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Marine families tie tainted water to illnesses: High toxin levels found at N.C. base from 1957 to '87

Associated Press (2007-06-13) Kimberly Hefling

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Media Link: http://www.boston.com/news/nation/washington/articles/2007/06/13/marine_families_tie_tainted_water_to_illnesses/%20type%3d%22html%22
More Info: Blackwater

WASHINGTON -- Marine families who lived at Camp Lejeune in North Carolina over three decades drank water contaminated with toxins as much as 40 times over today's safety standard, federal health investigators said yesterday.

The government disclosed results from a new scientific study on the same day that some families testified before a congressional panel about cancers and other illnesses they attribute to drinking tainted tap water at the sprawling training and deployment base.

The House Energy and Commerce panel, which held the hearing, described the sickened Marines as "poisoned patriots."

At least 850 former residents of the base have filed administrative claims, seeking nearly $4 billion, for exposure to the industrial solvents TCE and PCE, which contaminated Camp Lejeune's drinking wells before 1987. TCE, or trichloroethylene, is a degreasing solvent, and PCE, or tetrachloroethylene, is a dry-cleaning agent. The government describes them as probable carcinogens .

"My wife and I now have new full-time careers just staying alive and figuring out how to pay for it all," former Navy Dr. Michael Gros of Spring, Texas, said. He was stunned to learn years after his work in the 1980s as an obstetrician and gynecologist at Camp Lejeune that he had a rare non-Hodgkins lymphoma.

Gros told lawmakers yesterday that he has accumulated medical bills of more than $4.5 million and that he worries regularly about bankruptcy.

The US Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease Registry said its new modeling and analysis of Camp Lejeune's Tarawa Terrace drinking water system from 1957 to 1987 found levels of PCE as high as 200 parts per billion, compared with the 5 parts per billion that federal regulators in 1992 would set as the maximum allowable level.

The Navy judge advocate general's office promised lawmakers that it will "thoroughly analyze each and every claim utilizing the best scientific research available," according to prepared testimony. It is waiting for a government scientific study about how the water affected babies in utero.

Federal health officials have new analyses indicating Camp Lejeune's water was contaminated as far back as 1957 and up to 1987. The Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease Registry cites the new endpoint -- nearly two years after the Marines said they closed all the tainted wells -- in a continuing study on whether Camp Lejeune's water led to leukemia and birth defects in children. That study is expected to be finished as early as the end of the year.

Marine Corps officials said that Camp Lejeune provided water consistent with industry practices of the time and that its Marines' health and safety are of primary concern.

Jerry Ensminger of White Lake, N.C., a Marine for 24 years, lost his 9-year-old daughter to leukemia. In heart-rending testimony, he described comforting her during agonizing cancer treatments. He said that toward the end of her life, she endured taunts from classmates teasing her about her appearance after chemotherapy.

"It is time for the United States Marine Corps to live up to their motto 'Semper Fidelis,' " or always faithful, Ensminger said.

Marine officials have said they didn't immediately act when they learned of the contaminants because the federal standards were not yet in place.

The health agency estimated 75,000 people lived in the affected base neighborhood during those three decades.

The agency launched a new website, http://www.atsdr.cdc.gov/sites/lejeune , for people to learn the levels of contamination that came from their faucets at different times.

The newly released study is part of the health agency's ongoing investigation into whether exposure to the solvents caused birth defects and leukemia in babies.

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Title Marine families tie tainted water to illnesses: High toxin levels found at N.C. base from 1957 to '87
Publisher Associated Press
Author Kimberly Hefling
Pub Date 2007-06-13
Media Link http://www.boston.com/news/nation/washington/articles/2007/06/13/marine_families_tie_tainted_water_to_illnesses/
Note Links contamination to activities at training bases.
Keywords Blackwater
Media Type Linked Article
Book ISBN
Topic revision: r1 - 23 Jun 2007, RaymondLutz
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