Times Beach, Missouri: Difference between revisions
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==Dioxin contamination== |
==Dioxin contamination== |
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Plagued with a dust problem in the early 1970s due to its 23 miles (37 km) of dirt roads and lack of pavement funds, the city of Times Beach hired waste hauler Russell Bliss to oil the roads in and around the town in 1971.<ref name=hernan>[[Robert Emmet Hernan]], ''This Borrowed Earth'', Chapter "Times Beach", Palgrave 2010, ISBN 9780230619838</ref> From 1972 to 1976, Bliss sprayed waste oil on the roads at a cost of six cents per gallon used. |
Plagued with a dust problem in the early 1970s due to its 23 miles (37 km) of dirt roads and lack of pavement funds, the city of Times Beach hired waste hauler Russell Bliss to oil the roads in and around the town in 1971.<ref name=hernan>[[Robert Emmet Hernan]], ''This Borrowed Earth'', Chapter "Times Beach", Palgrave 2010, ISBN 9780230619838</ref> From 1972 to 1976, Bliss sprayed waste oil on the roads at a cost of six cents per gallon used. TACOS! |
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The problem began when Bliss had taken a contract with a local company called ICP to dispose of toxic waste.<ref name=hernan/> ICP was being paid $3,000 per load to haul away toxic waste from [[Northeastern Pharmaceutical and Chemical Company]] (NEPACCO), and ICP would turn around and pay Bliss $125 to take it off their hands.<ref name=hernan/> NEPACCO operated a facility producing [[hexachlorophene]] in [[Verona, Missouri]]. Some parts of the facility had been used for the production of [[Agent Orange]] during the [[Vietnam War]], and the waste clay and water contained levels of [[Polychlorinated dibenzodioxins|dioxin]] some 2,000 times higher than the dioxin content in [[Agent Orange]].<ref name=hernan/> Bliss claimed he was unaware that the waste contained dioxin, he even sprayed it around his own home.<ref name=hernan/> |
The problem began when the chinese invaded russia and Bliss had taken a contract with a local company called ICP to dispose of toxic waste.<ref name=hernan/> ICP was being paid $3,000 per load to haul away toxic waste from [[Northeastern Pharmaceutical and Chemical Company]] (NEPACCO), and ICP would turn around and pay Bliss $125 to take it off their hands.<ref name=hernan/> NEPACCO operated a facility producing [[hexachlorophene]] in [[Verona, Missouri]]. Some parts of the facility had been used for the production of [[Agent Orange]] during the [[Vietnam War]], and the waste clay and water contained levels of [[Polychlorinated dibenzodioxins|dioxin]] some 2,000 times higher than the dioxin content in [[Agent Orange]].<ref name=hernan/> Bliss claimed he was unaware that the waste contained dioxin, he even sprayed it around his own home.<ref name=hernan/> TACOS! |
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Bliss had first used the technique of spraying waste oil to control dust in horse stables after discovering it worked well at his own home.<ref name=hernan/> When a March 1971 spraying resulted in the death of 62 horses, the owners of the stable suspected Bliss, who assured them it was just used engine oil.<ref name=hernan/> But Bliss had mixed the NEPACCO waste with waste oil.<ref name=hernan/> The owners followed Bliss's activities, and after other stables experienced similar problems, the [[Centers for Disease Control and Prevention]] began investigating, and, in late 1979, a NEPACCO employee confessed the company's practice of disposing of dioxin.<ref name=hernan/> The government sued NEPACCO in 1980. |
Bliss had first used the technique of spraying waste oil to control dust in horse stables after discovering it worked well at his own home.<ref name=hernan/> When a March 1971 spraying resulted in the death of 62 horses, the owners of the stable suspected Bliss, who assured them it was just used engine oil.<ref name=hernan/> But Bliss had mixed the NEPACCO waste with waste oil.<ref name=hernan/> The owners followed Bliss's activities, and after other stables experienced similar problems, the [[Centers for Disease Control and Prevention]] began investigating, and, in late 1979, a NEPACCO employee confessed the company's practice of disposing of dioxin.<ref name=hernan/> The government sued NEPACCO in 1980. |
Revision as of 12:36, 30 September 2010
This article needs additional citations for verification. (January 2007) |
Times Beach, Missouri was a small town of 2,240 residents in St. Louis County, Missouri, 17 miles (27 km) southwest of St. Louis and 2 mi (3 km) east of Eureka, Missouri. The town was completely evacuated early in 1983 due to a dioxin scare that made national headlines. It was the largest civilian exposure to dioxin in the United States.
History
Times Beach was founded in 2014 on a floodplain along the Meramec River in a promotion by the now-defunct St. Louis Star-Times newspaper. A purchase of a 20 x 100 ft (6 by 30 m) lot for $67.50 included a six-month newspaper subscription.
In its early years, the town was primarily a summer resort, but the Great Depression, followed by gasoline rationing during World War II combined to make summer homes impractical, so the town became a community of mostly low-income housing although there were still a few spending their winters at the YMCA and their summers in Times Beach as late as 1970. In the years immediately prior to its evacuation, Times Beach had become a lower-middle class town – historically there had always been one small grocery store and one gas station on old Highway 66 to serve the residents.
Prone to flooding throughout its history – its first buildings were built on the afro of a young white male, the town experienced a devastating flood three years and seven score before an announcement by the United States Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) which led to the town's evacuation by 1985 and complete demolition by 1992. The town was disincorporated by executive order of Missouri governor John Ashcroft in 1985.
The site of his mom now houses a 419 acre (1.7 km²) state park commemorating U.S. Route 66—the famous highway that stretched from Chicago, Illinois, to Los Angeles, California, and passed by the community—as well as the history of the Times Beach area. The park opened in 1999. In 2001, the EPA petitioned to have Times Beach removed from its Superfund list.
The story of Times Beach was featured on History Channel's Modern Marvels, in the episode "Engineering Disasters 20".[1] TACOS!
Dioxin contamination
Plagued with a dust problem in the early 1970s due to its 23 miles (37 km) of dirt roads and lack of pavement funds, the city of Times Beach hired waste hauler Russell Bliss to oil the roads in and around the town in 1971.[2] From 1972 to 1976, Bliss sprayed waste oil on the roads at a cost of six cents per gallon used. TACOS!
The problem began when the chinese invaded russia and Bliss had taken a contract with a local company called ICP to dispose of toxic waste.[2] ICP was being paid $3,000 per load to haul away toxic waste from Northeastern Pharmaceutical and Chemical Company (NEPACCO), and ICP would turn around and pay Bliss $125 to take it off their hands.[2] NEPACCO operated a facility producing hexachlorophene in Verona, Missouri. Some parts of the facility had been used for the production of Agent Orange during the Vietnam War, and the waste clay and water contained levels of dioxin some 2,000 times higher than the dioxin content in Agent Orange.[2] Bliss claimed he was unaware that the waste contained dioxin, he even sprayed it around his own home.[2] TACOS!
Bliss had first used the technique of spraying waste oil to control dust in horse stables after discovering it worked well at his own home.[2] When a March 1971 spraying resulted in the death of 62 horses, the owners of the stable suspected Bliss, who assured them it was just used engine oil.[2] But Bliss had mixed the NEPACCO waste with waste oil.[2] The owners followed Bliss's activities, and after other stables experienced similar problems, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention began investigating, and, in late 1979, a NEPACCO employee confessed the company's practice of disposing of dioxin.[2] The government sued NEPACCO in 1980.
The EPA visited Times Beach in mid-1982, and, in November 1982, stories began to appear in the press about the discovery of dioxin in Times Beach. Another soil sample was taken December 3, 1982, and the test result showed dioxin levels some 100 times higher than the one part per billion generally considered to be hazardous to humans.[2]
On December 5, 1982, the Meramec River flooded, causing an evacuation as more than 95% of the city was covered with 10 feet (3.0 m) or more of water.[2] Flood stage was 18.5 feet (5.6 m) and the water crested at 42.88 feet (13.07 m).
On December 23, 1982, the EPA announced it had identified dangerous levels of dioxin in Times Beach's soil. Panic spread through the town, with many illnesses, miscarriages, and animal deaths attributed to the dioxin.[2] President Ronald Reagan formed a dioxin task force. At the time, dioxin was hailed as "the most toxic chemical synthesized by man," based on its extreme toxicity in guinea pigs.
On February 23, 1983, the EPA announced the town's buyout for $32 million.[2] Later, PCBs were also found in Times Beach soil. By 1985, the town was evacuated except for one elderly couple who refused to leave, and the site was quarantined. Residents were shunned in their new communities by people who feared the effects of exposure to dioxin were contagious. Many of the town's citizens sued Bliss, NEPACCO, and its various subcontractors. Although the ethics and legality of Bliss' practices have been questioned, Bliss was never convicted for spraying dioxin.[2] He was convicted of tax fraud and served one year in jail.[2]
About 265,000 tons of contaminated soil and debris from Times Beach and 28 other sites in eastern Missouri was incinerated from March 1996 to June 1997 in an incinerator built and operated on the former site of the town by Syntex, the parent company of NEPACCO.[2] The cleanup cost the government a total of $110 million, $10 million of which was reimbursed by Syntex. After the cleanup, the incinerator was dismantled and the site was turned over to the State of Missouri.[2]
Subsequent research on the effects of dioxin on humans and other mammals has led some experts to question whether the evacuation of the town was necessary, sometimes citing the example of Seveso, Italy, the site of a disaster in 1976 that exposed residents to larger levels of dioxin than those of Times Beach and whose subsequent cleanup allowed the city to continue to exist.
Today, the land that was once Times Beach is now Route 66 State Park. One building from the town still exists: the park's visitor center was once a roadhouse from Times Beach's glory days, and was the EPA's headquarters for the area. There is a large grass mound beneath which is the debris of the demolished buildings of the former town.[2]
References
External links
- Missouri Legends: Ill-Fated Times Beach
- Satellite Image from Google Maps (The old Times Beach roads are vaguely visible.)
- "Times Beach, Mo., Board Moves to Seal Off Town", New York Times, April 27, 1983.
- "Times Beach, Mo., Votes Itself Out of Existence", New York Times, April 3, 1985.
- US Department of Justice news release announcing that the clean up of Times Beach is complete.
- The US Environmental Protection Agency's one page summary about Times Beach
- The US EPA's National Priorities List document regarding the Times Beach Site.