----- forwarded message -----
Date: Wed, 08 Jan 2003 15:56:39 -0800
From: radtimes <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Rocket fuel pollution strains water supplies

Rocket fuel pollution strains water supplies,
prompts health fears

Andrew Bridges, AP Science Writer
Sunday, January 5, 2003
Associated Press

URL:
http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?file=/news/archive/2003/01/05/national1314EST0485.DTL

A toxic chemical used to fuel Cold War-era missiles and the rockets that
put man on the moon has left a legacy of contamination across the
Southwest, where it pinches the region's already tight supply of drinking
water.

The chemical, called perchlorate, pollutes much of the lower Colorado
River -- the main water source for 20 million people across the Southwest
-- and has forced the shutdown of hundreds of wells in California.

State and federal officials are still debating how much risk perchlorate
poses when ingested and what limits should be set for the chemical, a
process slowed partly by lawsuits filed by defense contractors such as
Lockheed Martin Corp. that worry they could be on the hook for billions of
dollars in cleanup costs.

Thousands of people have sued the companies that once made or handled
perchlorate, alleging years of drinking water laced with the chemical have
caused cancers and other illnesses.

Adrienne Wise-Tates, 46, has had tumors of the brain and ovaries, multiple
cysts in her breasts, cancerous cells found when she had a goiter removed
and, most recently, an unknown mass in her left kidney.

The mother of three blames the perchlorate-tainted water she drank while
growing up in Redlands. There, 70 miles east of Los Angeles, nearly 1,000
people are suing Lockheed Martin over perchlorate pollution associated
with a former rocket engine testing facility that closed in the 1970s.

"I played in the water, drank the water, everything. The normal things a
child does," Wise-Tates said. "Since it was so much in this area, in the
water, that's what I attribute it to."

Lockheed spokeswoman Gail Rymer said the company is "vigorously" defending
itself against the claims.

"We do not feel that anyone was harmed or has been made ill as a result of
our operations at the former Lockheed Propulsion Co. site," Rymer said.

The oxygen-rich chemical interferes with the way the body takes iodide
into the thyroid and can disrupt how the gland regulates metabolism. It's
unclear how much is dangerous.

Initially, it was thought perchlorate pollution would be restricted to
places where rocket fuel was made or used. However, it's since been tied
to plants around the country that made munitions, fireworks and even the
charges that deploy airbags.

"Anything that explodes seems to be associated with perchlorate," said
David Spath, chief of the division of drinking water and environmental
management for the California Department of Health Services.

Along with explosives, naturally perchlorate-rich fertilizer imported from
Chile has contaminated wells on New York's Long Island, forcing some to
close.

"We need to be able to say to people that this is a problem, it is a big
problem. It is moving rapidly. It is in 22 states and we need to address
it," said Sen. Dianne Feinstein, D-Calif. "We don't need to panic, but we
need to do it in a way that's cost-effective and makes sense."

The single largest source of contamination is a former Kerr-McGee Corp.
rocket fuel plant outside Las Vegas.

For decades, waste water containing perchlorate was left to seep into the
ground, a company official said.

"There were probably 20-plus years when we didn't have the environmental
awareness we have today," said Pat Corbett, the former plant manager who
is now the company's environmental technology director.

The site still leaches as much as 900 pounds of perchlorate a day into a
wash that drains into the Colorado River, the main water source for much
of Arizona, southern California and southern Nevada.

Across the nation, millions more eat vegetables grown with Colorado River
water. What risk the vegetables could pose, if any, is unknown.

"It's really one of the most massive pollution problems the water industry
has ever seen," said Timothy Brick, a member of the Metropolitan Water
District of Southern California.

Across California, nearly 300 wells are contaminated. Most are in Los
Angeles, Riverside and San Bernardino counties, where dozens of aerospace
factories hummed during the Cold War.

California officials have proposed what they consider a safe level of
perchlorate of two to six parts per billion and hope to set the nation's
first standard by 2004. However, Lockheed Martin and Kerr-McGee forced the
state to submit the draft recommendation to further outside review,
including by industry-picked experts, delaying the process by months.

The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency's draft proposal is stricter: one
part per billion.

Perchlorate in the Colorado River has been measured as high as 9 parts per
billion.

It will take years to discover the extent of perchlorate contamination
nationwide, and cleanup will take decades more, to the consternation of
people like Wise-Tates.

"I would just hope no one else has to go through this, but I am sure they
will, until they find some way to clean up the water," she said.


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