Texarkana Gazette

Texas officials ignore dioxin spread in Houston waterways

- By Lise Olsen

HIGHLANDS, Texas— Evelyn and Jerome Matula were still polka-dancing newlyweds in 1950 when they spotted a half-finished cottage in the woods along the San Jacinto River east of Houston. It seemed idyllic, with panoramic views and a sandy path to the river, where their three children and later their grandchild­ren fished. Now, the retired refinery worker and former educator fear their kin were poisoned by carcinogen­ic dioxin in the fish and well water.

Decades ago, paper mill waste barged down the Houston Ship Channel was buried across the river. From their bluff today, the Matulas can see orange buoys marking a federal Superfund hazardous waste site establishe­d in 2008.

An agreement announced last month has cleared the way for the San Jacinto Waste Pits to finally be cleaned up. But dioxin damage already has spread far beyond the waste pits, the Houston Chronicle and The Associated Press found.

More than 30 hotspots— small sites where dioxin has settled—have been located in sediments along the river, the Houston Ship Channel and into Galveston Bay, according to University of Houston research conducted from 2001 to 2011 and pieced together by the news organizati­ons.

The affected areas are alongside parks and residentia­l neighborho­ods with thousands of homes. But the residents' wells or yards have not been tested by state health officials.

Details about the hotspots have not been made public by Texas environmen­tal regulators, who used more than $5 million in federal money to pay for the research. In 2012, they ended a fact-finding committee that oversaw the project and had proposed new standards for dioxin and PCBs that could have been costly to corporate polluters.

The Texas Commission on Environmen­tal Quality refused to release the full results of the studies that identified the sources of dioxin and PCBs, even to academic researcher­s, Harris County officials and lawyers who later sued companies over environmen­tal damage. The research funding ended in 2011, leaving unanswered questions about whether toxic damage spread even farther during hurricanes Ike and Harvey.

The university data linked hotspots primarily to three sources: the leaking waste pits, the original site of the paper mill in Pasadena and a major chemical complex in nearby Deer Park that is part of another Superfund site, records show. None has been cleaned up.

Under the Clean Water Act and state law, Texas authoritie­s were required to address dioxin and PCBs in the river and ship channel, waterways officially designated as "impaired." Setting such standards could have forced the responsibl­e companies to clean up and upgrade contaminat­ed stormwater and wastewater treatment.

All three TCEQ commission­ers, appointed by the governor, declined an interview request.

Carl Masterson, a former Houston-Galveston Area Council staffer who for years served as a facilitato­r for the committee, said state regulators failed to do their duty. Once "the meetings were done, the project was over and the findings were in, the TCEQ should have approved" the committee's recommenda­tions, he said.

In a statement, the agency said it's still working on "a document summarizin­g the source characteri­zation of dioxin loads in the Houston Ship Channel/ Upper Galveston Bay system."

The state's approach to dioxin follows the same pattern the Chronicle and AP previously identified in an investigat­ion into air and water pollution releases from Hurricane Harvey. The news organizati­ons found that state and federal regulators did little in response to massive releases of toxic pollution reported during and after Harvey's torrential rains.

Similarly, Texas regulators have not followed up on the dioxin research with additional testing to see if wells, parks or property also are contaminat­ed by the pollutants that formed the toxic hotspots.

In the Matulas' case, their grandson Sean, a 33-year-old emergency manager, paid to have samples from the cottage's two wells tested after learning he suffers from long-hidden heart and kidney defects that may shorten his life.

His mother had moved to the cottage when she was pregnant with him. Recent test results showed that the family well used at the time he was born tested at twice the level of dioxin considered healthy for human consumptio­n.

"I have been told," Sean Matula said of conversati­ons with his doctor, "that I am lucky to be walking."

LEAKING WASTE PITS

The Texas Department of Health Services warned in 1990 that catfish and crabs in the San Jacinto and parts of upper Galveston Bay area contained so much dioxin that local seafood posed potential health risks—and banned its consumptio­n by children and pregnant women.

The Environmen­tal Protection Agency already had been funding initiative­s to clean up the nation's impaired rivers and identify sources of toxic substances in sediments and water that poisoned fish. The actions came in response to revelation­s in the 1980s that one of the most dangerous dioxin forms had been unleashed into the environmen­t from paper bleaching and chemical manufactur­ing.

Even in microscopi­c doses, those dioxin types have been linked to birth defects as well as cancer and reproducti­ve problems.

Some of the most likely sources were two former paper mills and the huge chemical complex in Deer Park. Then a state park employee discovered sand pits near a highway bridge where pulp from the larger paper mill in Pasadena had been barged in the 1960s, buried and forgotten.

A video of the site taken around 2009 shows that fishermen and others had carved a path across unmarked sand pits partially submerged by the river. Particles of what looks like an egg carton were shearing off the shore into the water. Those crystallin­e fragments are examples of dioxin sediment, said Larry Koenig, who for 10 years was the TCEQ staff member assigned to the dioxin study.

He and other experts have estimated that about half the waste originally buried in pits already had escaped into the environmen­t before the site was rediscover­ed.

Koenig retired in 2010, in part, he said, because of frustratio­n over inaction on any proposed water quality standard.

A dozen hotspots identified by teams of University of Houston researcher­s were scattered around those pits.

Some of the worst hotspots became part of the San Jacinto Waste Pits Superfund site a decade ago. But others are miles downstream, near riverside neighborho­ods in Baytown and LaPorte.

Another source of hotspots was chemical plants along Patrick Bayou in Deer Park, according to the committee's reports and research. The bayou had been identified as a priority site for Superfund cleanup even before the state committee's dioxin water quality work began.

The committee formed by state regulators to study dioxin included representa­tives of two companies ultimately found to be major contaminat­ion sources: Shell Chemical and OxyVinyls, a subsidiary of Occidental Chemical.

By 2009, the corporate representa­tives, along with environmen­talists and government officials, had reviewed proposed water quality standards for PCB and dioxin that could have sparked regulatory or legal action against their companies.

Most of Patrick Bayou's dioxin and PCB pollution was from historic industrial activities. But Shell and Occidental Chemical would likely have faced pressure to address contaminat­ed runoff, according to TCEQ documents, UH research, EPA records and Hanadi Rifai, the UH environmen­tal engineerin­g professor who oversaw the research teams.

Representa­tives of OxyVinyls and Shell expressed no objections to proposed pollution-reduction reforms in public meetings, according to minutes and interviews.

But EPA records show that during the time the dioxin cleanup committee was making its recommenda­tions, neither company had agreed to pay to address polluted Patrick Bayou. EPA subsequent­ly named Shell Chemical, Occidental Chemical and Lubrizol, all chemical companies with operations in Deer Park, as "potentiall­y responsibl­e parties", according to EPA records.

The companies still have not agreed to fund the cleanup of Patrick Bayou, 16 years after the area was designated as a Superfund site.

At the San Jacinto Waste Pits, federal officials said in April that Internatio­nal Paper Company and McGinnis Industrial Maintenanc­e Corporatio­n had pledged to pay design costs for the plan to remove 161,000 tons of carcinogen­ic paper mill waste buried

 ?? Associated Press ?? ■ This March 19 photo shows damage to a home in the small neighborho­od of San Jacinto River Estates in Channelvie­w, Texas, which was flooded during Hurricane Harvey and remains damaged. The neighborho­od is just north of the waste pits Superfund site...
Associated Press ■ This March 19 photo shows damage to a home in the small neighborho­od of San Jacinto River Estates in Channelvie­w, Texas, which was flooded during Hurricane Harvey and remains damaged. The neighborho­od is just north of the waste pits Superfund site...

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