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Tesla_WTC_Solution
10th January 2014, 18:13
http://mediad.publicbroadcasting.net/p/wvpn/files/styles/placed_wide/public/201401/WaterMap.jpg

The capital city of West Virginia, which happens to be my old workplace, has apparently suffered a very serious chemical leak along the Elk River at a site belonging to Freedom Industries. Many thousands of West Virginians are now without water and the National Guard is allegedly helping pass out bottled water.

Nitro, a town only some miles south of Charleston via I-64, made the news a couple years back when its citizens won a lawsuit against the chemical and bioengineering mega-corporation MONSANTO -- hundreds of townspeople had become ill with leukemia and other terrible diseases.

Today, Charleston joins the lineup of modern cities just large enough to draw notice, but powerless to change the awful reality of their circumstances. This accident, if accident it was, has the potential to compromise the health of thousands of children! Granted, it's not sarin that leaked into the river, but at least 5,000 gallons of a coal-washing chemical called 4-methylcyclohexane methanol has been washed into the water by faulty storage tanks.

Will anyone care when hundreds of US citizens in West Virginia fall ill? Or will this be covered up in the name of big business..?

http://i2.cdn.turner.com/cnn/dam/assets/140110072702-west-virginia-chemical-0110-story-top.jpg


http://www.cnn.com/2014/01/09/us/west-virginia-contaminated-water/index.html

Memo to many in West Virginia: Don't drink the water
By AnneClaire Stapleton and Tom Watkins, CNN
updated 12:30 PM EST, Fri January 10, 2014


(CNN) -- [Breaking news update at 12:30 p.m. Friday]

U.S. Attorney Booth Goodwin "opened an investigation into the circumstances surrounding the release" of a potentially dangerous chemical into parts of West Virginia's water supply.

[Original story, posted at 11:03 a.m. Friday]

Nearly 200,000 people in West Virginia awoke Friday to stark warnings about their tap water: Don't drink it. Don't cook with it. Don't even brush your teeth or take a shower.
The reason: a chemical spill in the Elk River in the central and southwestern parts of the state.

The news sent shock waves through the region as the worried headed to hospitals in search of reassurances they were OK.

A spokeswoman for West Virginia American Water Co., Laura Jordan, said the company had received calls about illnesses, but none of them were serious.

"We just advise customers if they are feeling something that isn't right to seek medical attention."

Many appear to have done just that.

"Our emergency rooms have been very busy with individuals unnecessarily concerned and presenting no symptoms," Charleston Area Medical Center said.

The water restrictions affected the hospital, too. It put into place linen conservation and alternative cleaning methods and turned away all but emergency patients.
Residents moved quickly to stock up on bottled water.

"We managed to get the last five bottles of water at 7-Eleven last night," Charleston resident Beth Turley told CNN. "We are OK right now on water. We're just drinking sports drinks and teas, things like that right now."

"There was a run on water at every Walmart and convenience store in the county," said Kent Carper, president of the Kanawha County Commission.

On Thursday evening, Gov. Earl Ray Tomblin declared a state of emergency for nine counties.

"Right now, our priorities are our hospitals, nursing homes and schools," the governor said. "I've been working with our National Guard and Office of Emergency Services in an effort to provide water and supplies through the county emergency services offices as quickly as possible."

The declaration affects West Virginia American Water customers in Boone, Cabell, Clay, Jackson, Kanawha, Lincoln, Logan, Putnam and Roane counties.

The company said on its Facebook page that the spill along the Elk River contaminated the Kanawha Valley water system.

President Barack Obama signed an emergency declaration authorizing the Federal Emergency Management Agency to coordinate disaster relief efforts.

The leaked chemical, 4-methylcyclohexane methanol, is harmful if swallowed, said Thomas Aluise, a spokesman for the state's Department of Environmental Protection. It is used to wash coal before it goes to market.

Jordan, the water company spokeswoman, said she first suspected something was amiss Thursday morning when she noticed an odor like licorice in the air en route to work.

The Department of Environmental Protection and the Emergency Operations Center investigated, and they found the spill coming from a 48,000-gallon tank at Freedom Industries, a chemical storage facility about a mile upriver from the West Virginia American Water plant.

A toxicologist with Freedom Industries told the water company there is "some health risk" associated with this chemical, Jordan said.

"The safety sheet indicated there could be some skin or eye irritation if you come in contact, or possibly harmful if swallowed, but that's at full strength of the chemical," Jordan said. "The chemical was diluted in the river."

The do-not-use advisory was issued just before 6 p.m. as a precaution, she said.
She said the company was working with DuPont and the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers to determine the level of contamination. "We will determine a course of action at that point in time," she said.

No one from Freedom Industries immediately responded to a telephone call seeking comment.

Officials weren't sure when the water advisory would be lifted in the nine-county area.
"You've got 60 miles of this system, and it's full of this water," said Carper of the Kanawha County Commission. "And people aren't using the water."

Meanwhile, Jordan said that a dozen water tankers had arrived by Friday morning from Pennsylvania and that West Virginia American Water has bought four truckloads of bottled water from a local supplier.

The emergency's ripple effects included the closure Friday of the state supreme court of appeals in Charleston, courts in Boone and Lincoln counties, and the cancellation of classes at West Virginia State University.

CNN's Ed Payne, Marlena Baldacci, Kevin Conlon and Dave Alsup contributed to this report.

_____________________

http://www.freedom-industries.com/

http://www.cdc.gov/niosh/docs/81-123/pdfs/0406.pdf

https://www.amsa.gov.au/environment/maritime-environmental-emergencies/national-plan/Supporting-Documents/documents/Methanol%20(CH3OH)%20MSDS.pdf

Tesseract
11th January 2014, 00:11
Structure looks relatively benign for an organic chemical, of course I surely would still not drink the water - but hopefully the aquatic life forms will not be too much affected. I expect this would take quite a while to dissipate naturally. Activated carbons would likely be highly effective in removing this from contaminated water.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/4-methylcyclohexanemethanol

Tesla_WTC_Solution
11th January 2014, 00:32
Thank you!
I think if this chemical broke into methanol and cyclohexane, it gets more poisonous.

You are right to point out that it seems stable; hopefully whatever is used to remove it (like Corexit was!) doesn't make people more ill than the spill did!

Can you imagine, being able to smell this stuff all over town?

Tesla_WTC_Solution
11th January 2014, 00:36
http://www.cnn.com/2014/01/10/health/west-virginia-chemical/

P.S. (CNN) -- Some 300,000 people in central and southern West Virginia have been advised not to drink the water because it's possibly unsafe. A 48,000-gallon storage tank along the Elk River is leaking a chemical called 4-methylcyclohexane methanol. It's often confused with other similarly named chemicals that can potentially be lethal.

To help avoid confusion, here's some information about 4-methylcyclohexane methanol, taken from the American Association of Poison Control Centers and CNN's previous reporting:

This chemical is used to:

-- Wash coal before it goes to market to reduce ash, also known as the "froth flotation process" of coal preparation

People can be exposed to this chemical by:

-- Inhalation
-- Ingestion
-- Skin and/or eye contact

Symptoms:

-- Nausea
-- Vomiting
-- Dizziness
-- Headaches
-- Diarrhea
-- Red or irritated skin
-- Itching
-- Rashes

Little is known about the safety implications for 4-methylcyclohexane methanol, according to the state's Poison Control director Dr. Elizabeth Scharman because it hasn't been adequately studied.

West Virginians told not to drink or bathe in water

The Material Safety Data Sheet, mandated by the Occupational Health and Safety Administration and provided by the chemical's manufacturer, says, "No specific information is available in our data base regarding the toxic effects of this material for humans."

Aside from basic first aid measures such as washing or flushing affected areas and seeking medical attention, the data sheet does not provide detailed treatment for exposure.
Read the data sheet.

Bob
11th January 2014, 00:41
Structure looks relatively benign for an organic chemical, of course I surely would still not drink the water - but hopefully the aquatic life forms will not be too much affected. I expect this would take quite a while to dissipate naturally. Activated carbons would likely be highly effective in removing this from contaminated water.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/4-methylcyclohexanemethanol

Probably need to look at UV (ultraviolet) light degradation.. and what if it combines with chlorine in water (chloride salts maybe)..

ghostrider
11th January 2014, 03:20
This is bad , fema involved and trucking wate in ... hmmmm can you say quarentine ???

Tesla_WTC_Solution
7th February 2014, 12:03
these innocent people are still being poisoned... look at the color of the water in this CNN video

http://www.cnn.com/video/data/2.0/video/us/2014/02/06/nr-brooke-intv-w-va-water-school-cook.cnn.html

W. Va. school cook: Water is disgusting

CNN Newsroom|Added on February 6, 2014
The head cook at a West Virginia school talks about the conditions of the water there after a chemical spill last month.



stillshot

https://imagizer.imageshack.us/v2/765x427q90/534/395x.png

The **** in the water makes them feel like they are burning up, like their damn skin is being chemical burned or tanned... ffs

Tesla_WTC_Solution
7th February 2014, 20:24
You guys need to leave the area.
if you want to have a future leave that part of WV NOW ASAP NOW