Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Victims gaslighted

A year later, officials tell the people of East Palestine everything’s okay

- By Katie Annarino

On Jan. 2, Jessica Conard rushed out the door to pick up her four-year-old son’s inhaler. Following the Norfolk Southern train derailment and open chemical burn, he developed chronic asthma, which unfolds in sudden coughing spells that get more intense as the day goes by.

“This is why I keep pushing for this 1881A,” she texted me, referring to part of the Social Security Act that would provide free health care for those affected, but only after a federal emergency declaratio­n, which the Biden administra­tion has not issued. “We need to know our acute and long-term illnesses will not bankrupt us.”

As the first anniversar­y of the Feb. 3 derailment and the controlled burn three days later arrive, the rising cost of healthcare for affected residents is just one of the unmet needs in East Palestine

and the surroundin­g communitie­s.

The costs the communitie­s pay

Residents were hopeful when President Biden appointed FEMA disaster recovery coordinato­r, Jim McPherson, to address the residents’ unmet needs. But McPherson has ignored messages from residents and refused to hold an open forum.

This is just one more slap in the face for a community that’s been engaged in a year-long fight for greater transparen­cy and aid from government officials and agencies.

The derailment and open burn show what often happens to the local victims of an environmen­tal disaster. The poisoned are forced to rely on their polluter for financial assistance and independen­t testing. Officials tell those who report nosebleeds, vision impairment­s, migraines, rashes, chemical bronchitis and other debilitati­ng ailments, “There are no unmet needs.”

The average annual income in East Palestine is $44,500, and many residents can’t work or were fired because of their health issues. The costs to treat their conditions are financial impossibil­ities. That’s why so many residents, and others, advocate that residents get access to free healthcare.

The government that should be helping them doesn’t and proves almost impossible to contact. They have no one to turn to. Residents endure constant gaslightin­g, and its effects are just as traumatizi­ng, if not more so, than the derailment itself.

Unmet need one: healthcare

Let’s start with unmet need number one: healthcare. The evidence is mostly anecdotal but compelling.

I traveled to East Palestine for a town hall meeting last February. Days later, I had crippling vertigo and blurred vision. In March, 15 CDC workers came to the area and seven reported sore throats, headaches, coughing and nausea.

Dr. Rick Tsai, dubbed “The Creek Ranger” for his work documentin­g the creek contaminat­ion, fell ill after a trip into the creeks in mid-March. “All my

joints, elbows, and wrists, hurt so bad. I had a horrible headache. It felt like there was a burn stripe from my nasal cavity down into my chest.” His other issues included severe acid reflux and gastrointe­stinal issues.

The chief sustainabi­lity officer of Eco Integrated Technologi­es and independen­t testing expert, Scott Smith, has traveled to the area 26 times to do soil, creek water and furnace filter testing. He had to have his nose cauterized after severe nosebleeds.

Laurie Harmon was diagnosed with chemical bronchitis as well as contact dermatitis due to chemical exposure, manifested in painful blisters that came and went for months. Her soil test revealed concerning levels of formaldehy­de, a chemical for which the EPA refuses to test, even though it is a potential byproduct of the open chemical burn. Harmon’s fiance, Jake Cozza, tested positive for vinyl chloride.

Conard’s 9-year-old son developed eye lesions after the open burn. “He had an eye infection for two weeks and had these sores on the outside of his eye. I was terrified he would go blind,” she says.

Christina Siceloff also tested positive for vinyl chloride and struggles with headaches. Her 4-year-old son, Eddie, experience­d intense vomiting which heightened during contaminat­ed soil excavation and remediatio­n.

Despite the reported health issues, Ohio Gov. Mike DeWine, who took six months to sign the emergency declaratio­n, visited East Palestine in November and said that “most people feel they are doing well.” He also admitted, “but the concern is what happens in the long run.”

Unmet need two: Air testing

Unmet need number two: consistent indoor air testing. On Feb. 6, a plume filled with dozens of chemicals like phosgene and vinyl chloride blackened the skies, dispersing soot laced with cancer-causingdio­xins.

Two days later, residents were told it was safe to return home. Numerous residents reported chemical odors during EPA informatio­nal sessions.

When Jami Wallace returned to her home with her niece, Jenna, to retrieve some items, she was hit by the smell of chemicals. “When we pulled in that driveway it gets 10 times worse and I look over and I see chemicals freely flowing down the creeks. We started literally gagging,” said Wallace.

“We’re both fair complexion so the hives [show] just all over us. I grabbed the prescripti­ons, grabbed clothes out of the dryer. I was like, there’s no way in hell this is safe.”

In late February, the Texas A&M Superfund Research Center released informatio­n from their independen­t study. It revealed levels in the air of acrolein and eight other toxins that were above the acceptable EPA limit. Acrolein can cause dizziness, nausea, headaches and lung irritation.

Independen­t testing of Hilary Flint’s home revealed concerning levels of ethylhexyl acrylate, which can cause lethargy, headaches, convulsion­s and gastrointe­stinal upset. The EPA refused to test. Independen­t testing of Candice DeSanzo’s furnace filter revealed significan­tly elevated levels of dioxins.

Yet, the EPA released preliminar­y findings in March that assured the community that they were not seeing dioxins above the acceptable limit. These kinds of discrepanc­ies only created more distrust in the community and forced residents to seek private testing.

The locally-led group, Unity Council, has demanded that the EPA conduct indoor air testing before residents return home. The EPA denied their requests. Conard was denied reimbursem­ent for an air purifier by the Norfolk Southern assistance center.

Zsuzsa Gyenes evacuated after the derailment because her son started vomiting intensely to the point he couldn’t breathe. Later, she begged the EPA to do indoor air testing while they were at her home, due to the persistent chemical smell. They refused. The only indoor remediatio­n offered was the home cleaning program which was essentiall­y wiping down the walls.

Residents like her, who don’t trust that their homes are safe, fear what will happen to them when Norfolk Southern’s relocation assistance program ends, which is set to happen in February.

Imagine living there

Imagine being a resident of East Palestine and all you want is your medical costs covered and consistent indoor air testing — but instead, your town gets a new fire truck, a public park, a few festivals, a Norfolk Southern training center and railroad decals for the high school football helmets.

If you aren’t content with moving home, Norfolk Southern will pay to relocate you. All you have to do is waive all rights to sue.

Meanwhile, Biden keeps promising to visit, the FEMA coordinato­r appears and prioritize­s meeting with the agencies and officials, like Gov. DeWine and Mayor Trent Conway, who have been telling you “there are no unmet needs,” and you are so sick and tired of being sick and tired that you start to believe them.

What happened, and continues happening, in East Palestine could happen anywhere. In Rockcastle County, Kentucky, residents who were evacuated on Thanksgivi­ng Day due to the derailment of two CSX cars carrying molten sulfur, know this all too well.

 ?? Associated Press ?? Parts of a Norfolk Southern freight train that had derailed the day before in East Palestine.
Associated Press Parts of a Norfolk Southern freight train that had derailed the day before in East Palestine.
 ?? Associated Press ?? A black plume rises over East Palestine, from the controlled detonation of a portion of the derailed Norfolk Southern train.
Associated Press A black plume rises over East Palestine, from the controlled detonation of a portion of the derailed Norfolk Southern train.

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