| |
A
Fuel of Cold War Defenses Now Ignites Health Controversy
By Peter Waldman
Staff Reporter
RANCHO
CORDOVA, Calif. -- For years, Greg and Doris Voetsch felt they were living
a suburban dream here on the banks of the American River.
Just
15 miles from downtown Sacramento, they raised four kids on homegrown
cherries, pears, cucumbers and string beans, along with salmon and rainbow
trout caught in the Sierra-fed waters flowing just beyond their back door.
Mr. Voetsch, a landscaper, used tobacco juice, instead of pesticides,
to keep the aphids at bay. Snow-melt was their air-conditioning, cooling
the hot summer breezes. The cost of living was "almost nothing,"
Mr. Voetsch says.
| |
But
trouble seeped into their paradise. In 1983, 13 years after the family
moved here, surgeons removed two tumors, each of a different type
of cancer, from Mr. Voetsch's thyroid gland. Shortly after, his two
older daughters, both in their 20s at the time, had surgery to treat
thyroid-related problems. |
|
|
Last
year, his 67-year-old wife, who has had thyroid trouble for years, had
a benign brain tumor removed. The couple's daughter-in-law, who grew up
nearby, also has thyroid problems. Her son -- the Voetsches' grandson
-- is autistic.
Five
years ago, the Voetsches learned that the home they bought in 1970 lies
on the edge of a so-called plume of underground water polluted with waste
from a nearby missile factory. Among the chemicals found in local drinking
wells is perchlorate, the main ingredient of solid rocket fuel and a known
toxin. The Voetsches believe it was in their water and, they suspect,
their garden soil. "We lived off the land and never thought twice
about it," Mr. Voetsch says.
In
the human body, perchlorate affects production of thyroid hormones --
a phenomenon that the Environmental Protection Agency says can cause thyroid
ailments such as Graves' disease and cancer in adults. Fetuses and newborns,
the EPA says, are at even greater risk, susceptible to neurological and
other developmental damage.
For
decades, millions of Americans have been unknowingly exposed to perchlorate
through their local water supplies. No one denies that the chemical is
toxic. But the level at which it becomes dangerous in drinking water is
the subject of a fierce debate that pits the EPA against the Pentagon
and its defense-industry allies. As a result, the U.S. is still years
away from establishing a nationally enforced standard, and until it does
so, a poisonous chemical lingers in the environment in amounts that could
still be causing the slow spread of serious disease on a large scale.
To
date, the EPA has identified 75 perchlorate releases in 22 states, including
Arizona, Texas, Nebraska, Iowa, New York, Maryland and Massachusetts,
as well as California. The Colorado River, the main water source for about
15 million homes across the Southwest, contains perchlorate at roughly
seven parts per billion -- seven times the level that the EPA's National
Center for Environmental Assessment says is safe.
Defense-industry
dumping is suspected in nearly all these cases, though perchlorate has
also been linked to fireworks and other explosives, automobile airbags
and Chilean fertilizers, some of which may have been used near the Voetsches'
home. The EPA says it will take hundreds of years and cost several billion
dollars to clean up the known plumes.
A
NEW POISON
| |
Perchlorate
is one of a newly recognized group of toxins called endocrine disrupters
chemicals.
Sidebar
in the WSJ |
|
|
The
EPA wants suspected water supplies tested nationwide for perchlorate,
but the Pentagon, which argues perchlorate isn't dangerous in small doses,
is resisting in many cases. Instead, the Pentagon has asked Congress for
an exemption from environmental laws covering the cleanup of explosive
residues at operational sites.
It's
impossible to determine definitively whether perchlorate caused the Voetsches'
ailments and similar maladies reported by hundreds of other people in
affected areas. California's Department of Health Services is studying
local health statistics for correlations between perchlorate levels in
local drinking water and rates of thyroid and other disorders associated
with the chemical. Eight states have passed advisory limits on perchlorate,
ranging from one part per billion in Maryland, Massachusetts and New Mexico,
to two ppb in California and 18 ppb in Nevada.
The
EPA worries even the smallest traces of perchlorate are dangerous, particularly
to infants at risk of neurological damage because thyroid-hormone production
is crucial to normal brain development. In January, the agency's national
assessment center proposed a draft "reference dose" for perchlorate
in drinking water of one part per billion. That recommendation, when finalized
after a peer review process, goes to the EPA's Office of Water, which
ultimately proposes a national standard after weighing costs and benefits.
"After
everything I've seen on perchlorate, I'm a lot more concerned about even
subtle deficiencies of thyroid hormone on brain development than I was
before," says biologist Thomas Zoeller, an endocrine expert at the
University of Massachusetts at Amherst and one of the 17 peer reviewers
of the EPA's draft reference-dose report.
Billions
in Cleanup Costs
The
Pentagon and several of its major contractors, all facing billions of
dollars in possible cleanup and liability costs, say perchlorate is perfectly
safe in trace amounts. They argue the chemical, an ordinary salt ion similar
to nitrate, should be allowed in drinking water in concentrations up to
200 ppb. "The scientific basis for believing there's harm has not
been established," says Maureen Koetz, assistant undersecretary of
defense for the environment.
That
perchlorate is an issue at all is a legacy of the Cold War, when the priorities
of containing communism trumped domestic considerations for the environment
and public safety. The military started using perchlorate in solid rocket
fuel and other propellants in the 1940s. At the time, the chemical wasn't
considered very toxic. Millions of tons of it were simply flushed onto
the ground, left to flow unimpeded into streams and underground aquifers.
The
polluting continued for years after evidence began to mount of the dangers
of perchlorate. A three-month investigation by The Wall Street Journal
has found that even after California regulators tried to control disposal
of the chemical in the 1950s, companies dumped it with impunity. It wasn't
until the 1970s, after passage of federal clean-water laws, that the defense
industry began trying to contain perchlorate waste for treatment. But
by then, the chemical had already begun its long, slow seep into water
supplies nationwide.
As
late as 1976, in fact, Aerojet-General Corp., operator of the missile
plant near the Voetsches' home, built a special, 3,500-foot pipeline to
dump toxic waste into unlined earthen pits -- directly disobeying a local
water-board order issued just months earlier, state documents show. At
first, Aerojet told investigators the pipe was just a stopgap measure
to bypass a clogged holding pond.
"A
3,500-foot pipeline may not quite be temporary," acknowledges William
Phillips, longtime general counsel of Aerojet's parent, GenCorp Inc.,
of Sacramento. But Mr. Phillips and other defense-industry officials say
that the contractors' disposal practices were state-of-the-art at the
time, particularly for a chemical they didn't -- and still don't -- consider
very harmful. Moreover, the defense suppliers say they followed all orders
and guidelines issued by the Pentagon, which owned and managed most of
the perchlorate supply and put its own inspectors inside factories to
ensure proper handling.
The
Pentagon, for its part, says its job is national security, not environmental
safety. "We are no different from any other set of individuals who
operate in states and localities and follow the laws," says Ms. Koetz,
the assistant undersecretary of defense. "We do not consider it our
job to get out in front of the health and environmental regulatory agencies
in terms of discovering" pollution risks.
"Should
someone have connected the dots in 1962, 1972 or 1982? Absolutely,"
says Kevin Mayer, an EPA Superfund official in San Francisco and the agency's
point man on perchlorate. "But it didn't happen. There isn't any
one person or one agency that definitively dropped the ball. Everyone
did nothing."
That's
what upsets people living in perchlorate-polluted areas. Though tests
revealed high levels of perchlorate in the Voetsches' neighborhood water
as far back as 1963 -- seven years before they moved in -- state water
regulators declared local wells safe. The Voetsches joined a class-action
lawsuit in 1998, filed in Sacramento state court, accusing Aerojet, Boeing
Co. and two local water utilities of negligence and fraud. The defendants
contest the allegations, and the case is pending.
"I
think they knew it was dangerous and just kept doing it," says Mr.
Voetsch, now 68 years old. "There was nobody there to stop them,
and nobody was the wiser."
Perchlorate
fueled the takeoff of American rocketry. During World War II, the Navy
tapped Theodore von Karman, a Hungarian-born aeronautics professor at
California Institute of Technology, to develop engines powerful enough
to lift planes off the short flight decks of aircraft carriers. He and
some other rocket hobbyists from CalTech founded Aerojet in Pasadena,
Calif. Their breakthrough: so-called jet-assisted takeoff rockets, fueled
by solid perchlorate compounds that were highly charged but stable enough
to be handled safely aboard ships.
Perchlorate,
dubbed "powdered oxygen," is combusted inside a rocket engine
with aluminum powder and a rubber-like polymer to stoke an intense burn.
To propel a rocket, the solid fuel must be ground and molded into a particular
shape. Over time, the fuel breaks down, requiring continual replacements.
That's why, for more than 40 years, tons of perchlorate were routinely
flushed from rockets and missiles onto the ground and into water supplies.
Aerojet
began manufacturing at a plant in the San Gabriel Valley town of Azusa,
Calif., about 40 miles east of downtown Los Angeles. Nearly from the start,
it had discharge problems. In 1949, the Los Angeles County engineer warned
the company in a letter that dumping its hazardous waste into "cesspools"
and "seepage beds" posed an "extreme hazard" to the
underground water supply. "I cannot too strongly emphasize the necessity
of obtaining a sewer connection in the shortest possible time," pleaded
the county engineer, who noted Aerojet was already in violation of local
discharge restrictions. Aerojet was never punished, and its Azusa plant
was connected to an industrial sewer line in 1952.
Move
Out of the City
Hemmed
in by the burgeoning Los Angeles suburbs, Aerojet moved most of its rocket
operations north to some abandoned gold-dredging fields in Rancho Cordova,
about 15 miles east of Sacramento. In 1951, shortly after buying the site,
an Aerojet employee calculated that about 1,000 gallons of liquid waste,
plus 300 pounds of ammonium perchlorate, would flow into the underground
aquifer every day. Most of the waste would have "a deleterious effect
on both plant life and the underground water supply," he warned in
an internal memo. But ammonium perchlorate might "be beneficial in
a sewage stream and possibly be slightly beneficial on plant life,"
he added.
As
in the San Gabriel Valley, Aerojet designed a system in Rancho Cordova
to channel waste into unlined leaching ponds, apparently assuming whatever
pollutants did reach groundwater would be diluted to safe levels. But
when those designs were circulated for comment to California's water,
health, and fish-and-game departments in Sacramento, the regulators unanimously
panned the proposed "percolation beds" as posing grave pollution
risks to streams and underground aquifers, state documents show.
Officials
sought specific toxicity advice on perchlorate from a botany professor
at the University of California at Davis. He replied that perchlorate
was "known to be toxic to plant life" and was unlikely to break
down "in course of percolation through gravel." For treatment,
he recommended evaporation in "sealed beds" and "absorption
and contact with organic matter."
Today,
this so-called biological method is a common way of extracting perchlorate
from water. "It's astonishing how right he was," says Mr. Mayer
of the EPA.
On
May 15, 1952, California's Central Valley Regional Water Pollution Control
Board, over Aerojet's objections, issued Resolution No. 127, barring "entry"
of perchlorate and eight other chemicals into local groundwater and the
nearby American River. That same year, medical researchers published their
findings that perchlorate blocks the uptake of essential iodide into the
thyroid gland, thus inhibiting thyroid-hormone production.
Neither
the medical findings nor the water board's order had much effect. By 1955,
regulators were finding perchlorate in local groundwater. Though hampered
by primitive test methods and Navy secrecy, a state hydraulic engineer
reported that untreated discharges of some 310 pounds a day of perchlorate
were being dumped into "abandoned gold dredger pits." The good
news, he reported, was that the waste was seeping into the ground more
slowly than expected. The bad news, reported a few months later, was that
a nondrinking well on Aerojet's property was contaminated with 1,000 ppb
of perchlorate, indicating "waste water from the sump is commingling
with underlying groundwater."
Mr.
Phillips, the GenCorp general counsel, says Aerojet's disposal practices
met all safety and regulatory requirements of the day. "You were
supposed to put [perchlorate] in these pits," he says. "We thought
the pits were impermeable."
In
1957, a national task group on underground waste reported perchlorate
contamination had spread over "several square miles" east of
Sacramento. The group's report, published in the American Water Works
Association Journal, described perchlorate as a "weedicide"
toxic to plants at 1,000 to 2,000 ppb. It said the perchlorate plume near
Sacramento ranged from 3.5 million to five million ppb. Also that year,
some Harvard University researchers, using studies on guinea pigs, found
that perchlorate, after passing through the placenta from the mother,
depleted thyroid-hormone production in fetuses.
In
1958, the Water Pollution Control Board notified Aerojet that its discharges
were "consistently in violation of the board's requirements."
At a special briefing for state agencies in 1960, board engineers described
Aerojet's operations as a mess, with "four or five major discharges"
into a creek feeding the American River and many smaller releases onto
the ground. Aerojet, citing security, wouldn't tell regulators all the
chemicals it was using, according to regulators' documents from the briefing.
"We
pointed out that just because we do not know what is going on in this
area, an area of extremely permeable sediments, the board should not give
industry a blank check to discharge anything [it] desired to the groundwater
basin," a state engineer wrote after the briefing.
The
upshot was Resolution 62-21, the board's 1962 order to Aerojet not to
discharge anything "deleterious to human, animal, plant, or aquatic
life" into local waters. The resolution set maximum discharge levels
for 21 chemicals -- 1,000 ppb for perchlorate -- and ordered Aerojet,
for the first time, to "disinfect" all waste before it left
Aerojet's property.
But
this was the year of the Cuban missile crisis, and Aerojet had other concerns.
A unit of General Tire at the time, Aerojet was playing a big part in
helping the U.S. close the missile gap with the Soviet Union. At the height
of the rocket race in the early 1960s, Aerojet's Sacramento County facility
employed 22,000 workers in three shifts, seven days a week. In 1962, they
helped build and deploy the first solid-fuel intercontinental ballistic
missile, the Minuteman I. Because it didn't require hours to load, as
liquid-fuel rockets do, the Minuteman is believed to have helped steel
President Kennedy's nerve during the Cuban missile crisis.
Aerojet's
operations were overseen by 300 to 400 full-time Pentagon inspectors who
approved every facet of design, production and waste disposal, says Aerojet's
Mr. Phillips. "Had we known we could have done something to keep
this [perchlorate contamination] from happening, they would have given
it to us," he says. "Everybody involved thought they were doing
the right thing."
Burning
the Stuff
In
1961, Aerojet had begun burning its excess perchlorate, along with drums
of the chlorinated solvent trichloroethylene, or TCE, which is now considered
carcinogenic. Still, large quantities of the chemicals continued to go
into the ground, according to accounts by former Aerojet employees given
to California investigators in a 1979 criminal probe. (That state investigation
was dropped in the mid-1980s, when Aerojet agreed to sign a consent decree
to clean up its waste.)
In
write-ups of those witness accounts obtained by the Journal, several employees
described a chemical "sludge" left over after burning that Aerojet
would let seep into the ground or would bury in separate pits. Former
employees, including one identified as the foreman of Aerojet's chemical-waste-disposal
unit from 1963 to 1968, said they dumped hazardous chemicals into a septic
lagoon meant for human waste. Witnesses also said many workers continued
dumping perchlorate and TCE into "rock piles" and open ponds.
(TCE was heavily used to clean missile parts laden with solid rocket fuel.)
Meanwhile,
tests of the underground aquifer at the Aerojet site showed steadily rising
concentrations of perchlorate -- from 18,000 ppb in the mid-1950s to 91,000
ppb in 1979. In the decade after 1955 alone, Aerojet processed roughly
19 million pounds of ammonium perchlorate at "grind station"
Line 03, company documents say. The "daily washdown" of the
area flowed into unlined ponds.
The
water board issued more discharge orders, with little effect. In February
1976, for example, the board granted permission to Aerojet's Cordova Chemical
unit to dig an injection well for inserting waste deep underground. The
board's order explicitly barred "pollution" and discharging
waste to any "surface drainage courses." Yet just three months
after that order came out, Cordova built the 3,500-foot pipeline to channel
waste straight into an unlined dredger pit.
"That's
the worst thing I know about on this whole place," says Aerojet's
Mr. Phillips. The general counsel says that Aerojet never hid its perchlorate
contamination. He points out that the company notified the water board
in the mid-1970s that it detected perchlorate in its groundwater at 50
times the board's allowable limit. No one worried about it then, Mr. Phillips
says, because, among other reasons, Aerojet's wells weren't for drinking.
Perchlorate
became a drinking-water concern in 1985, when the EPA detected it in wells
serving about 42,000 households near Aerojet's original facility in the
San Gabriel Valley, near Los Angeles. The agency found concentrations
ranging from 110 ppb to 2,600 ppb. But five of the six so-called field
blanks -- samples of purified water that were also tested to assure data
quality -- inexplicably tested positive for perchlorate. Flummoxed, EPA
reviewers threw out most of the test results as unreliable. (Today, some
EPA officials believe those field blanks probably came from Colorado River
water or other tainted sources.)
EPA
scientists asked the federal Centers for Disease Control in Atlanta for
guidance on possible health risks from perchlorate. The response, written
by the Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease Registry on Jan. 26, 1986,
underscored the same toxicity concerns the Pentagon and EPA are still
arguing about 17 years later. The agency "strongly recommended"
retesting the San Gabriel wells.
"Although
the limited data available does not suggest that several [thousand ppb]
of perchlorates would represent an acute threat to public health,"
the toxic-substance agency letter concluded, "the effects of continued
low-level perchlorate ingestion need to be described as soon as possible."
Superfund
Sites
Those
effects remained undescribed for more than a decade afterward. In 1992,
the EPA, citing the 1952 study on perchlorate's effects on thyroid-hormone
production, issued its first health assessment of the chemical, proposing
an initial reference dose for perchlorate of four ppb in drinking water.
By then, Aerojet's facilities in Northern and Southern California had
both been named EPA Superfund sites because of contamination by TCE and
other known carcinogens. The Sacramento facility, in fact, was treating
groundwater for other toxic agents and reinjecting it into the aquifer
with 8,000 ppb of perchlorate still in it -- with regulators' full assent.
"We
did not have any data which indicated that perchlorate had been identified
as a contaminant of concern," testified Thomas Pinkos, who oversaw
Aerojet's cleanup for the regional water board from 1979 through 1988,
in a recent deposition.
After
the EPA's 1992 health warning, state officials watched warily as Aerojet's
perchlorate plume spread toward drinking wells in Rancho Cordova. At the
time, the most sensitive test equipment could detect perchlorate at levels
only above 400 ppb. The defense industry, meanwhile, was fighting the
EPA's health assessment, arguing in a 1995 report to the EPA that the
reference dose should be 42,000 ppb in drinking water. Aerojet itself
grew less cooperative with state officials, regulators say. "Plumes
tended to stop at their fences," one quips.
The
logjam broke in early 1997, when a California state lab, prodded by residents
in Rancho Cordova, developed a new method for measuring perchlorate down
to four ppb. With the lower detection limit, the substance quickly turned
up in Rancho Cordova's wells at levels reaching 300 ppb.
The
Voetsches learned in the media about the thyroid-disrupting contaminant
shuttering nearby wells. Mr. Voetsch says he attended several community
meetings, following up with various public and private officials to pursue
his family's case. But the only person who returned his calls, he says,
was a local geographer and Navy vet named Larry Ladd, who has made perchlorate
pollution his passion. The Voetsches then joined the class-action lawsuit,
led by the law firm that employs Erin Brockovich, the toxic-tort paralegal
played by Julia Roberts in the film of the same name. The suit, among
several filed over perchlorate contamination, is mired in the courts,
and Mr. Voetsch says he hasn't heard from the lawyers in years.
"I'm
thoroughly convinced no one wants to know what's going on here,"
Mr. Voetsch says.
The
firm's chief attorney, Edward Masry, says the perchlorate clients haven't
been contacted in several years because a judge put a stay on their case,
pending legal motions, but should be hearing from the firm shortly.
With
more-sensitive tests, perchlorate quickly turned up in several water supplies
in Southern California. In 1997, the San Gabriel Valley plume -- 11 years
after its initial discovery -- had spread to a five-square-mile area beneath
about 250,000 residents, according to the San Gabriel Basin Water Master.
In
nearby San Bernardino County, perchlorate plumes prompted closure of dozens
of wells, threatening some communities with water shortages. When local
Defense Department officials got wind of a plume in Redlands, Calif.,
they circulated an internal "bellringer" report telling colleagues
to keep the information secret. The June 1997 report noted 250,000 residents
could be "adversely affected," with "pregnant women and
children" among the most at risk. Yet, citing the local outrage at
perchlorate's discovery in wells near Sacramento several months earlier,
the report warned of "far reaching ramifications when the public
learns of the situation." Its conclusion: "Future procurement
programs could be adversely affected due to increased environmental costs."
Plumes
Spread
In
1997, the Pentagon and several defense contractors, under EPA pressure,
launched the first toxicological studies to determine perchlorate's effects
at low exposure levels -- the same studies that ultimately led to the
EPA's reference dose this year. Meanwhile, perchlorate plumes popped up
at defense sites all across the country -- Texas and Utah in 1998, then
Kansas, Missouri, Nebraska, Iowa, West Virginia and Maryland the next
year.
When
the Metropolitan Water District of Southern California found the chemical
in taps in Los Angeles, scientists traced the plume 400 miles up the Colorado
River to Lake Mead, above Hoover Dam. From there, they tracked the plume
10 miles westward, up a desert riverbed called the Las Vegas Wash, to
Kerr-McGee Corp.'s giant ammonium perchlorate plant in Henderson, Nev.
The
Navy built the plant in the 1940s to make perchlorate compounds for the
war. Inherited by Kerr-McGee in a 1967 merger, the facility spilled thousands
of pounds of perchlorate waste every day through the mid-1970s into unlined
evaporation ponds. The chemical leached into shallow groundwater over
the years, seeping into the Las Vegas Wash, the main drain into Lake Mead
for wastewater coming from Las Vegas.
Perchlorate
was detected in Kerr-McGee's groundwater back in the mid-1980s, and it
was ignored. The company was then treating the aquifer for the metal chromium-6,
and reinjecting high levels of perchlorate-tainted water back underground,
say officials of Nevada's Division of Environmental Protection. "The
guidance on perchlorate was lacking," says Patrick Corbett, director
of environmental affairs for Kerr-McGee, based in Oklahoma City.
Kerr-McGee
is spending roughly $70 million to extract perchlorate, too, but is catching
only about half the 900 pounds a day seeping into the Las Vegas Wash,
EPA officials say. The company, which has filed a lawsuit seeking Pentagon
reimbursement for the cleanup costs, says it's adding new systems to capture
much more of the perchlorate. Still, so much perchlorate has already entered
Lake Mead that the levels below Hoover Dam -- all the way out to Los Angeles
-- have hardly budged in five years, ranging from five to 10 ppb.
'Decades
of Dilution'
"It
will probably take decades for the dilution effect to flush it all out,"
says Douglas Zimmerman, an environmental regulator in Nevada.
In
addition to slaking thirsts across the Southwest, the Colorado River water
irrigates 95% of America's winter lettuce crop, grown in Yuma, Ariz.,
and California's Imperial Valley. The EPA says it still doesn't know if
lettuce and other vegetables accumulate perchlorate from irrigation water,
but preliminary indications aren't good. Tests on several vegetable samples
from a perchlorate-contaminated farm in Redlands found the plants concentrated
perchlorate from local irrigation water by an average factor of 65, according
to calculations by Renee Sharp of the Environmental Working Group in Oakland,
Calif., one of the few nonprofit groups focused on perchlorate contamination.
That means the perchlorate dose in the vegetables was 65 times the amount
in the water.
"If
people are eating it, on top of drinking it, the EPA will have to lower
its proposed drinking-water standard substantially," Ms. Sharp says.
For
now, that standard is only a recommendation. Enactment of a national standard
will have to wait until either the EPA or the defense establishment prevails.
Meanwhile, Aerojet and Lockheed Martin Corp. are already spending hundreds
of millions of dollars to extract perchlorate from aquifers they polluted
in California, with much of it being reimbursed by the Pentagon.
Sandra
Lester thinks it's too little, too late to help her. She grew up on Rancho
Cordova's perchlorate plume, near the Voetsch family, and fell sick with
Graves' disease at age 15. Now 20, she wants to become a large-animal
veterinarian, but is still enfeebled by skin problems, muscle pains and
other complications of her disease. She blames perchlorate and had joined
another class-action suit, but she heard this month that the law firm
is dropping her case.
"It
doesn't seem like the government cares very much about this problem,"
she says. "It's not like perchlorate is killing people. It's slow."
|