Officials acknowledge effects of utility leak on AL residents: nosebleeds, headaches and vomiting

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hemical leak at a natural gas facility that had long been owned by San Diego-based Sempra Energy has been found to have contributed to the troubled health of residents in a poor Alabama community.

The Alabama Department of Public Health announced in a recent press release that the ongoing review of the 2008 leak in Eight Mile, Ala., has determined that the chemical odorant used to detect natural gas leaks is affecting residents in the predominantly African American community of 8,000.

In October, the Los Angeles Times reported about the leak in Eight Mile after residents in the community complained that they were largely ignored for years although 2,000 miles away, in the affluent Porter Ranch neighborhood, people were relocated and compensated following the methane leak from the Aliso Canyon natural gas storage facility — also owned by a Sempra subsidiary.

In both incidents, residents complained of nosebleeds, headaches and vomiting, which they attributed to the natural gas-related odor. In Eight Mile, residents have questioned whether the chemical odor contributed to seizures in children, respiratory ailments and other serious health effects.

“Based on the current scientific evidence and available information, we believe that the community is affected by the odors,” said Dr. Mary McIntyre, chief medical officer for the Alabama health department.

“These odors may impact residents’ sense of well-being and quality of life,” McIntyre stated. “Mercaptan causes irritation to mucous membranes and has been associated with some of the symptoms reported by the residents of Eight Mile.”

Mercaptan, a class of chemical that includes compounds of sulfur and mercury, has been used for decades to give odor to natural gas and has been considered fairly harmless by government and industry. Whether the smell is the source of the illnesses in Porter Ranch and Eight Mile has been a subject of debate.

At the Aliso Canyon facility, mercaptan was released along with vast amounts of methane, a potent greenhouse gas, during a leak from a single well in October 2015. The leak forced thousands of residents in Porter Ranch and other nearby neighborhoods from their homes for months.


The Eight Mile leak was discovered a few months before Sempra acquired Mobile Gas Co., which owns the facility where the leak occurred. Sempra sold Mobile Gas in September.

Jenny Gobble, a spokeswoman for Spire Energy, the new owner of Mobile Gas, said the mercaptan leak did cause an odor in the community, but the company contends that the chemical “used to safely odorize natural gas for nearly 100 years” has not made residents sick.

“We are confident that Mobile Gas appropriately handled the situation in Eight Mile,” Gobble said. Mobile Gas workers “responded quickly when the odor was first noticed, and since that time, they have installed effective treatment systems that use ozone to eliminate mercaptan in the water.”

Carletta Davis, president of the We Matter Eight Mile Community Assn., has asked local officials to help protect residents as a result the health department’s statement.

“We respectfully demand action be taken on behalf of the children, elderly and all individuals and entities affected by this tragic chemical spill,” Davis said in a letter to government officials.

Health officials acknowledge effects of utility leak on Alabama residents
 

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'We cannot breathe:' A poor Alabama town has lived with the rotten egg stench of gas for 8 years

By IVAN PENN

OCT. 15, 2016 | REPORTING FROM EIGHT MILE, ALA.

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Markell Williams, 11, has been hospitalized five times this year for seizures, which his mother believes are linked to a chemical spill near his hometown of Eight Mile, Ala. (Meggan Haller / For The Times)
When methane started leaking out of a well at the Aliso Canyon natural gas storage facility outside Los Angeles last October, noxious fumes blanketed the nearby Porter Ranch neighborhood for months. Residents complained of nausea, nosebleeds and vomiting; more than 8,000 families were forced out of their homes by the stench of the chemical odorant added to natural gas to help detect leaks.

Two thousand miles away, in a poor Alabama community, residents are complaining of similar symptoms after lightning struck equipment at an underground pipeline. An estimated 500 gallons of the same chemical spilled into the soil and groundwater, according to state environmental officials.

lawsuits out of 14 filed by hundreds of Eight Mile residents are still pending, according to Sempra Energy securities filings. The residents allege damage to health and property values. In one typical case, the lawsuit accuses Mobile Gas of continuing to expose residents to “noxious mercaptan pollution, which is annoying, unpleasant, obnoxious, disturbing, and harmful to the plaintiffs’ health.”

Mobile Gas acknowledged the leak in court documents but claimed that waste cleanup firms they had hired failed to get rid of the spilled chemical. Those firms did not return calls for comment.

Mercaptan, a class of chemical that includes compounds of sulfur and mercury, has been used for decades to give odor to natural gas and has been considered fairly harmless by government and industry. Whether the smell is the source of the illnesses in Porter Ranch and Eight Mile has been a subject of debate.

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Residents say this pond near Gethsemane Cemetery is contaminated. (Meggan Haller / For The Times)
At the Aliso Canyon facility, mercaptan was released along with vast amounts of methane, a potent greenhouse gas, during a leak from a single well.

The response from government officials was heightened by the potential for a catastrophic explosion and by significant air quality and climate change concerns. And yet it still took four months to seal the problem well.

At Eight Mile, only mercaptan — not natural gas — leaked in June 2008, according to Mobile Gas.

Robert Jackson, a senior fellow at Stanford University’s Woods Institute for the Environment, said a spill into groundwater, as at Eight Mile, could remain in plumes with irritating effects lasting for years.

“Our sense of smell is acutely sensitive to mercaptans,” Jackson said. “They’re irritants. They irritate our eyes. They’re designed to smell bad, to be unpleasant.”

Dr. Jeffrey Nordella, an urgent care physician in Porter Ranch, said he has been conducting his own research on mercaptan’s health effects since the Aliso Canyon leak.

“Mercaptan is toxic to the human body,” Nordella said. “The question is exposure — how much and for how long?”

Exactly how the chemical affects human health is unclear, though at least three workers have died after exposure to extremely high levels of methyl mercaptan, one of several variations of the chemical, according to reports by two federal agencies.

The U.S. Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease Registry cited a 1970 case of a 53-year-old worker who developed anemia, fell into a coma and later died after he opened and emptied tanks of the compound. He also suffered seizures, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency noted in a 2013 report.

In 1979, a 19-year-old was exposed to methyl mercaptan at high concentrations for a few minutes and died 45 minutes later as a result of respiratory arrest and heart failure. In 2001, a 24-year-old worker was found dead at a chemical factory with what tests showed were large quantities of methyl mercaptan in his liver, kidneys, lungs, blood and urine.

The EPA report said that exposure to methyl mercaptan even when not at those extreme levels can depress the central nervous system and affect respiratory function. Signs of exposure can include mucous membrane irritation, headache, dizziness, staggering gait, nausea and vomiting.


Residents of Eight Mile discuss the Mobile Gas leak.
Markell Williams was just 3 years old when a powerful chemical oozed into the soil and water less than a mile from his home. By age 5, he was having seizures.

His mother, Raquel Williams, 33, blames the chemical’s pungent smell that permeates the air in their community. Whenever the odor would grow strong — and it can hit with a blast that sometimes forces people to run for cover — it seemed to trigger Markell’s seizures with growing intensity and frequency, his mother said.

Over the last year, the seizures have become so frequent that Markell, now 11, has missed months of school.

“This year, he’s been hospitalized five times because his seizures didn’t get any better,” said Raquel Williams as she sat next to his hospital bed in September.

More than 1,300 residents have filled out health assessment questionnaires describing symptoms such as nosebleeds, respiratory distress, nausea, vomiting, seizures, vision problems and hypertension.

The Facebook page for the We Matter 8 Mile Community Assn. includes photos of infants and toddlers on ventilators, children with blood dripping from their noses and adults wearing medical masks to protect themselves from the stench.

But Davis, who is the association’s president, said that Mobile Gas and government officials are treating the problem as merely an unpleasant odor despite reports — for eight years running — that residents are being sickened.

Likening the struggle to the Flint, Mich., water crisis, Davis said she intends to keep fighting.

“Nobody is going to do this for us,” she said. “We’re just falling through the cracks.”

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Gregory Davis, 7, has nosebleeds, which his mother Carletta Davis believes are caused by exposure to the odorant mercaptan. (Meggan Haller / For The Times)

On its website, Mobile Gas acknowledges that its investigation and treatment of the mercaptan spill “have taken a long time” because of complex geology and groundwater flow.

But it says that two water treatment systems built to remove mercaptan from surface water and groundwater have helped mitigate the problem.

The new owner of Mobile Gas, St. Louis, Mo.-based Spire Energy, said employees have not detected any odor. And recent visits by state environmental agents didn’t reveal any problems.

“What happened in Alabama only involved mercaptan, which has been safely used to odorize natural gas for nearly 100 years," Spire Energy spokeswoman Jenny Gobble said in a statement. “There is no evidence linking low levels of mercaptan in the air to any lasting health effects.”

The company declined to discuss specific cases.

Dr. Mary McIntyre, chief medical officer for the Alabama Department of Public Health, said through a spokeswoman that the agency was working with other state and federal agencies to find solutions for the Eight Mile community, and it has also contacted the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. So far, though, the agencies “are unable to determine any association between reported conditions and the 2008 mercaptan spill,” she said.

The years of troubles in Eight Mile have led some residents to pack up and move. But most of the 3,000 residents don’t have the resources to leave.

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The median income in Eight Mile in 2014 was $35,000, or more than $8,000 lower the state median. In Porter Ranch, by comparison, the median income in 2014 was $105,602, more than $44,000 higher than the California median income.

Southern California Gas paid more than $500 million to temporarily relocate about 8,000 Porter Ranch families and clean more than 1,700 homes. Eight Mile residents say they got nothing approaching that assistance. Some have settled their cases with Mobile Gas for undisclosed amounts. Local media reported that most settlement payouts ranged from $3,000 to $10,000 apiece.

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Jeremiah Hollins outside the Gulf South Pipeline Whistler’s Junction facility. Hollins has respiratory trouble and uses a walker because of trouble in his legs that he believes is made worse by breathing in mercaptan. (Meggan Haller / For The Times)
Jeremiah Hollins, a 65-year-old retired truck driver, used to find relief when he boarded his rig for out-of-town trips. But, now in his retirement years, he said the constant smell of mercaptan is taking its toll.

“My doctor told me that I need to get out of this area,” Hollins said. Hollins wrestles with respiratory trouble and holds himself up with a walker because of trouble in his legs that he believes is made worse by breathing in mercaptan.

Marcus Richardson, 39, works as an environmental safety and health professional. Long before his headaches and nosebleeds began, he smelled a problem.

“I started smelling sulfur,” Richardson said. “I said, ‘Ma, I think you’ve got a gas leak.’ She didn’t have a gas leak. The whole community had a gas leak.”

Richardson thought he had escaped the effects of mercaptan when he left Eight Mile looking for a change of scenery. He moved in with a girlfriend in the Northridge area of Southern California, just two miles from the Aliso Canyon natural gas facility.

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Eight Mile residents hold a rally before a protest march in downtown Mobile. (Julie Dermansky for DeSmogBlog)
He was in Northridge when Aliso Canyon’s leak started Oct. 23.

“I got exposure on both ends,” said Richardson, who said he felt “pure outrage” over the contrast in how the leaks were handled in the two communities.

“The response that they had in California was immediate; it was swift,” Richardson said. “The prestige of that community propelled a swifter action than in this community.”

Dozens of Eight Mile residents marched on the state Capitol in Montgomery on Thursday to voice their years-long frustrations to state leaders. They chanted “Eight Mile, we matter” and many wore surgical masks. By the time they boarded buses to go back home, the governor had agreed to meet with them next week.

“We will not stop until we get answers,” said DaShaun Taylor, holding a poster of her cousin breathing on a ventilator. “Because literally, as the signs says, we cannot breathe.”

'We cannot breathe:' A poor Alabama town has lived with the rotten egg stench of gas for 8 years
 

Chrishaune

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My anger at stories like these. Seems like every major corporation in America is taking advantage of the people who work for them. Or ignoring the people that live with them in their neighborhoods. All because some greedy executives want to make their retirement money in only a few years so they can retire at 45 years old...
 

YvrzTrvly

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We need less regulations not more, these people should just move if breathing the air makes them sick.
These people should just move...christ lower learning strikes again

Yea cuz they makin enough paper to move...are educated enough to find another job...are willing to leave where they called home for n number of years...

These are the least qualified people to relocate...which is arguably why they have gotten no renumeration for something that money will not alleviate...
 

Dr. Acula

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These people should just move...christ lower learning strikes again

Yea cuz they makin enough paper to move...are educated enough to find another job...are willing to leave where they called home for n number of years...

These are the least qualified people to relocate...which is arguably why they have gotten no renumeration for something that money will not alleviate...
I think he was being sarcastic..
 

David_TheMan

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Funny how to see the progressives tryign to talk about regulation as if this didn't go on against regulation in place and that the regulatory bodies in place did nothing to stop it. SMH.
No regulation doesn't mean you can't sue for damages, regulation principly allows damages to be capped and reduces company accountability behind regulatory shielding.
 

Red Shield

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Figured the people were black by reading the title...

although 2,000 miles away, in the affluent Porter Ranch neighborhood, people were relocated and compensated following the methane leak from the Aliso Canyon natural gas storage facility

Never gonna get a fair shake and always gonna get fukked over by this country. For as long as this damned country exists...
 

tru_m.a.c

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Funny how to see the progressives tryign to talk about regulation as if this didn't go on against regulation in place and that the regulatory bodies in place did nothing to stop it. SMH.
No regulation doesn't mean you can't sue for damages, regulation principly allows damages to be capped and reduces company accountability behind regulatory shielding.

Ah put a cork in it.

As of May 2016, Alabama joined federal lawsuits challenging the EPA's Clean Power Plan, water rule and mercury standards.
Environmental policy in Alabama - Ballotpedia
:mjlol:
 

tru_m.a.c

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My anger at stories like these. Seems like every major corporation in America is taking advantage of the people who work for them. Or ignoring the people that live with them in their neighborhoods. All because some greedy executives want to make their retirement money in only a few years so they can retire at 45 years old...
this is the way of the world

the real question is why is the LA times writing exposes on this and not your local alabama paper?
 
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