Chattanooga Times Free Press

DO WACKER’S $210 MILLION IN TAX-BREAKS HAVE CLAWBACKS?

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Wacker Polysilico­n announced Tuesday it is closing its Charleston, Tenn., plant, possibly for “several months,” as the investigat­ion continues into the cause of a Sept. 7 explosion that sent a plume of hydrochlor­ic acid into the air and continues to leak small-dose “burps” of the estimated 6 tons of the chemical chlorosila­ne there.

Shawn Fairbanks, director of Bradley County Fire & Rescue, and Troy Spence, Bradley County Emergency Management Agency Director, told Times Free Press reporter Mark Pace last Friday that there was no way to safely remove the chemicals and they now leak as they are exposed to moisture in the damaged pipes.

“It’s not safe, but [Wacker] can’t get in there to get it out,” Fairbanks said. “Part of the problem is they can’t enter the building because it is not structural­ly sound.”

In announcing the closure Wednesday, Wacker officials said an equipment malfunctio­n led to a hydrogen explosion that damaged piping. The piping leaked the chlorosila­ne, a chemical that creates hydrogen chloride as it comes into contact with moisture in the air.

Wacker officials also said — as they have several times — “there was no risk to the community.”

Roads in the area and Interstate 75 were closed for hours. Residents and school children were forced to shelter in place and told to shut off their heat and air systems. A plant worker, a firefighte­r, four deputies and seven local residents were treated at hospitals after the explosion — which Wacker termed “an incident.”

That sounded then (and still sounds) like quite a bit of risk. It was the second “incident” in eight days at the facility — five workers suffered chemical burns on Aug. 30 in a different area of the plant. And just days after the explosion there was a third “incident,” one in which there was again a leak large enough to trigger a shelter-in-place warning at the plant.

Now we learn that there is a continuing problem. And we also learn that an undisclose­d number of Wacker workers are apparently being shuffled between repairs and “advanced training” possibly for “several months.”

The Tennessee Department of Environmen­t and Conservati­on and the Occupation­al Safety and Health Administra­tion are investigat­ing the incidents.

Hydrochlor­ic acid is a colorless to slightly yellow, corrosive, nonflammab­le gas that is heavier than air and has a strong irritating odor. Its corrosive vapors, and inhalation of the fumes, can cause coughing, choking, inflammati­on of the nose, throat and upper respirator­y tract, and in severe cases, pulmonary edema, circulator­y system failure and death, according to the Agency for Toxic Substances & Disease Registry, a federal public health agency of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. ATSDR also says skin contact with the gas can cause redness, pain and severe skin burns and eye damage. EPA rates and regulates the gas as a toxic substance.

The $2.5 billion plant manufactur­es chemicals for solar panels, and when the German company began looking at the Charleston, Tenn., site, it received one of the top five richest government incentive packages offered in Tennessee — $210.5 million in 2009 for 500 jobs at the polycrysta­lline silicon plant. That’s $421,000 per job.

Are there claw-back clauses in those incentives? If not, why not?

This is a textbook case for why they might be needed. We paid for the emergency responders that kept this from being worse.

We’re paying for the state’s TDEC investigat­ion, and we’re paying for the federal government’s OSHA investigat­ion.

More pointedly, we paid for those jobs that may well now be in limbo.

 ?? STAFF FILE PHOTO BY DOUG STRICKLAND ?? A plume billows from the Wacker polysilico­n chemical plant after an explosion released a hydrogen chemical gas on Sept. 7.
STAFF FILE PHOTO BY DOUG STRICKLAND A plume billows from the Wacker polysilico­n chemical plant after an explosion released a hydrogen chemical gas on Sept. 7.

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