I just thought
it appropriate to post this report of a chemical spillage in West Virginia,
also the home of the Dow Chemical plant in Institute, sister to Bhopal. Let’s
watch and see what the company and the Government do.
By Kiley Kroh
“Residents of
nine counties in West Virginia have been told not to use or drink their water
after a chemical used by the coal industry spilled into the Elk River on
Thursday. Gov. Earl Ray Tomblin declared
a state of emergency as more than 100,000 customers, or 300,000 people, are
without safe drinking water.
“Don’t make
baby formula,” said West Virginia American Water Company president Jeff
McIntyre. “Don’t brush your teeth. Don’t shower. Toilet flushing only.”
The chemical,
4-Methylcyclohexane Methanol (MCHM), is used to wash coal of impurities and
spilled from a tank at Freedom Industries into the river. While the amount of
MCHM that spilled wasn’t immediately known, West Virginia American Water has
been conducting water quality testing every hour. According to Laura Jordan,
a spokesperson with the water company, they believe the chemical is leaking at
ground level and “there is a possibility this leak has been going on for
sometime before it was discovered Thursday,” WSAZ reported.
Local
officials described
MCHM as smelling like licorice and looking like “cooking oil floating on top of
the water.” The West Virginia Department of Health and Human Resources said
symptoms of MCHM exposure include “severe burning in throat, severe eye
irritation, non-stop vomiting, trouble breathing or severe skin irritation such
as skin blistering.”
Though the
spill occurred Thursday morning, West Virginia American Water didn’t provide
its customers with a warning until evening and, as Al Jazeera reported,
several were angered by the lack of information, particularly regarding what
should be done if they had already used or ingested the water.
Early Friday,
Tomblin announced that the White House approved a federal emergency declaration
to help with the urgent water situation. Soon after the governor’s declaration
on Thursday, residents flooded local stores for bottled water and disposable
dishes. “It was chaos, that’s what it was,” cashier Danny Cardwell told
CBS News.
West Virginia
American Water has emphasized that once contaminated by MCHM, the water cannot
be treated. As a result,
schools in at least five of the counties will be closed Friday and hospitals,
restaurants, nursing homes and other establishments in the area are also banned
from using their water as the entire system is flushed out and testing
continues. As of early Friday, Freedom Industries, “a
full service producer of specialty chemicals for the mining, steel, and cement
industries,” had yet to comment on the spill."
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