Volume 6 January 1999

THE ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY TO SPONSOR COMMUNITY MEETING

On Thursday, March 11, 1999, starting at 7:00 pm,
the United States Environmental Protection Agency (USEPA)
will host a very important community update meeting
at the South Mountain Community Center,
at 212 East Alta Vista in South Phoenix.

The USEPA's Project Manager, Nancy Riveland-Har, will make a presentation, then the format is planned to be more like an openhouse. Ms.Riveland-Har's presentation will also cover the results of the indoor air monitoring conducted in the same homes that were tested last spring.


TOSC DEATH
MAPPING UPDATE

by Steve Brittle
TOSC has been attempting to get the records of deaths so it can map out the places in the census tract affected by the QPC fire where deaths have been reported. Starting in May 1996, the community asked that this mortality mapping be done by EPA. Even until the fall of 1996, the EPA kept telling us that the State of Arizona's Department of Health Services (ADHS) would soon provide this information. Then EPA eventually asked TOSC to do this mapping of the deaths. Christopher Blakeman and Alexandra Degher have been the TOSC staff most closely working on this. The correspondence in this matter speaks for itself.

On June, 19, 1998, Blakeman wrote:

I'm writing to let you all know that we just received a letter of "pending approval" from Dr. Bob England of the ADHS Human Subjects Review Committee (HSRC) regarding our proposal for mapping mortality incidence in South Phoenix. Dr. England's letter indicates the HSRC's opinion that the TOSC proposal "appears to reasonably protect the subjects' personal privacy and safety", however he is clear to note that it does not mean that "the requested data must be made available".

In order to progress beyond this stage the HSRC is requesting that TOSC return a signed ADHS Confidentiality Statement that outlines specific details required of TOSC to ensure our commitment to upholding the confidentiality of any individuals, and their families, which may be named in the data TOSC has requested. ADHS is also requiring that TOSC provide written certification that we will make no attempts to identify any individuals named in these data, and that if such identification occurs inadvertently, that we will have no follow-up contact as a result of such discovery.

Lastly, Dr. England states that the Department is exploring the feasibility of providing the information TOSC has requested in the most convenient format possible. The distribution of this information is likely to be slowed by the fact that ADHS does not have all of their death certificate data in an electronic format. Furthermore, decisions regarding the means for dissemination of this information must be made the branch of ADHS which coordinates vital statistics and record keeping. This information was communicated to you as soon as we learned of it. We will follow up with additional updates as soon as we hear back from ADHS as to their progress on this matter. If you have any questions or comments please feel free to contact me at your convenience.

On Friday, August 21, 1998, Alexandra Degher wrote:
Re: STATUS: ADHS & Mortality mapping, TOSC
On Friday, August 14, I sent a fax to Merle Lustig requesting the mortality data. Earlier that day I had spoken with her on the phone and told her what I needed and she said she would get it but it might take a while to get together. I will call her for an update probably late next week and tell you what was said.

On Tuesday, October 13, 1998, Christopher Blakeman wrote:
Hi Nancy (Riveland-EPA),
Thanks for your reply. We still haven't received the data from ADHS, although we're told they're working on it. Obviously, we can do nothing without it, so we're waiting. I'll let you know when we've got enough to make progress. I guess this is a frustrating time for all of us.

On Wednesday, October 14, 1998, Alexandra Degher wrote:
Subject: Mortality data It's official. We got the mortality data from ADHS! I just received it yesterday and as soon as I check it out and make sure there's nothing wrong with it, we're on our way with the map.

On the same date Christopher.Blakeman wrote:
Subject: ADHS Data
Good news!
It appears that we have received the mortality data from ADHS late yesterday. I say appears because it is on a computer "tape" and we're not able to directly read data in that format, so we have yet to view the file.
We're confident that one of the depts. here at OSU will have computer equipment capable of reading this type of data storage, and our plan is to ultimately store these data in a more convenient format for ease of use. Alexandra Degher of our staff is handling this task. If you'd like more detail on the status I recommend that you contact her at (541)737-4026. Hopefully we can move forward more quickly once this data issue is cleared up. I hope this helps to provide some encouragement. As always feel free to contact me as well.

On Tuesday, October 27, 1998, Alexandra Degher wrote:

Subject: S. Phoenix mortality data update

We seem to be running into a bit of a snag with the mortality data. The information was sent on an ancient computer tape and no one on campus seems to have the equipment that can read it anymore. I am going to try a few more options and see where we get. On Monday, November 2, 1998, Alexandra Degher wrote: I sent the tape with the mortality data back to ADHS and will call them in a few days to see if they are having any luck getting the data on a disk or CD.

On Wednesday, November 25, 1998, Alexandra Degher wrote:

I received the mortality data from ADHS last Friday on diskette. I opened it without a problem and now have a list of all the deaths in CT 1160 from 1988 to 1998. Unfortunately, there are no addresses for the first two years but the rest is complete. I will discuss how to present the data in our TOSC meeting this Wednesday.

On Wednesday, November 25, 1998, Christopher Blakeman wrote:
We're confident that we can map these data in a meaningful format. I'm certain we'll reach a conclusion when we meet later today. Given the holiday tomorrow, and some unknowns about manipulating the data, it could take us some time to complete the task, but we're on the right tack, and have all the necessary items. The delays we've all experienced with this issue have been trying, but we're almost there. Please let your colleagues and neighbors know that we hope to indulge your patience for just a little longer. on behalf of all of us here, we really appreciate your patience thus far, and admire the community's resolve. We'll be sure to get you an update ASAP. In the meantime, have a good Thanksgiving, and feel free to write/call if you get curious.



UPDATE ON MEETINGS WITH EPA
AND THE CITY OF PHOENIX' ROLE

by Steve Brittle
On August 28, 1998, I met with Keith Takata, Director of the Superfund Programs of the Region 9 Environmental Protection Agency, and Nancy Riveland-Har, the EPA QPC Project Manager to discuss the status of the QPC investigation by the EPA. The EPA has been trying to get a resolution to the QPC matter, meeting with representatives from Congressman Pastor's office, the State of Arizona, Maricopa County, Quality Printed Circuits, and the City of Phoenix to see if everyone will work and chip in with resources to resolve the problems and issues associated with the QPC fire. These discussions have covered the fact that the community people affected by the QPC fire wants a clinic to get the proper, informed medical help and treatment for their chemical injuries, and the need for a decontamination of the affected homes. (The recent EPA study of the affected area showed elevated levels of certain contaminants associated with the fire.)

I told Takata and Riveland-Har about the community's attempts to communicate with the governor, particularly the demonstration at the state capitol last spring to demand a meeting with Governor Hull. I also explained to Takata and Riveland-Har about the many repeated calls to Governor Hull's office to try to schedule the meeting with Governor Hull that inevitably result in a "promise" that "someone will get back to you on that" and no one ever does.

At the October 1, 1998, Concerned Residents of South Phoenix meeting, Mary Carr, a District 23 Republican candidate for state legislature suggested that we try sending a letter to the mayor of Phoenix and all of the city council members. The letter would briefly state our concerns and our desire to be on the next available city council agenda so that we could tell the mayor and city council about the problems in the area affected by the QPC fire. There was consensus on this idea, so a letter was sent. The letter is as follows:

October 4, 1998
Skip Rimsza, Mayor [and all councilmembers]
City of Phoenix
200 West Washington
Phoenix, AZ 85004

Dear Mayor Rimsza:
The Concerned Residents of South Phoenix, a community-based organization in South Phoenix that formed in the aftermath of the Quality Printed Circuits (QPC) fire of 1992, requests that the next available Phoenix City Council meeting agenda include an agenda item to deal with the unresolved problems created by the toxic fire. There are chemical contaminants in homes in South Phoenix where the smoke from the QPC fire traveled, in the ventilation ductwork in these homes, and in the soils outside these homes, all in statistically significant levels above those in control homes where the smoke from the QPC fire did not travel. There is an increased death rate in the area affected by the smoke and contamination, and numerous complaints of ongoing adverse health reactions by residents of the affected area. These adverse health reactions include rashes, respiratory and circulatory system affects, hair loss, dizziness, nausea, and more. The City of Phoenix contributed to the causes of the actual fire and the contamination in certain ways:

The City of Phoenix moved this circuit board manufacturer into an established residential area. After the facility had a devastating fire in 1989, the City of Phoenix exempted the facility from having to have the fire control sprinkler system required by the fire code. (This sprinkler system would have prevented the fire from getting out of control.) During the 1992 QPC fire, which raged for over twelve hours, there was an incomplete evacuation of the area, resulting in adverse health effects in the community and property contamination and devaluation. The Environmental Protection Agency has been investigating this matter and seeks a resolution also. The Concerned Residents of South Phoenix asks that the City of Phoenix do its part, which it has not done before, to help resolve these issues of contamination and adverse health effects that came from the fire. Thank you for your consideration of this matter. The Concerned Residents of South Phoenix await your response. On October 23, I received the following response from City Councilmembers Cody Williams and Phil Gordon:

October 20, 1998
Dear Mr. Brittle:
We received your October 4 letter concerning your request to include an item that addresses the Quality Printed Circuits fire and associated concerns at the next available City Council meeting. We have referred your letter to city management for review of the concerns it raised and to see whether the City has any jurisdiction in this matter. To date, city management has informed us that State and Federal law requires that any potential environmental or health concerns be addressed by the U. S. Environmental Protection Agency or Maricopa County. Therefore, we are forwarding a copy of your letter and this response to the EPA and County Health Department.
Sincerely,
Phil Gordon
Cody Williams
District 4
Councilman Councilmembers
District 8
cc: Sheryl Sculley
Karen O'Regan,
Keith Takata, EPA
Nancy Riveland Harr, EPA

To this I responded:
October 23, 1998
Cody Williams, Councilmember District 8
City of Phoenix
200 West Washington
Phoenix, AZ 85004
Dear Councilmember Williams:

I have just received a letter dated October 20, 1998, but instead of addressing it to me as a representative of the Concerned Residents of South Phoenix, you have addressed it as Don't Waste Arizona. Please check your records on this matter to avoid recurring errors of this sort. Further, I need to inform you that although your letter asserts that "city management has informed us that State and Federal law requires that any potential environmental or health concerns be addressed by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency or Maricopa County," this is indeed not at all true. Please have the "city management" making this statement refer me to the actual, specific "State and Federal law" that have this requirement, as this is news to every state and federal agency, as well as to the members of the Concerned Residents of South Phoenix, who have been seeking a resolution to the issues created by the toxic fire. The "city management" asserting that "State and Federal law requires that any potential environmental or health concerns be addressed by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency or Maricopa County" evidently forgot that the City of Phoenix itself contributed to the causes of the actual fire and the contamination in certain ways that were entirely within its own venue and sole jurisdiction:

  1. The City of Phoenix moved this circuit board manufacturer into an established residential area in a City of Phoenix land-use decision that federal and county officials have no jurisdiction over.
  2. After the facility had a devastating fire in 1989, the City of Phoenix exempted the facility from having to have the fire control sprinkler system required by the fire code in a City of Phoenix decision that federal and county officials have no jurisdiction over. (This sprinkler system would have prevented the 1992 fire from getting out of control.)
  3. During the 1992 QPC fire, which raged for over twelve hours, there was an incomplete evacuation of the area, resulting in adverse health effects in the community and property contamination and devaluation. Even the Maricopa County Emergency Plan promulgated in response to the federal Emergency Planning and Community Right-To-Know Act (EPCRA) and State of Arizona laws implementing EPCRA put the responsibility and decision for community evacuation or shelter-in-place measures into the hands of the on-scene emergency coordinator, which within the city limits of Phoenix is the Phoenix Fire Department. Therefore, these decisions were made by a part of the governmental body or corporation that is the City of Phoenix.
The Concerned Residents of South Phoenix, a community-based organization in South Phoenix that formed in the aftermath of the Quality Printed Circuits (QPC) fire of 1992, STILL requests that the next available Phoenix City Council meeting agenda include an agenda item to deal with the unresolved problems created by the toxic fire, and the City of Phoenix's inaction regarding this matter. There are chemical contaminants in homes in South Phoenix where the smoke from the QPC fire traveled, in the ventilation ductwork in these homes, and in the soils outside these homes, all in statistically significant levels above those in control homes where the smoke from the QPC fire did not travel. There is an increased death rate in the area affected by the smoke and contamination, and numerous complaints of ongoing adverse health reactions by residents of the affected area. These adverse health reactions include rashes, respiratory and circulatory system affects, hair loss, dizziness, nausea, and more.

During the City of Phoenix budget meetings, I personally raised this issue to you, Cody, and as you remember, the crowd in attendance applauded my suggestion approvingly. The Environmental Protection Agency has been investigating this matter and also seeks a resolution. The Concerned Residents of South Phoenix STILL asks that the City of Phoenix do its part, which it has not done before, to help resolve these issues of contamination and adverse health effects that came from the fire. These issues are the direct result of the city's zoning decisions, fire code exemptions, and inadequate emergency response procedures.

Thank you for your consideration of this matter. The Concerned Residents of South Phoenix await your response.
cc: EPA Maricopa County LEPC
Environmental Explorer
There has never been any response to this request to be on the city council agenda.



THE HYDROGEN FLUORIDE (HF) - QPC FIRE DISASTER CONNECTION REVISITED

by Steve Brittle
There have been allegations for a long time now that the hydrogen fluoride created by the burning of chemicals in the QPC fire were very directly related to the lingering health problems and excess deaths in the area affected by the QPC fire. The fluorides still found in affected homes are considered more evidence supporting these allegations. Now, Earth Island Journal has published an article on the Internet about two other HF disasters that sounds chillingly like what this community suffered.

The Donora Fluoride Fog: A Secret History of America's Worst Air Pollution Disaster

by Chris Bryson, for Earth Island Journal

The anniversary of the worst recorded industrial air pollution accident in US history - which occurred 50 years ago this October in Donora, Pennsylvania - will go virtually unmarked. The Donora incident, which killed 20 and left hundreds seriously injured and dying, was caused by fluoride emissions from the Donora Zinc Works and steel plants owned by the US Steel Corporation.

In the aftermath of the accident, US Steel conspired with US Public Health Service (PHS) officials to cover up the role fluoride played in the tragedy.

These charges comes from Philip Sadtler, a top industrial chemical consultant who conducted his own research at the scene of the disaster. Fifty years later, Earth Island Journal has learned, vital records of the Donora investigation are missing from PHS archives. Fifty years later, US Steel continues to block access to their records of the Donora disaster, including a crucial air chemical analysis taken on the final night of the tragedy.

The "Donora Death Fog"

Horror visited the US Steel company-town of Donora on Halloween night, 1948, when a temperature inversion descended on the town. Fumes from US Steel's smelting plants blanketed the town for four days, and crept murderously into the citizens' homes.

If the smog had lasted another evening "the casualty list would have been 1,000 instead of 20," said local doctor William Rongaus at the time. Later investigations by Rongaus and others indicated that one-third of the town's 14,000 residents were affected by the smog. Hundreds of residents were evacuated or hospitalized. A decade later, Donora's mortality rate remained significantly higher than neighboring areas.

The "Donora Death Fog," as it became known, spawned numerous angry lawsuits and the first calls for national legislation to protect the public from industrial air pollution.

A PHS report released in 1949 reported that "no single substance" was responsible for the Donora deaths and laid major blame for the tragedy on the temperature inversion. But according to industry consultant Philip Sadtler, in an interview taped shortly before his 1996 death, that report was a whitewash.

"It was murder," said Sadtler about Donora. "The directors of US Steel should have gone to jail for killing people." Sadtler charged that the PHS report helped US Steel escape liability for the deaths and spared a host of fluoride-emitting industries the expense of having to control their toxic emissions. (A class-action lawsuit by Donora victims families was later settled out of court.)

In 1948, Sadtler was perhaps the nation's leading expert on fluorine pollution. He had gathered evidence for plaintiffs across the country, including an investigation of the Manhattan Project and the DuPont company's fluoride pollution of New Jersey farmland during World War II. For giant fluoride emitters such as US Steel and the Aluminum Company of America (Alcoa), the cost of a national fluoride clean-up "would certainly have been in the billions," said Sadtler. So concealing the true cause of the Donora accident was vital. "It would have complicated things enormously for them if the public had been alerted to [the dangers of] fluoride."

A 50-Year Cover-up

US industry was well-placed to orchestrate a whitewash of the Donora investigation. The PHS was then a part of the Federal Security Agency. The FSA, in turn, was headed by Oscar R. Ewing, a former top lawyer for Alcoa. Neither his old industry connections, nor the fact that Alcoa had been facing lawsuits around the country for its wartime airborne fluoride pollution was mentioned in Ewing's introduction to the official report on Donora.

Sadtler remembers seeing a PHS van in Donora conducting air testing after the disaster. "I looked in and the chemist said,'Phil, come on in.' Very friendly. He says,'I know you are right, but I am not allowed to say so.' He must have been influenced by US Steel."

Sadtler blamed fluoride for the Donora disaster in an account published in the December 13, 1948 issue of Chemical and Engineering News. He reported fluorine blood levels of dead and hospitalized citizens to be 12 to 25 times above normal, with "primary symptoms of acute fluorine poisoning, dyspnea (distressed breathing similar to asthma)... found in hundreds of cases." He recommended that, "Changes should be made in suspect processes to prevent emission of fluorine-containing fumes."

Industry moved quickly to silence Sadtler, who had been a contributor to Chemical and Engineering News for many years. (C&EN is published by the American Chemical Society.)

"I had a call from the editor that I was not to send them any more [articles]," Sadtler said. The editor told Sadtler that the head of the Alcoa and the US Steel-funded Mellon Institute, Dr. Edward R. Weidline (who also had served as a director of the American Chemical Society) "went to Washington and told [the magazine's editors] that they were not to publish any more of what I wrote," Sadtler said. Looking Back on Donora. Today, 50 years later, researchers examining the Donora disaster face two troubling obstacle: (1) vital records are missing from the PHS archives and (2) US Steel's records are closed to reporters, researchers and investigators. In her 1994 doctoral dissertation ("The Death-Dealing Smog Over Donora, Pennsylvania: Industrial Air Pollution, Public Health Policy and the Politics of Expertise, 1948-1949"), Lynne Page Snyder of the University of Pennsylvania, described the response to the disaster. The following excerpts were published in the Spring 1994 issue of the Environmental History Review. "Pollution from the Donora Zinc Works smelting operation and other sources containing sulfur, carbon monoxide and heavy metal dusts, was trapped by weather conditions in the narrow river valley in and around Donora and neighboring Webster.

"Air pollution problems were recognized from the facility as early as 1918, when the plant owner paid off the legal claims for causing pollution that affected the health of nearby residents.

"In the 1920s, residents and farmers in Webster took legal action again against the company for loss of crops and livestock. Regular sampling of the air was begun in 1926 and stopped in 1935."

From local accounts of the time, Snyder provided this description of the 1948 disaster. "By Friday evening (October 2), local residents were crowding into nearby hospitals and dozens of calls were made to the area's eight physicians. While Fire Department volunteers administered oxygen to those unable to breathe, Board of Health member Dr. William Rongaus led an ambulance by foot through darkened streets to ferry the dead and dying to hospitals or on to a temporary morgue.

"On Rongaus' advice, those with chronic heart or respiratory ailments began to leave town late Friday evening, but before noon on Saturday, 11 people died. "Conditions had not improved by Saturday night, and with roads congested by smog and traffic, evacuation became impossible. The company operating the Donora Zinc Works finally ordered the plant shut down at 6 a.m. Sunday morning. By mid-day Sunday, rain had dispersed the smog.

"Pittsburgh itself escaped the episode primarily because it had just begun to enforce a smoke control ordinance and was cutting back on the use of bituminous coal as a fuel source. The Donora Smog gained national attention when Walter Winchell broadcast news of the disaster on his national radio show.

"The Pennsylvania Department of Health, United Steelworkers, Donora's Borough Council and the US Public Health Service all participated in the investigation of the air pollution incident. The investigation was the first time there was an organized effort to document the health impacts of air pollution in the United States. Commenting on the studies of the incident, the Monessen Daily Independent wrote that damage from air pollution from the Zinc Works was something no scientific investigation is necessary to prove.All you need is a pair of reasonably good eyes.' "Before the Donora smog, neither manufacturers nor public health professionals considered air pollution an urgent issue. At the annual meeting of the Smoke Prevention Association in May 1949, a leading industrial physician and consultant to insurance companies dismissed air pollution as a threat, except on rare occasions [when] Mother Nature has played us false.''

"The studies of the Donora Smog did not fix blame and could not document levels of pollution beyond workplace limits set at the time. The Public Health Service recommended a warning system tied to weather forecasts and an air sampling system be installed to avoid future incidents. The lessons learned at Donora resulted in the passage of the 1955 Clean Air Act and began modern air pollution control efforts in the Commonwealth. Snyder learned that US Steel had conducted an air analysis on the final night of the smog. But despite her numerous requests for the Donora records, Snyder recalls, US Steel finally informed her that they didn't "have anything for me."

Equally frustrating to Snyder was the missing PHS records. At the time, Donora was the largest environmental investigation the government agency ever had mounted. "The kinds of papers I would expect to find are the correspondence files, the original and carbon copies of responses sent out, typed-up site visits, typed-up telephone conversations, maps, rough drafts of reports, photos," Snyder explained. But all these records have vanished.

"You have to suspect the worst. Not only of US Steel, but of the Public Health Service," Snyder says. Now herself a PHS historian, she concludes of the Donora records, "Someone may have decided they were too hot to handle and got rid of them. I'm open to that prospect." [Chris Bryson is a New York based investigative reporter and co-author with Joel Griffiths of "Fluoride and the A-Bomb" (Winter 97-98 Earth Island Journal). This report was compiled with research assistance by Ellie Rudolph.

Fluoride and the Mohawks

Cows crawled around the pasture on their bellies, inching along like giant snails. So crippled by bone disease they could not stand up, this was the only way they could graze. Some died kneeling, after giving birth to stunted calves. Others kept on crawling until, no longer able to chew because their teeth had crumbled down to the nerves, they began to starve. These were the cattle of the Mohawk Indians on the New York-Canadian St. Regis Reservation during the period 1960-75, when fluoride pollution from neighboring aluminum plants devastated the herd and the Mohawks' way of life.

Crops and trees withered, birds and bees fled from this remnant of land the Mohawk still call Akwesasne, "the land where the partridge drums." Today, nets cast into the St. Lawrence River by Mohawk fishers bring up ulcerated fish with spinal deformities. Mohawk children, too, have shown signs of damage to bones and teeth.

In 1980, the Mohawks filed a $150 million lawsuit for damage to themselves and their property against the companies responsible for the pollution: the Reynolds Metals Co. and the Aluminum Co. of America. But five years of legal costs bankrupted the tribe and they settled for $650,000 in damages to their cows. The court left

the door open for a future Mohawk suit for damage to their own health. After all, commented human rights lawyer Robert Pritchard, "What judge wants to go down in history as being the judge who approved the annihilation of the Indians by fluoride emissions?"
- Joel Griffiths



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