Marine spreads word of bad water

http://www.jsonline.com/news/waukesha/41407067.html


For 30 years, Camp Lejeune exposed troops to chemicals

By <mailto:[email protected]>Meg Jones of the Journal Sentinel

Posted: Mar. 17, 2009

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William J. Lizdas
John Hartung unfurls a Marine Corps flag at his Waukesha home 
Tuesday. A Marine stationed at Camp Lejeune, N.C., in the 1970s, 
Hartung attributes a number of ailments to exposure to toxic 
chemicals in the drinking water there.
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William J. Lizdas
John Hartung unfurls a Marine Corps flag at his Waukesha home 
Tuesday. A Marine stationed at Camp Lejeune, N.C., in the 1970s, 
Hartung attributes a number of ailments to exposure to toxic 
chemicals in the drinking water there.
Close
Bad water
<http://media.journalinteractive.com/images/LEJEUNE18G.jpg>
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Camp residents sought

People who think they might have been exposed to toxic drinking water 
at Camp Lejeune, the Marine base in North Carolina, between 1957 and 
1987 should contact the Marines. The military is compiling a registry 
of people who worked, lived or visited the base during that time 
period and drank the water. For more information or to register, call 
or go to: [email protected]; (877) 261-9782; or 
<https://clnr.hqi.usmc.mil/clwater/>https://clnr.hqi.usmc.mil/clwater/.

Other Web sites dedicated to Camp Lejeune water are: 
<http://lifeaftercamplejeune.com>lifeaftercamplejeune.com and 
<http://www.tftptf.com>www.tftptf.com.

Waukesha - John Hartung thought something was wrong with the water 
while he was stationed at Camp Lejeune.

The Milwaukee native joined the Marines in 1977 and spent six months 
at the Marine Corps base in North Carolina. He drank from the 
bubblers and the water tanks brought out to troops training in the 
field, brushed his teeth, ate in the chow halls and swam in the pool.

Unfortunately for Hartung, his suspicions would not be confirmed for decades.

"I said, 'This water tastes funny.' They said, 'That's how it tastes 
down here,' " said Hartung, who got cysts on his neck and was sent to 
the infirmary. "I saw others with boils and rashes, and they didn't know why."

Something was very wrong with the drinking water at Camp Lejeune. 
Before wells were closed at the base in 1984 and 1985, tests showed 
drinking water was contaminated by toxic chemicals, including very 
high concentrations - more than 40 times the current EPA limit - of 
industrial solvents trichloroethylene and perchloroethylene.

Hartung didn't find out until a few years ago about the high 
incidence of cancers in people who worked and lived at Camp Lejeune, 
and of birth defects and illnesses of children born at the base. Now 
he's trying to get the word out to Marines living in Wisconsin who 
spent time at Camp Lejeune from 1957 to 1987, the years the 
government has identified as the period when toxic chemicals tainted 
the drinking water.

Hartung, who now lives in Waukesha, has started a Web site - 
<http://lifeaftercamplejeune.com>lifeaftercamplejeune.com - to alert 
others about the problem.

"I want to see people get their benefits and to say, 'I was poisoned, 
but at least they took care of me and my family,' " said Hartung, 49, 
who has chronic fatigue as well as other ailments and can no longer work.

Under a law signed last year by President George W. Bush, the Marines 
are required to notify those who may have been exposed to 
contaminated water at Camp Lejeune. The military says an off-base dry 
cleaning business, now closed, was to blame, as well as chemicals 
leaking from underground storage tanks and unsafe disposal practices 
at the base.


Tracking toxic exposure

The Marines encourage anyone who served at Lejeune or worked there 
during that time to participate in a registry. Studies are under way 
by the Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease Registry to determine 
if there's a link between the health problems of those who drank the 
tainted water.

Women who were in their first trimester of pregnancy when exposed 
seem to have been affected more than others, said Jeff Dimond, health 
communications specialist with the agency.

Tracking as many people as possible "is a task the complexity of 
which gets more and more difficult every day. Understand that 
problems with the dry cleaner dumping the (trichloroethylene and 
perchloroethylene) into the ground and contaminating the groundwater 
happened at the height of the Vietnam War," Dimond said. "The good 
thing, if there is such a thing, is that the population was transient 
at the time, so they weren't exposed as much. But the bad thing was 
they were exposed."

Allen Menard got a letter from the military last year. It was the 
first he had heard of water problems at the base, where he spent 
three years in the early 1980s.

The Green Bay man was diagnosed in 2001 with mycosis fungoides, a 
rare skin cancer. And his wife suffered a miscarriage in 1984, losing 
their daughter's twin, while Menard was stationed at Lejeune and the 
couple lived near the base.

"I started looking at what the heck we were exposed to. I looked at 
the chemicals and I thought, 'Oh my God, that's where I got my skin 
cancer from.' It's very rare for someone my age," said Menard, 45.

Joe Alexander spent most of 1978 at Lejeune serving with the 6th 
Marines. He didn't suffer any health problems until 2000, when a cyst 
was discovered on his pancreas. He was hospitalized for a year, 
followed by several months in a nursing home to relearn how to walk, 
swallow and talk.

Alexander, 50, learned last year about the water he drank at Lejeune.

"I worked for Wisconsin Electric for almost 17 years, and I'm 
familiar with trichloroethylene and I know how hazardous it can be," 
said Alexander, of Milwaukee. "It's used to strip paint off metal. I 
can imagine what it will do to your insides."

It's unknown just how many people drank the tainted water, but a 
Marines spokeswoman said the military estimates it could be as many 
as half a million. When finally finished, Dimond said, the registry 
will be the largest in the history of the U.S. government.

The Marines hope to reach as many people as possible through a Web 
site and call center, direct mailings, contacting local and national 
media and notifying veterans groups.

"More probably could have been done in the past. Fortunately, today 
we have a lot more resources to get the word out and notify people," 
said Marine Capt. Amy Malugani.

Those who think they were affected by the tainted water can file a 
claim by going to <http://www.marines.mil>www.marines.mil and 
clicking on "Camp Lejeune Water Study" under links.

For Menard, Alexander and Hartung, efforts by the Marines to reach 
out to them are too late.

"The Marine Corps motto is semper fi. That means always faithful," 
said Menard. "They're not being faithful. They knew this back in the 
'80s. They finally got ahold of us in 2008? That's a joke."


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