PA Health Secretary Wants Tracking of Resident’s Health near Natural Gas Wells | InjuryBoard New York City

PA Health Secretary Wants Tracking of Resident’s Health near Natural Gas Wells | InjuryBoard New York City.

PA Health Secretary Wants Tracking of Resident’s Health near Natural Gas Wells

Visit Paul Napoli on Facebook

Posted by Paul NapoliJune 20, 2011 11:59 PM

June 20, 2011

Pennsylvania’s top health official says the state needs to create a health registry to track illnesses caused by natural gas drilling.

In response to growing concern and public outcry about the way natural gas drilling in the Marcellus Shale affects the health of residents, Secretary of Health Eli Avila told Lieutenant Governor Cawley and the Marcellus Shale Advisory Commission the state needs to take steps to address those concerns.

“In order to refute or verify claims that public health is being impacted by drilling in the Marcellus Shale, there must be a comprehensive and scientific approach to evaluating over time health conditions of individuals who live in close proximity to a drilling site or are occupationally exposed,” Avila told the Commission.

Avila, a doctor and attorney with experience in environmental remediation, says the Department of Health needs:

  • The power to investigate complaints by citizens, health care providers and public officials in a timely and thorough manner.
  • To routinely evaluate and assess environmental and clinical data, including the sampling of water, air, wildlife and other indicators of environmental health.
  • To educate health care providers about signs and symptoms of environmental related heath conditions and about proper testing for such illnesses, including chemical and radiation testing.
  • To have health care providers share patient testing with the Department of Health.
  • To educate the public about the chemicals used in the drilling process and any potential to cause illnesses.
  • To create a health registry to track drilling related health conditions.

“While it is critical that the Department investigates concerns, collects and assesses environmental and clinical data and educates health care providers and the general public, the most timely and important initiative that the Department can undertake is the creation of a population-based health registry,” Avila said.

Pa. health chief wants to analyze drilling areas – WSJ.com

Pa. health chief wants to analyze drilling areas – WSJ.com.

State health agency doesn’t keep Marcellus database – News – The Times-Tribune

State health agency doesn’t keep Marcellus database – News – The Times-Tribune.

 

Article Tools

| Font size: [A] [A] [A]

Our Social Networks

Facebook Twitter

Facebook

ALLENTOWN, Pa. (AP) — The Pennsylvania Department of Health says it does not formally keep track of citizens’ health complaints about gas drilling and has not, as a result, linked drilling to any health consequences.

Agency spokeswoman Brandi Hunter-Davenport said Friday in response to an Associated Press inquiry that the department takes citizen complaints about drilling seriously. But she said the agency does not keep a complaint database, and she could not say how many complaints the agency has received and investigated.

The AP asked for the data after a northern Pennsylvania hairdresser named Crystal Stroud told an anti-drilling rally in Harrisburg this week that a gas well drilled near her home poisoned her well water and made her sick. A drilling firm denies her claims.

Despair Not — In These Times- Sandra Steingraber

Despair Not — In These Times.

 

Features » May 25, 2011

Despair Not

We must confront ‘well-informed futility syndrome’ to overcome our fossil fuel addiction.

By Sandra Steingraber

Santiago lies under a layer of smog caused by local industries and the growing number of cars in the Chilean capital. (Martin Bernetti/AFP/Getty Images)

What will we say when our grandchildren ask us the names of the departed? Or, by then, will the loss of favorite animals be the least of our worries?

To Despair or Not to Despair, That Is the Question

What do you think? Is confronting climate change the moral issue of our time?

• Or should we make like a polar bear and adapt? After all, the planet may warm and seas may rise and crops may fail, but surely some humans–at least the fittest (and richest)–will survive.

• Or is such grim optimism too complacent–and complicit?

We invite you to share your thoughts. E-mail despairnot@inthesetimes.com. Please include your phone number and address. The In These Times Board of Editors will compile your contributions, which will be published in an upcoming issue of In These Times or at http://www.InTheseTimes.com.

In Alton, Ill., downstream from Peoria, the Illinois River town where I grew up, the abolitionist Elijah Lovejoy was pumped full of bullets on a dark November night by a mob intent on silencing the man once and for all. On this evening, they succeeded.

By dawn, Elijah was dead, and his printing press—the means by which he distributed his radical ideas—lay at the bottom of the Mississippi River. The year was 1837. The Rev. Lovejoy, a Presbyterian minister who attended Princeton Theological Seminary, was buried on this 35th birthday.

But the story doesn’t end there.

Almost immediately, membership in antislavery societies across the nation swelled. Vowing to carry on the work of his fallen friend, Edward Beecher, president of Illinois College in Jacksonville, threw himself into abolitionist efforts and, in so doing, inspired his sister, Harriet Beecher Stowe, who went on to write the most famous abolitionist treatise of all: Uncle Tom’s Cabin. Meanwhile, Elijah’s brother, Owen Lovejoy, turned his own house into a station along the Underground Railroad. Owen went on to win a seat in Congress and, along the way, befriended a young Illinois politician by the name of Abraham Lincoln.

These facts impressed me as a child.

When I read Reverend Lovejoy’s biography as a grown-up and mother, I found other things impressive. Such as the fact that, at the time of his assassination, Elijah had a young family. And yet, in the weeks before his death—when it became clear that the mob pursuing him was growing bolder by the hour—he did not desist from speaking out against slavery. So Elijah declared in one of his final speeches:

While all around me is violence and tumult, all is peace within…. I sleep sweetly and undisturbed, except when awakened by the brickbats of the mob.

Truly? With a pregnant wife in the bed next to him and a 1-year-old son in the next room? He wasn’t worried?

A letter to his mother in Maine tells a more nuanced story:

Still I cannot but feel that it is harder to “fight valiantly for the truth” when I risk not only my own comfort, ease, and reputation, and even life, but also that of another beloved one.

And then there’s this poignant aside:

I have a family who are dependent on me… And this is it that adds the bitterest ingredient to the cup of sorrow I am called to drink.

Here’s something else that I’ve noticed while reading his words. To the slave owners and murderous thugs, Elijah spoke calmly. He reserved his fierce language for the members of the community who gladly lived in the free state of Illinois but wished to remain above the fray: the ones who added their signatures to a resolution asking him to cease publication of his newspaper and leave town, but would not sign a resolution that urged protection of law against mob rule; the ones who agreed that slavery was a homicidal abomination but who feared that emancipation without recompense to slave owners for loss of property would be socially destabilizing; the ones who believed themselves upstandingly moral but who chose to remain silent about the great moral crisis of the day.

Two crises, one cause

In the spirit of Elijah Lovejoy—the man who is the namesake of my 9-year-old son—the time has come for outspoken, full-throated heroism in the face of the great moral issue of our own day: the environmental crisis—an unfolding calamity whose main victims are our own children and grandchildren.

In fact, the environmental crisis is actually two crises, although they share a common cause. You could view it as a tree with two main branches: One branch represents what is happening to our planet through the atmospheric accumulation of heat-trapping gases (most notably, carbon dioxide and methane). The second branch represents what is happening to us through the accumulation of inherently toxic chemical pollutants in our bodies.

Follow the first branch and you find droughts, floods, acidifying oceans, dissolving coral reefs and faltering plankton stocks (the oceans’ plankton provides half of our atmospheric oxygen supply). Follow the second branch and you find pesticides in children’s urine, lungs stunted by air pollutants, abbreviated pregnancies, altered hormone levels and lower scores on cognitive tests.

The trunk of this tree is an economic dependency on fossil fuels, primarily coal (plant fossils) and petroleum and natural gas (animal fossils). When we light them on fire, we threaten the global ecosystem. When we use them as feedstocks for making stuff, we create substances—pesticides, solvents, plastics—that can tinker with our subcellular machinery and various signaling pathways that make it run.

Biologist Rachel Carson first called our attention to these manifold dangers in her 1962 book, Silent Spring. She wrote, “Future generations are unlikely to condone our lack of prudent concern for the integrity of the natural world that supports all life.” Since then, the scientific evidence for the disintegration of our world has become irrefutable, and members of the future generations to whom she was referring are now occupying our homes.

They are our kids.

I mean this in the most basic ways. When my son Elijah, at age 4, asked to be a polar bear for Halloween, I sewed a polar bear costume—and I did so with the full knowledge that his costume might outlast the species. No other generation of mothers before mine has ever borne such knowledge—nor wondered if we should share this terrible news with our children. Or not. It’s a novel situation. Indeed, according to the most recent assessment, one in every four mammal species (and one in every three marine animals) is now threatened with extinction, including that icon of Halloween itself: the little brown bat. Thus, animal costumes whose real-life correspondents have been wiped from Earth may well become commonplace.

This leads me to wonder: What will we say when our grandchildren ask us the names of the departed? When bats, bees, butterflies, whales, polar bears and elephants disappear, will children still read books about them? Will they want to dress up as vanished species? Or, by then, will the loss of favorite animals be the least of their worries?

‘New morbidities of childhood’

Chronic childhood diseases linked to toxic chemical exposures are rising in prevalence. Here are a few of the current trends:

• 1 in 8 U.S. children is born prematurely. Preterm birth is the leading cause of death in the first months of life and the leading cause of disability. Its price tag is $26 billion per year in medical costs, special services and lost productivity. Preterm birth has demonstrable links to air pollution, especially maternal exposure to fine particles and combustion byproducts of the type released from coal-burning power plants.

• 1 in 11 U.S. children has asthma, the most common chronic childhood disease and a leading cause of school absenteeism. Asthma symptoms have been linked to certain ingredients in plastic (phthalates) as well as outdoor air pollution, including traffic exhaust. The annual cost of childhood asthma is estimated at $18 billion. Its incidence has doubled since 1980.

• 1 in 10 U.S. children has a learning disability, and nearly 1 in 10 has attention deficit/hyperactivity disorder. All together, special education services now consume 22 percent of U.S. school spending—about $77.3 billion per year at last count. Neurodevelopmental disorders have significant associations with exposures to air pollution, organophosphate pesticides like diazinon, and the heavy metals lead, mercury, and arsenic, among others.

• 1 in 110 children has autism or is on the autism spectrum. Annual costs are $35 billion. Causes are unknown, but exposure to chemical agents in early pregnancy is one of several suspected contributors.

• 1 in 10 U.S. white girls and 1 in 5 U.S. black girls begin breast development before the age of eight. On average, breast development begins nearly two years earlier (age 9) than it did in the early 1960s (age 11). A risk factor for breast cancer in adulthood, early puberty in girls is associated with increasing body fat as well as exposure to some hormonally active chemical agents known as “estrogen mimickers.” We have no cost estimates for the shortened childhoods of girls.

All together, asthma, behavioral problems, intellectual impairments and preterm birth are among the “new morbidities of childhood.” So concludes a 2006 federally funded investigation of pediatric environmental health. Ironically, by becoming so familiar a presence among children, these disorders now appear almost normal or inevitable. And yet, with an entirely different chemical regulatory system, farm bill and energy policy, their prevalence might be much reduced.

The fact that we do not identify and abolish hormone-disrupting, brain-damaging chemicals to which children are routinely exposed raises profound ethical questions. The authors of the pediatric health investigation, published in Environmental Health Perspectives, put it this way:

In the absence of toxicity testing, we are inadvertently employing pregnant women and children as uninformed subjects to warn us of new environmental toxicants. … Paradoxically, because industry is not obligated to supply the data on developmental neurotoxicity, the costs of human disease, research, and prevention are socialized whereas the profits are privatized.

In the absence of federal policies that protect child development and the ecology of the planet on which our children’s lives depend, we parents have to serve as our own regulatory agencies and departments of interior.

Already manically busy, we are encouraged by popular media reports to read labels, consult websites, vet the contents of birthday party goody bags, shrink our carbon footprints, mix our own nontoxic cleaning products, challenge our school districts to embrace pesticide-free soccer fields and limit the number of ounces of mercury-laced tuna fish consumed by each child per week.

Next page »Page 1 of 2
  • Help In These Times publish more articles like this. Donate today!
  • Subscribe today and save 46% off the newsstand price!

Notice of Public Hearing – Health Impacts of Hydraulic Fracturing Techniques

Notice of Public Hearing – Health Impacts of Hydraulic Fracturing Techniques.

Legislative panel questions industry on controversial hydrofracking as state forms new rules – Times Union

Legislative panel questions industry on controversial hydrofracking as state forms new rules – Times Union.

NYS Assembly Hearings on Health Effects of Hydrofracking

Assembly Public Hearing on Health Impacts of Hydraulic Fracturing Techniques  Albany, NY May 26, 2011

Playlist: Sandra Steingrabber, PhD, distinguished scholar in Residence at Ithaca College; Adam Law, MD Endocrinology, Physicians, Scientists and Engineers for Healthy Energy; Kevin Chatham-Stephens, MD Pediatric & Environmental Health Fellow, Mt. Sinai School of Medicine; Uni Blake, MS environmental toxicologist, Independent Oil and Gas Association of NY; Scott Cline, PhD, geologist & petroleum engineer, Independent Oil and Gas Association of NY. Note: Includes 1st three hours only. Audio improves after 1st clip (Sandra Steingrabber).

This was a combined public hearing of the NYS Assembly Standing Committee on Environmental Conservation chaired by Robert K. Sweeney and Assembly Standing Committee on Health, chaired by Richard N. Gottfried. The panel includes (left to right) Assembly Members Thomas J. Abinanti (Environment); Richard N. Gottfried (chair, Health); Robert K. Sweeney (chair, Environment); Steve Englebright (Energy); and Michelle Schimel (Environment).

DVDs of the complete hearings are available from: Public Information, 202 L.O.B, Albany, NY 12248. Refer to: “Assembly Public Hearing on Health Impacts of Hydraulic Fracturing Techniques from Thursday, May 26” and Include a check for . A transcript of the hearing will also be available from the Assembly Public Information Office.

“NY Assembly Hearing on Fracking & Health Impacts” (05-14-11, The Marcellus Effect)- http://marcelluseffect.blogspot.com/2011/05/ny-assembly-hearing-on-fracking-health.html


1-Sandra Steingrabber- http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1mhDFYUQdq0 & http://blip.tv/shaleshock-media/1-sandra-steingrabber-5217824

2-Sandra Steingrabber responds to panel- http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=H3ZvOFSpyss & http://blip.tv/shaleshock-media/2-sandra-steingrabber-responds-to-panel-5217543

3-Adam Lawhttp://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UBgmeGiCXvU & http://blip.tv/shaleshock-media/3-adam-law-5216851

4-Adam Law responds to panelhttp://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FRVeeJ7wPgg & http://blip.tv/shaleshock-media/4-adam-law-responds-to-panel-5216662

5-Kevin Chatham-Stephenshttp://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KN_1zZbMwVE & http://blip.tv/shaleshock-media/5-kevin-chatham-stephens-5215959

6-Kevin Chatham-Stephens responds to panelhttp://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GzYCC8BZxJU & http://blip.tv/shaleshock-media/6-kevin-chatham-stephens-responds-to-panel-5215816

7-Uni Blakehttp://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2KzqBDYuZ-c & http://blip.tv/shaleshock-media/7-uni-blake-5215662

8-IOGA Scott Klinehttp://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IZl9Dp_m-1k & http://blip.tv/shaleshock-media/8-scott-kline-5215468

9-IOGA Scott Kline Uni Blake respond to panelhttp://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9933iLt-k1c & http://blip.tv/shaleshock-media/9-ioga-scott-kline-uni-blake-respond-to-panel-5215366

10-IOGA Scott Kline Uni Blake respond to panel (con’d)http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kly5pcgif1M & http://blip.tv/shaleshock-media/10-ioga-scott-kline-uni-blake-respond-to-panel-con-d-5214831

You can order a DVD of the hearings for $10 check from the Assembly Public Information Office   http://assembly.state.ny.us/req/

Scott Kline Testimony–Comment/Questions

The notion of an hermetically sealed layer by virtue of capillary blockage is also one that I heard made by a proponent of propane fracking in answer to my question, what about old gas wells or vertical faults near the fracking operation?

Theoretical knowlege has a place.  Without it, we’d have no progress.  But it can be wrong, and in this case the consequences are so bad, the precautionary principle needs to be operative.

In any case, Kline’s explanations did not pass muster with Richard Gottfried, chair of the Assembly Health Committee.

As I was recording the exchange, I got a sense of how difficult it must be for politicians, at least good ones, to deal with technical testimony.

Has this issue of ‘capillary blocking’ been adequately addressed in a scientific debate or exchange?

We keep talking about the risk of old gas wells and vertical faults.  The industry’s experts keep talking about how safe and sequestered it is in the shale layer.

We continue to make the point that the industry narrowly focuses on the fracking operation at depth when it makes the claim, repeated I believe by Kline, that no drinking water aquifer has been contaminated by hydro-fracking.

I know that I am not alone in being concerned with the long term consequences –long after the gas has been extracted.  The integrity of the well casing is often cited.  But when I here from Kline that the fracturing actually does extends above and below the shale layer, I am concerned.

As is Richard Gottfried, chair of the Assembly Health Committee, who responds to Kline’s assertion of capillary blockage with a question of capillary action transporting the liquid.  To which Kline responds, it all would go toward the well bore regardless, because of the pressure gradient.

That is the problem the theoretical knowledge.  There are coherent views, but we really don’t know what processes may unfold over time.

Though maybe it is not productive for activists to get involve with this sort of question over all else we need to focus on, certainly, some more expert scientific opinion countering the industry claims articulated by Kline would help those who in the legislature who support, or are leaning toward, and extended moratorium.

Some might say this is already out there, but I have no as yet read anything that directly addresses the industry/technical assertion that capillary blockage makes everything safe and contained.

It was a long exchange between Kline and the panel.  The assertion that the thermogenic methane that has contaminated water wells near drilling operations comes from shallow layers apparently is disputed by the Duke study.

Early, Sandra Steingrabber made the point that there are really only two studies –the ecent Duke study and the Ingraffea/Howarth/Santoro study.

On 5/27/11 9:13 PM, KatyaBelousBoyle@aol.com wrote:

No doubt now that Scott Cline holds a BS in geological science.  His statements about fracking are pure BS.   RHB

 
Visit the Sustainable Otsego website:
http://sustainableotsego.org/

message-footer.txt
1K   View   Download
Reply
Reply to all
Forward
Reply
James Northrup to mmsteinberg, NYGCG, ROUSE, averettr
show details 1:11 PM (11 hours ago)
Melanie

The telling point is highlighted below – 


Kline goes out of his way to discuss one of the least likely vectors of pollution – the frack going out-of-zone via vertical faulting. 

It happens – and companies have paid fines for it (Encana / Garfield County). 

Plus of course, surface casing blows out – which is in effect the frack going way out of zone. 

The problems start when the well is spudded -and prior to its being cased, much less fracked. 

The open hole during drilling (with a column of drilling mud to provide hydrostatic pressure on the gas) is a vector for methane migration 

And gas that gets into the drilling mud can get into the aquifer/ ground water – before the well is cased. 

And the cased well remains a pathway, with increasing probability of contamination into groundwater as the casing corrodes. 


Which is why the original driller will sell the well before it reaches its economic life expectancy 

To avoid the P&A (plug and abandonment) liabilities of a leaking well. Of which there are thousands already in NYS. 

Basically man-made open vectors from the formation into groundwater. 

Think of old wells as equivalent to  “man-made vertical faults” 

With no money at the DEC to properly plug them.




– Show quoted text –
– Show quoted text –

Visit the Sustainable Otsego website:
http://sustainableotsego.org/

Could Smog Shroud the Marcellus Shale’s Natural Gas Boom? – NYTimes.com

Could Smog Shroud the Marcellus Shale’s Natural Gas Boom? – NYTimes.com.

Sandra Steingraber Assembly Testimony 5/26/11

The Potential Health Impacts of Hydraulic Fracturing

Testimony before the New York State Assembly Standing Committees

on Environmental Conservation and Health

May 26, 2011

Sandra Steingraber, Ph.D.

Distinguished Scholar in Residence

Department of Environmental Studies

Ithaca College

Ithaca, New York  14850

ssteingraber@ithaca.edu

 

Chairman Sweeney, Chairman Gottfried, and distinguished members of the committees:

 

Thank you for convening this hearing on a topic that is of urgent concern to all New Yorkers.  Hydraulic fracturing relies on pressure, water, and high volumes of inherently toxic chemicals to shatter the bedrock beneath our feet and beneath our drinking water aquifers.  Once shattered, the bedrock releases more than just bubbles of natural gas.  The rock itself releases inherently toxic materials that have been bound together with the shale for 400 million of years.  As we, in New York, consider whether to permit or prohibit this form of energy extraction, it is essential that we understand the possible consequences to public health as a prerequisite for making that decision.  Once shale is shattered, it cannot be unshattered, nor groundwater unpoisoned.

 

Some of the chemicals used in hydraulic fracturing—or liberated by it—are carcinogens.  Some are neurological poisons with suspected links to learning deficits in children.  Some are asthma triggers.  Some, especially the radioactive ones, are known to bioaccumulate in milk.  Others are reproductive toxicants that can contribute to pregnancy loss.  Cancer, miscarriage, learning disabilities, and asthma are not only devastating disorders, they are expensive.  They add rocks to the pockets of our health care system and cripple productivity.[1]  A recent analysis published in our nation’s preeminent public health journal, Health Affairs, estimates that we now spend $76.6 billion each year on health care for children exposed to toxic chemicals and air pollution.[2]

 

So it is right that we ask if hydraulic fracturing brings with it involuntary environmental exposures that may increase our disease burden here in New York.  I applaud you for initiating this conversation.  It feels like an historic moment.

 

My name is Sandra Steingraber.  I’m a distinguished scholar in residence at Ithaca College, and my Ph.D. is in biology from the University of Michigan.  More specifically, my training is in systems ecology, which means I’m interested in understanding how a dynamic web of direct and indirect interactions—from pollination to groundwater flow—helps shape the natural world.

 

Early on in my career as a biologist, I had a profound personal experience that led me to the work I do now, which is focused on understanding how the cumulative impacts of multiple environmental exposures to toxic chemicals create risks for human health.

 

At the age of 20, I was diagnosed with bladder cancer, a quintessential environmental cancer with well-established links to particular classes of chemicals.  Questions about my possible chemical exposures posed to me by my own diagnosing physician led me, years later, to return to my hometown in Illinois and investigate an alleged cancer cluster there.  Among other things, I discovered the presence of dry-cleaning fluid in the drinking water wells.  That was a surprise because the underlying geology of the area should not have allowed toxic contamination to happen.  But there it was.  I came to appreciate how little we really know about the unmapped, subterranean landscape below our feet, which has intimate, unseen connections to the world above ground.  It’s not just an inert lump of rock down there.

 

My investigation of the environmental links to cancer became the topic of my book Living Downstream, which was released last year as a documentary film.  I’ve also published two books on pediatric environmental health, the most recent of which is Raising Elijah: Protecting Children in an Age of Environmental Crisis.  The book’s final chapter addresses the potential health threats of hydraulic fracturing, and I’m pleased to share the results of my research with you.

 

I’ll begin by saying that a comprehensive study of the long-term, cumulative, public health impacts of fracking has not been done.  However, we do know quite a lot about the risks to human health posed by some of the chemicals used in the process or released by it.

 

 

 

Health Effects from Air Pollution

 

Because breathing is our most ecological act—we inhale a pint of atmosphere with every breath—I’ll begin with air.

 

Air pollution is an inevitable consequence of horizontal hydrofracturing.  It is not the outcome of a catastrophic accident.  It is not a hypothetical risk.  Compromised air quality is a certainty.  Because four to nine million gallons of fresh water are required to frack a single well and because wells must cover the landscape for Marcellus shale development to be profitable, fracking is a shock and awe operation.  77,000 wells are envisioned for upstate New York alone.[3]  Each well requires 1,000 truck trips.  77,000 times 1,000 equals a number with six zeroes after it.  This represents a prodigious amount of diesel exhaust.  And, of course, in addition to endless fleets of 18-wheelers, gas production requires generators, pumps, drill rigs, condensers and compressors, which also run on diesel.  At the same time, the wellheads themselves vent volatile organic chemicals—such as benzene and toluene—that are themselves highly toxic and can combine with combustion byproducts to create smog.[4]

 

This kind of air pollution is lethal.  It contains large amounts of ultrafine particles, soot, ozone, and the carcinogen benzo-a-pyrene.  In adults, these pollutants are variously linked to bladder, lung, and breast cancer, stroke, diabetes, and premature death.  In children, they are linked to premature birth, asthma, cognitive deficits, and stunted lung development.[5]

 

Again, this harm comes with economic costs.  Premature birth, which is the leading cause of disability in the United States, carries  $26 billion a year price tag. The direct and indirect costs of childhood asthma are $18 billion a year.[6]

 

What’s more, the airborne contaminants from gas drilling travel long distances, up to 200 miles.[7]  That is to say, the health costs of drilling will be borne by children living in areas where no one is benefiting financially from land leases.  Albany will be affected.  So will New York City.

 

In the gas-producing areas of Utah and Wyoming, formerly pristine air now contains more ozone than downtown Los Angeles.[8]  As the mother of a child with a history of asthma, this concerns me deeply.  New York is not Wyoming.  Our starting point here is not pristine, and our population density is much greater.  The cumulative impact of the air pollution that would be generated by hydraulic fracturing and the air pollution already here in our state is a question that, I submit, requires investigation before any permits are issued.

 

Health Effects from Water Pollution

 

We are each of us in this room 65 percent water by weight.  As such, we enjoy an exquisite communion not only with the atmosphere but with the water cycle, too.

 

Fracking turns millions of gallons of fresh water into poisonous flowback fluid that requires permanent disposal.  The technology does not exist to turn this waste into drinkable water nor remove the radioactive isotopes.  You cannot filter radioactivity.  This much we know with certainty.  The unfolding nuclear disaster in Japan illustrates the point.

 

We also know that there are many documented cases of surface and ground water contamination with compounds associated with gas extraction, including the carcinogen benzene.[9]  However, because hydraulic fracturing has been granted the environmental equivalent of diplomatic immunity—and enjoys special exemptions from both the Clean Water Act and the Clean Drinking Water Act—it is difficult for those of us in the research community to quantify the public health consequences.  Researchers lack knowledge about the behavior of groundwater, and, because of trade secrets, they also don’t know what chemicals to test for.[10]

 

We do know, from a study released earlier this month, that drinking water wells near gas extraction sites in Pennsylvania and New York have, on average, 17 times higher methane levels than wells located farther away.[11]

 

Other than possible explosions, what are the health consequences of drinking and inhaling methane?   For pregnant women?  For children?  For anybody?  We don’t know.  Those studies have never been done.  The federal government does not regulate methane in drinking water.

 

We do know that disinfection byproducts are created when water containing carbon-based contaminants is chlorinated.  These include trihalomethanes, such as chloroform, which are, in fact, linked to both bladder and colon and cancers.[12]  Can methane serve as a raw material for the creation of carcinogenic compounds during the disinfection of public drinking water?  To my knowledge, we in the scientific community don’t have an answer to that question.

 

I have brought with me a jar of water from my kitchen tap in the village of Trumansburg, which comes from a municipal well sunk into a groundwater aquifer next to Cayuga Lake, where fracking fluid from Pennsylvania has been dumped.  Every day, I pour this water into glasses and hand them to my children.  Every day, this water becomes their blood plasma.  It becomes their tears.  It becomes their cerebral spinal fluid.  According to the most recent annual Drinking Water Quality Report for my village, this water contains 29.2 parts per billion trihalomethanes.  That’s not in violation of regulatory limits, but it’s worrisome as there is no documented safe threshold level of exposure.  This water also contains nitrates, probably as the result of agricultural run-off.  Their presence in this jar is, all by itself, not a call for alarm.  But it is a sign that our municipal water, which draws from an unconfined aquifer, is vulnerable to chemical contamination.  It shows that there exist hidden connections between the surface of the earth and the watery vaults of groundwater deep beneath our feet.

 

What would happen to this water if the fields that surround my village—many of which are already leased to gas industry—become a staging ground for fossil fuel extraction?

 

This is not a hydrological experiment that I am interested in running.

 

 

 

Impact on Food

 

I have also brought with me a loaf of bread and a bag of flour.  Both are made from organic heirloom wheat and rye that is grown in my home county and milled right in my village.  You can find similar loaves of artisanal bread—made from this same flour—in Brooklyn bakeries.  This particular loaf was created by Stefan Senders of the Wide Awake Bakery in Mecklenburg, New York.  Baker Senders asked me to submit this loaf as his personal testimony to the Assembly today.  And it comes with a message:

 

“Please tell the committees that bread is mostly water.  The flour and the yeast are just a matrix to make water stand up. I can’t bake bread without a source of clean water.”

 

He also told me that the farmers who grew the organic wheat to make his flour are surrounded by leased land.  He believes whole farm-to-table enterprise is threatened by fracking.

 

Baker Stefan and his suppliers have reason to feel concern.  Organic farmers who raise food near fracking operations are facing potential boycotts and will lose their certification if their crops and animals are chemically contaminated.

 

Upstate New York was recently identified by the New York Times as a national hotspot for organic agriculture, which itself is the most rapidly expanding sector of the food production system that has continued to grow even during the economic downturn.[13]  Cows, wheat fields, vineyards, maple syrup, and apple orchards:  they are all part of a healthy human food chain.  They all require clean water, and they are all affected badly by exposure to air pollution.

 

Of course, public health is also served by employment opportunities in the form of non-toxic jobs.  The above-mentioned mill and bakery are currently hiring.  They both have plans to grow their businesses as demand for locally produced, organic bread is rising.  The grain farmers, too, are seeking additional land.  However, as baker Stefan Senders informs me, concern about the area gas leases and the possible end of the current state moratorium on horizontal drilling have negatively affected plans for locally expanding organic wheat agriculture and artisanal bread baking.  This raises a question:  is the human health of New York best served by jobs that involve organic bread production or fossil fuel extraction?

 

Conclusions

 

I fervently hope that these hearings are the beginning, not the end, of an essential conversation.  In its current incarnation, the New York State Department of Environmental Conservation’s draft Supplemental Environmental Impact Statement—on which the future of hydraulic fracturing hangs—considers neither human health consequences nor the cumulative impacts of the numerous hazards that gas drilling has brought to our doors.

 

The human health impacts of fracking cannot be understood by looking at one chemical exposure by itself, one river at a time, one well pad in isolation.  We all know that it is not just the last straw that breaks the backs of camels.   I urge the Assembly to look at the all straws, employing the new tools of cumulative impacts assessment to do so.[14]  Until that work is complete, benefit of the doubt goes to New York’s children, water, cows, and wheat fields, not to things that threaten them.

 

 

 

 


[1] President’s Cancer Panel, Reducing Environmental Cancer Risk: What We Can Do Now, 2008-2009 Annual Report (National Cancer Institute, May 2010)

 

[2] L. Trasande and Y. Lui, “Reducing the Staggering Costs of Environmental Disease in Children, Estimated at $76.6 Billion in 2008,” Health Affairs 30 (5): 863-70, 5 May 2011.

 

[3] This estimate is based on assumptions about how much of the shale will be tapped over what period of time.  77,000 wells assumes that 17 New York State counties are drilled and that the shale is 70 percent developed over 50 years at a density of eight wells per square mile.  T. Engelder, “Marcellus 2008 Report Card on the Breakout Year for Gas Production in the Appalachian Basin,” Forth Worth Basin Oil and Gas Magazine, Aug. 2009, pp. 18-22, and Anthony Ingraffea, Ph.D., personal communication.

[4] C.D. Volz et al., “Potential Shale Gas Extraction Air Pollution Impacts,” FracTracker—Marcellus Shale Data Tracking, Foundation for Pennsylvania Watersheds, 24 Aug. 2010.

[5] American Lung Association, “Health Effects of Ozone and Particle Pollution,” State of the Air, 2011; President’s Cancer Panel, Reducing Environmental Cancer Risk: What We Can Do Now, 2008-2009 Annual Report (National Cancer Institute, May 2010).

[6] American Lung Association, Asthma and Children Fact Sheet, Feb. 2010; J.M. Perrin et al., “The Increase of Childhood Chronic Conditions in the United States,” Journal of the American Medical Association 297 (2007); U.S. Centers for Disease Control, Summary Health Statistics for U.S. Children: National Health Interview Survey, 2006 and “Premature Birth,” 2010.

[7] S. Kemball-Cook et al., “Ozone Impacts of Natural Gas Development in the Haynseville Shale,” Environmental Science and Technology 15 (2010): 9357-63.

 

[8] M. Bernard, “Air Pollution Becoming a Basin Concern,” Vernal Express, 5 Oct. 2010; D.M. Kargbo et al., “Natural Gas Plays in the Marcellus Shale: Challenges and Potential Opportunities,” Environmental Science & Technology 44 (2010): 5679-84.

[9] A. Lustgarten and ProPublica, “Drill for Gas, Pollute the Water,” Scientific American, 17 Nov. 2008.

[10] For example, U.S. Agency for Toxics Substances and Disease Registry, Evaluation of Contaminants in Private Residential Well Water, Pavillion, Wyoming, Fremont County, August 2010.

 

[11] S.G. Osborne et al., “Methane Contamination of Drinking Water Accompanying Gas-Well Drilling and Hydraulic Fracturing,” Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, May 2011, epub before print.

[12] R.D. Morris et al., “Chlorination, Chlorination By-products and Cancer: A Meta-analysis,” American Journal of Public Health 82 (1992); H.W. Weinberg et al., “Disinfection By-Products (DBPs) of Health Concern in Drinking Water: Results of a Nationwide DBP Occurrence Study (Athens, GA: EPA National Exposure Research Laboratory, 2002).

 

[13] H. Fairfield, “The Hot Spots for Organic Food,” New York Times, 3 May 2009.

[14] “Cumulative impacts” refers to the combined effect of numerous adverse impacts on public health or ecosystems from environmental hazards.  The Science and Environmental Health Network has launched a new website that describes the latest science on cumulative impacts assessment:  www.cumulativeimpacts.org.

__._,_.___

ISS – A REGULATORY DISASTER

ISS – A REGULATORY DISASTER.

A REGULATORY DISASTER

Following the BP oil disaster, federal agencies took steps that may have further compromised the health of cleanup workers and Gulf Coast residents.

A special Facing South investigation by Sue Sturgis and Chris Kromm

Riki-Ott_small.jpgWhen BP’s Deepwater Horizon oil rig blew up a year ago in the Gulf of Mexico, triggering the largest oil spill in U.S. history, Riki Ott — a marine toxicologist from Alaska — had a sinking feeling: Here we go again.

Share

Ott (photo at right) was touring the United States to promote her book Not One Drop, the story of what until then was the nation’s worst oil spill — the 1989 Exxon Valdez disaster, which spilled up to 32 million gallons of crude oil into Alaska’s Prince William Sound after a tanker ran aground.

Back then, Ott was working as a commercial salmon fisher in the area. She wrote extensively about the environmental and social fallout from Exxon Valdez, and founded several nonprofits to help Alaskan communities deal with the impact.

When BP’s failed rig began gushing oil into the Gulf, Ott’s first instinct was to turn away. “I didn’t want to go,” Ott told Facing South. “It hurt too much.”

But Ott managed to stay away for only 10 days. From news reports, she became convinced that many of the post-spill mistakes made in Alaska were being repeated in the Gulf — and putting the health of thousands of Gulf Coast residents in serious jeopardy.

Over the last year, Ott has been crisscrossing Gulf communities from Louisiana to Florida, collecting stories from hundreds of people. What she has learned has led her to believe there is an environmental health crisis unfolding in the Gulf that was exacerbated by the federal government’s failure to take appropriate action to protect cleanup workers and coastal residents.

“There are a lot of sick people in the Gulf, with reports of respiratory problems, skin rashes and other issues that won’t go away,” she says. “The federal government has done a huge disservice by pretending this isn’t a problem.”

exxonvaldez_cleanup_workers.jpgLacking a plan

Exhibit A of the government’s failure to address the BP disaster’s public health aftermath, Ott and others contend, are the medical problems now afflicting many of the workers mobilized to clean up the spill.

There are a potentially large number of people affected, as about 100,000 people went through cleanup worker safety training, according to the National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences.

The National Institutes of Health is currently undertaking a study looking at impacts of the BP spill on cleanup workers. But that research is geared toward helping prepare for future incidents that put workers at risk and not to helping those affected by the BP disaster.

The reported illnesses should have come as no surprise: People who were involved in the Exxon Valdez cleanup two decades ago (photo above) reported a flu-like respiratory illness that was dubbed “Valdez Crud,” the symptoms of which — coughing, burning eyes, chest pain, etc. — are consistent with exposure to toxic chemicals found in crude oil.

Over time, the acute health problems suffered by Exxon Valdez cleanup workers morphed into more chronic conditions including memory loss and cancer, which are long-term consequences of toxic chemical exposure.

Though there were no published, peer-reviewed studies conducted on Exxon Valdez cleanup workers, an unpublished pilot study done by a Yale graduate student in 2003 included a phone survey of 169 workers that found those with significant oil exposure or exposure to oil fumes were more likely to report symptoms of chronic airway disease than those with less exposure. Based on that finding, Ott told Congress that she estimates as many as 3,000 former Exxon Valdez cleanup workers suffer from spill-related health problems.

More recently, a study by Spanish scientists published last August in the Annals of Internal Medicine looking at fishermen who responded to the 2002 spill of 20 million gallons of oil from the Prestige tanker off the northwestern coast of Spain found that participation in the cleanup was associated with persistent respiratory problems such as coughing and shortness of breath.

The Spanish cleanup workers also showed chromosomal abnormalities in their white blood cells that increased with intensity of exposure.

The U.S. Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease Registry, a division of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, reports that exposure to benzene, a component of crude oil, causes damage to the blood, immune system and reproductive organs, and can lead to leukemia.

The Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA), the federal agency in charge of protecting workers from on-the-job hazards, deployed personnel to the Gulf the week after the rig exploded. But even at the height of the cleanup effort, the cash-strapped agency had at most only 50 personnel assigned solely to the oil cleanup — far too few to comprehensively monitor the massive effort that stretched from Texas to Florida.

OSHA also worked with the National Institute on Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), a division of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, to establish rules regarding protective equipment and training for cleanup workers. But those rules were not always followed. Last July, for example, OSHA sounded an alarm over shortcuts in the required 40-hour training for cleanup supervisors.

“We have received reports that some are offering this training in significantly less than 40 hours, showing video presentations and offering only limited instruction,” U.S. Assistant Secretary of Labor for Occupational Safety and Health Dr. David Michaels announced last July.

A report [pdf] released last year by the Center for Progressive Reform (CPR), a nonprofit public and environmental health watchdog group, identified the “original sin” behind the compromise of cleanup workers’ health and safety as the limited role that OSHA and NIOSH played in the oil spill planning process laid out under the Oil Pollution Act of 1990.

Passed by Congress in the wake of the Exxon Valdez disaster, the act creates a National Contingency Plan that gives OSHA inspection authority after a spill and a role on national and regional response teams. However, the plan simply states that response actions should comply with OSHA standards but doesn’t set out any clear compliance mechanism. As a consequence, CPR found, too few cleanup workers were given adequate training on the use of personal protective equipment such as respirators.

“When cleanup crews first got to work on the beaches and on the water, there was no carefully considered plan for what protections they needed for the oil fumes and heat,” says CPR President Rena Steinzor, a professor at the University of Maryland School of Law.

But a lack of training about how to use protective gear wasn’t the only problem: In some cases, BP failed to even make gear available.

Kellie Fellows was one of hundreds of workers hired by BP to help clean up beaches in Mississippi last summer, and she later shared the story about her experience with the Louisiana Environmental Action Network (LEAN). During training Fellows and her co-workers were told that safety was a priority and that they would be provided with respirators and other protective gear.

But when it was time to go to work, there were no respirators provided — even though there was a strong smell of oil on the beach. Initially they were given Tyvek protective suits to wear but were instructed to pull them up only partway and to tie the arms around their waists; eventually they were told there was no danger and sent out without the suits. They were given only straw hats, safety glasses and gloves and sent to work.

Fellows’ job was to hold a trash bag while two men shoveled in tar balls. Once they collected about 20 pounds of tar balls, her assignment was to tie off the bag in a knot. But in order to do that, her bare arms repeatedly touched the oil-smeared bag. Eventually her arms became covered with oil, which also worked its way down inside her gloves. Her skin began burning.

“I wanted to be in a Tyvek [suit]. And they refused.”

When she reported the contamination to her superiors, no one seemed to know what to do. They ended up washing her hands with soap and bottled water, rubbing on a couple packets of burn cream, and sending her home for the rest of the day.

Fellows has been left with lingering headaches she attributes to the toxic exposures, and she believes many others are still experiencing health-damaging consequences — even though the managers denied the clean-up had anything to do with it.

“Everyone was given excuses,” Fellows says, “Oh, you have the flu, it’s going around, that kind of thing. Bronchial issues? Oh, well, it’s allergies. Every excuse known to man was given except for them to actually say this is coming from the oil.”

Louis Bayhi, a Louisiana charter boat captain, heard the same story after he was hired by BP to shuttle divers and scientists to the spill site, and later worked for BP’s Vessels of Opportunity program in direct cleanup.

Bayhi says he was told he didn’t have to wear a respirator since he wouldn’t be directly touching the oil, though he says the fumes still sickened him and his crew. Two co-workers passed out on his boat, were taken for emergency treatment, and never returned. He still doesn’t know what happened to them.

When crews would arrive back at shore, Bayhi says, BP medical staff would ask them how they were feeling. When they described headaches and other problems, they were told it was seasickness.

“I’ve been offshore pretty much all my life and I got sick one time because I ate Froot Loops and beer for breakfast. Other than that, I really don’t remember a time I got seasick.”

Plus, seasickness doesn’t continue onshore for months on end — but Bayhi’s symptoms have. Earlier this month, he spent five days in the hospital with severe abdominal pain. The doctors couldn’t figure out what’s wrong with him, but he suspects it’s related to his oil exposure.

Environmental health advocates say the kind of exposures cleanup workers suffered is unthinkable in this day and age.

“The workplace environment cleanup people were put in was totally unacceptable for 2010,” Wilma Subra, an environmental chemist who works with LEAN, told Facing South. “You had a responsible party with resources, and it should not have happened.”

chemical_dispersant_spraying.jpg‘Human health hazards: acute’

Adding to the toxic stew in the Gulf — and the health risks to cleanup workers and coastal residents — was the approach BP used, with government approval, to disperse the massive oil slicks stemming from the disaster.

Oil dispersants are a mix of surfactants and industrial solvents that cause oil to form into droplets and fall to the ocean floor. Less than a month after the Deepwater Horizon explosion, BP reported spraying more than 400,000 gallons of dispersant on the slick and wellhead itself — primarily two versions of Corexit, manufactured by Illinois-based Nalco.

Corexit EC9500A and Corexit EC9527A were both on the list of 18 dispersants approved for use on oil spills by the Environmental Protection Agency. However, as The New York Times reported, the EPA’s own data showed that Corexit was far more toxic — and far less effective — than other alternatives in handling southern Louisiana crude:

Of 18 dispersants whose use EPA has approved, 12 were found to be more effective on southern Louisiana crude than Corexit, EPA data show. Two of the 12 were found to be 100 percent effective on Gulf of Mexico crude, while the two Corexit products rated 56 percent and 63 percent effective, respectively. The toxicity of the 12 was shown to be either comparable to the Corexit line or, in some cases, 10 or 20 times less, according to EPA.

Considered a trade secret, the precise contents of dispersants like Corexit were initially hidden from public view and revealed to the Environmental Protection Agency last June only after extensive negotiations. However, OSHA requires that any ingredients which may be harmful to exposed workers be listed on readily available Material Safety Data Sheets. For both forms of Corexit used by BP — Corexit EC9500A and EC9527A — the data sheets include this warning: “Human health hazards: acute.”

OSHA’s data sheet for Corexit EC9527A [pdf] details the potential health consequences: “[E]xcessive exposure may cause central nervous system effects, nausea, vomiting, anesthetic or narcotic effects.” It also notes that this version of Corexit includes 2-butoxyethanol, stating that “repeated or excessive exposure to butoxyethanol may cause injury to red blood cells (hemolysis), kidney or the liver … Prolonged and/or repeated exposure through inhalation or extensive skin contact with EGBE [butoxyethanol] may result in damage to the blood and kidneys.”

By September 2010, BP reported spraying about 2 million gallons of dispersants for the spill — an unprecedented amount. And some Gulf scientists believe there is already evidence that it’s having adverse health impacts.

In July 2010, Dr. Susan Shaw — founder and director of the Marine Environmental Research Institute — told CNN about a shrimper who had water splash onto his skin:

…[H]e got a headache that lasted for three weeks. He had heart palpitations. He had muscle spasms and … bleeding from the rectum.

And that’s what Corexit does. It ruptures red blood cells, causes internal bleeding, and liver and kidney damage.

This stuff is so toxic combined [with oil] … it goes right through skin.

As with the risks to cleanup workers, the hazards posed by Corexit were already known. The United Kingdom had famously banned the used of the dispersant. A version of Corexit was also used after the Exxon Valdez disaster and implicated by cleanup workers and environmental advocates for the health problems they suffered after that disaster.

Even when faced with growing criticism about the use of such toxic elements on such an untested scale — especially near cleanup workers and coastal communities — government regulators appeared slow to address the hazards.

On May 26, the EPA and U.S. Coast Guard issued a directive telling BP to stop using surface dispersants — except in “rare cases where there may have to be an exception.” Yet as Rep. Edward Markey (D-Mass.) noted in a strongly worded letter sent to Adm. Thad Allen, the spill recovery commander, on July 30, exemptions were being routinely granted:

An analysis of the exemption request letters submitted by both the BP and Houma Unified Command, as well as other documents provided to me by the USCG, reveals that since the Directive was issued on May 26th, more than 74 exemption requests have been submitted and, usually within the same day, approved by the USCG. On 5 separate occasions BP submitted requests for pre-authorized exemptions to deviate from EPA and USCG instructions by applying 6,000 gallons of dispersant per day to the ocean surface for an entire week … In every instance this weekly request was approved by the USCG, and on many of these days, BP still used more than double its new 6,000 gallon limit.

The result? Dispersant use declined only 9 percent — even after federal officials had formally directed BP to stop using them in all but the most extreme circumstances.

Aside from the threats posed by immediate exposure, there’s concern about how long Corexit will linger. Dr. Shaw warns that such chemicals readily bioaccumulate — meaning they get stored in the fat tissue of marine organisms and get passed up the food chain, including to humans who eat fish.

And there were reports that dispersants were still being used and posing a health threat long after the spraying was supposed to have stopped. “I have received hundreds of reports about improper spraying,” says Subra with the group LEAN. “It was ongoing, and people are being made very, very sick.”

In August 2010, a month after the Joint Command for the oil spill says the spraying was supposed to have ended, Rocky Kistner with the Natural Resources Defense Council documented the presence of of large tanks of Corexit on Gulf beaches. Earlier this year, MSNBC also detailed accounts of Gulf residents who maintain the dispersant spraying continued long after July, with C-130s spraying within sight of beaches at night.

Subra says she has passed the reports she’s received about the spraying to the EPA. However, the agency has refused to discuss the matter with her, saying only that it’s part of an ongoing criminal investigation.

lmrk_seafood_sampling.pngJust four jumbo shrimp a week

Another potential health risk for people in the Gulf Coast and beyond is the safety of the region’s seafood.

At a press conference held last September, National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administrator Jane Lubchenco declared that seafood from the Gulf was “free of contamination.” NOAA echoed the sentiment earlier this month, when it led reporters on a tour of testing facilities in Mississippi and declared that “not one piece of tainted seafood has entered the market” due to the BP spill.

But as Subra points out, test data from the federal government and state agencies contradicted at least the earlier assertions. Twenty-four percent of all Gulf seafood and 43 percent of all Gulf oysters sampled through August 2010 contained polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs), a natural constituent of crude oil and a byproduct of burning fuel. The ATSDR reports that PAHs are known to cause cancer as well as birth defects and damage to the skin and immune system.

While the concentrations detected fell far below the levels of concern established by the Food and Drug Administration, those levels are another source of controversy.

To set its safe consumption levels for Gulf seafood in the wake of the BP oil spill, the FDA measured the levels of PAHs in the seafood against the national average of seafood consumption — about 3 ounces a week. That’s the equivalent of four jumbo shrimp.

But the typical Gulf Coast family — especially in fishing communities — eats much more seafood than that. A survey in late 2010 by the Natural Resources Defense Council of 547 seafood eaters in the Gulf found the median consumption was about 20 seafood meals a month. Those at the higher end consumed up to 60 seafood meals a month. And their portions were bigger than just four jumbo shrimp.

“Those levels are clearly not designed to deal with the situation on the Gulf Coast,” says Subra. “It’s not protective enough.”

What’s more, the estimate is based on the person eating the seafood weighing an average of 176 pounds. What about children? People who weigh less? Pregnant women and their developing fetuses? Yet federal and state health officials insist their measures are conservative and adequate to protect the public.

LEAN has been conducting its own tests of seafood from the Gulf, looking at PAHs as well as total petroleum hydrocarbons, which the FDA is not testing for. It tested only seafood that appeared pristine and neither looked nor smelled suspicious.

LEAN found that levels of total petroleum hydrocarbons in flounder and speckled trout caught in Louisiana’s St. Bernard Parish last August were 21,575 milligrams per kilogram, while oysters caught in Plaquemines Parish showed levels of 12,500 mg/kg. Petroleum levels found in fiddler crabs and periwinkles harvested from Terrebonne Parish on Aug. 19 were 6,916 mg/kg. LEAN notes that there shouldn’t be any detectable levels of petroleum hydrocarbons in seafood.

The prospect of contaminated seafood continues today: At a public meeting held late last month in Grand Isle, La. as part of the Natural Resource Damage Assessment process that’s now underway, shrimpers reported pulling up nets full of oil from the seafloor and facing the decision of whether to report the oil to the Coast Guard, which would mean throwing away the day’s catch, or keeping quiet.

Subra is among those who aren’t taking any chances.

“I don’t eat seafood now from the Gulf or from coastal areas,” she confesses. “I still eat crawfish, but that’s freshwater.”

* * *

TOMORROW: BP’s spill is not the oil industry’s only threat to the health of Gulf Coast residents.

* * *

Sue Sturgis is an investigative reporter and editorial director of Facing South, and Chris Kromm is Facing South’s publisher. This piece is the second installment in an in-depth, week-long series by Sturgis and Kromm on the growing health crisis in the Gulf in the wake of the BP disaster and the government’s failure to respond adequately. To read the first piece, click here.

* * *
(PHOTOS: From top, Riki Ott from www.rikiott.com; Exxon Valdez cleanup workers from NOAA via Wikimedia Commons; C-130 spraying chemical dispersants on BP spill from U.S. Air Force; Gulf seafood being sampled by Jeffrey Dubinsky for the Lower Mississippi Riverkeeper.)
user-pic

0 Votes

Categories: