contaminated
dust. Once airborne, the dust "was carried by prevailing winds over the town of
Nitro, surrounding communities and the plaintiffs' homes and businesses," the
lawsuit alleged.
Residents have sought to have their case declared a class action on behalf of
more than 25,000 current or former Nitro residents.
No 'big alarm'
In May 2004, Calwell hired a contractor to collect dust samples from Nitro
homes. He hired a lab to test those samples for dioxin. The contractors tested
more than a dozen homes. They found levels of dioxin that ranged from 16 parts
per trillion to 1,210 parts per trillion.
There are no regulatory standards for dioxin in indoor dust. But the EPA's
recommended cancer guideline is 4.3 parts per trillion. The state's cleanup
trigger for residential soils is 3.9 parts per trillion.
In February, Calwell sent the EPA and the West Virginia Department of
Environmental Protection letters about the test results.
Randy Sturgeon, an EPA chemical engineer and project manager, said the data did
not "raise a big alarm" inside his agency.
"We came to the conclusion that it was not a health threat that warranted
further investigation on our part," Sturgeon said in mid-June.
At the DEP, officials have decided to let federal regulators handle the
situation.
"I feel more comfortable with EPA in the lead," said Ken Ellison, director of
the DEP's Division of Land Restoration. "I believe that EPA has more resources
and more levels of support than we do."
The latest in the dioxin battle
The December lawsuit is far from Calwell's first battle with Monsanto over
dioxin.
In the mid-1980s, Calwell spent more than 10 months in trial trying to prove
that seven Monsanto workers were made sick by handling dioxin-contaminated
2,4,5-T.
A federal court jury returned a verdict against the workers. After the trial,
Calwell and his clients blamed rulings by U.S. District Judge John T. Copenhaver
to not allow some of the workers' key evidence, according to press reports from
the time. Among other things, Copenhaver would not let
Calwell use an EPA map showing dioxin contamination at the Nitro plant in 1983 -
more than a decade after Monsanto stopped making its contaminated herbicide.
In 1983 and again in 1985, the EPA and Monsanto agreed to deals under which the
company was to clean up the Nitro site.
Today, though, the area remains polluted.
In a July 2000 report, the EPA said the Kanawha River contains unsafe and
illegal levels of dioxin. The EPA said it should be cleaned up, but the agency
proposed no specific steps and has not ordered any action.
In August 2000, Calwell sued Monsanto on behalf of a group of residents along
Heizer and Manilacreeks near Nitro. The residents allege that the dumping of
dioxin wastes by the company polluted their properties.
The residents sought to expand the Supreme Court's 1999 "medical monitoring"
ruling to also allow lawsuits to force polluters to pay for property monitoring.
In December 2002, the court declined to do so. That lawsuit continues, though,
as residents seek other damages for Monsanto's pollution.
Meanwhile, Monsanto lawyers have cited the 1983 and 1985 EPA orders as reason
for the Heizer/Manila lawsuit and the more recent Nitro case to be dismissed.
Charles Love, one of Monsanto's lawyers, argued that the EPA orders preempt any
effort by the residents to sue. If the EPA has or is taking action, Love argued,
then residents cannot file their own lawsuit.
In Putnam Circuit Court, Judge O.C. Spaulding rejected Love's argument.
Last week, Love sought to move the case to U.S. District Court in Charleston.
In an interview last month, he said he had not examined Calwell's dioxin test
results.
"We're too early in the litigation to have reached that point," Love said.
Glynn Young, a Monsanto corporate media spokesman, said the company did not take
Calwell's test results too seriously.
"Yes, these kinds of things need to be looked into, and if this information had
come from anybody but a plaintiffs' attorney, it might have been handled
differently," Young said.
"Lawsuits of this nature are not uncommon," Young said. "This is what a lot of
people do for a living. We have been down this road before with Mr. Calwell 20
years ago."
Two cases, different result
In north-central Minnesota, St. Regis Paper Co. operated a wood-treatment plant
for more than 30 years. The 125-acre site northeast of Duluthis on the Leech
Lake Indian Reservation between Pike Bayand Cass Lake.
Starting in the 1950s, lumber was pressure treated with creosote and chemicals
called pentachlorphenol and copper chromium arsenate. This process generated
various types of pollution, including dioxin and arsenic.
In 1984, the EPA added the site to its Superfund program, putting it on the
priority list for toxic waste cleanups.
In October 2004, contractors tested homes in the area for dioxin dust. They
found concentrations ranging from 0.234 parts per trillion to 240 parts per
trillion.
The EPA said in a report that, "the amount of indoor dust concentration from the
site exceeded what the EPA considers to be acceptable for six of the 10 homes
sampled."
As a result, the EPA proposed to order International Paper, which now owns the
site, to clean up the homes.
The science behind such an action is fairly new. The EPA based it on work done
to study and clean up the former World Trade Center site in lower Manhattan.
"We're taking a conservative approach to what we've found," said Tim Drexler,
the EPA's project manager for the cleanup.
In Nitro, the median dioxin dust concentration for the 33 homes Calwell tested
was 238 parts per trillion - roughly the same as the highest concentration the
EPA found at the Minnesota homes.
EPA officials say they are not convinced the numbers can be accurately compared.
In Minnesota, the dust samples were taken from living areas inside the homes. In
Nitro, Calwell's firm collected dust from attics and crawl spaces.
Sturgeon, the EPA project manager in Nitro, said the living-area samples more
accurately reflect ongoing exposure. But Sturgeon agreed with Calwell that attic
samples give a better estimate of how much dioxin has been in the home over a
longer period of time - say, since the Monsanto plant last made 2,4,5-T in the
early 1970s.
"If you want to know, over history, what accumulation of dioxin you had in a
home, attic dust is one of the few places you could look," Sturgeon said.
'Wouldn't you be concerned?'
Since he filed the lawsuit, Calwell has collected more dust samples in Nitro.
In court, he also is trying to halt the efforts of Monsanto to shed itself of
any liability for pollution of the Nitro area. He hopes to avoid having that
liability wiped out as part of a bankruptcy proceeding for one of Monsanto's
successor companies.
At the EPA's regional office in Philadelphia, officials have agreed to
re-examine the Nitro situation based on the additional dust samples.
In Charleston, officials from the state Bureau for Public Health's ATSDR program
are reviewing that data at the EPA's request.
Barbara Smith, an epidemiologist with that program, said she is not sure yet if
the data Calwell collected will give her agency enough to do a complete study.
"Just getting numbers is not going to be enough," Smith said. "We've got
numbers, but we're not sure we have enough data."
If that's the case, Smith said, her agency might ask the EPA to do its own
sampling to provide adequate data for a study.
Eric Carlson, an EPA liaison officer in Wheeling, said it would not be fair to
say his agency is not doing anything about the dioxin problem in Nitro.
Carlson cited a March 2004 EPA deal in which Monsanto agreed to do a new study
of dioxin contamination in the Kanawha River. As a result of that deal,
contractors for Monsanto performed new fish sampling in the Kanawha.
"I wouldn't say nobody is doing anything," Carlson said. "There is a significant
amount of work being done about the river."
Residents say more studies of the river are small consolation for them.
"I'm concerned about the damage that has been done," said Ross Stone, who has
lived in Nitro for 55 years and in the same house for 52 years. "I'm interested
to find out just exactly what the outcome is going to be, how it affects
people."
Joan Dixon, a 45-year Nitro resident, said, "There's dioxin in my attic, and in
my yard, too. Wouldn't you be concerned?"
To contact staff writer Ken Ward Jr., use e-mail or call 304-348-1702.
For additional articles like this one, go to the Tittabawassee River Watch web site www.trwnews.net for complete coverage of the Tittabawassee River Dow Chemical dioxin contamination saga. . The Newspaper / Media page of our site contains an extensive archive of media articles dating back to January 2002. The source organization's web site link is listed to the right of the article, visit often for other news in our area. The Newspaper / Media page may be accessed by scrolling down to the bottom of the CONTENTS section and clicking on the Newspaper/Media link.