The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

State moves to close plant temporaril­y over gas levels

Leak at BD’s Covington facility cited; company vows to oppose effort.

- By J. Scott Trubey strubey@ajc.com

The state of Georgia wants a judge to temporaril­y shut down sterilizat­ion operations at the Becton Dickinson plant in Covington, a dramatic escalation in enforcemen­t against the company that comes days after air test results near the plant showed elevated levels of ethylene oxide.

State Attorney General Chris Carr filed the complaint late Monday in Newton County Superior

Court on behalf of Gov. Brian Kemp and state environmen­tal regulators, citing a recent leak of the toxic gas that took place

over an eight-day period. The complaint alleges violations of the Georgia Air Quality Act and faults BD for failing to report the leak of 54.5 pounds of ethylene oxide from Sept. 15-22.

The complaint alleges BD “failed to recognize or disclose the duration and extent of the release,” initially stating it lasted only one day and totaled two pounds.

‘This is by no means done, but this process has taken a giant step in the right direction.’ Ronnie Johnston

Covington mayor

During the time of the release, the state alleges, BD was not in compliance with its permit requiremen­ts to destroy more than 99 percent of ethylene oxide used.

BD contends it reported the release even though it wasn’t required to because the amount of the gas released each day of the leak was below regulatory thresholds.

The complaint will be heard before a judge at a time to be determined. But the state wants BD’s operations suspended until the company can prove that it has reformed its operations and upgraded its emissi onsc ontrols.

“Afte rm onths of failed negotiatio­ns, empty promises, and misleading reports of ethylene oxide leaks, we have filed a Temporary Restrainin­g Order to suspend operations at the BD facility in Covington,” Kemp said in a statement. “Our top priority is the health and well-being of Georgia families. This measure is necessary to ensure transparen­cy and prevent behavior that threatens the safety of employees and the community.”

In a statement, BD said i to perates safely and in full compliance with its permits and will “vigorously defend” itself. The company accused Kemp and other officials of “ignoring science” and putting patients who need sterilized medical devices at risk.

“The Attorney General’s action is an unnecessar­y move given the company’s high level of cooperatio­n and is inconsiste­nt with our continued dialogue with the state to implement voluntary improvemen­ts at our Covington facility,” the company’s statement said.

BD and fellow medical sterilizer Sterigenic­s in Cobb County have come under scrutiny since July whenm edia report shig hlighted a 2018 federal Environmen­tal Protection Agency assessment that flagged areas near the plants for the potential for high cancer risk caused by long-term exposure to ethylene oxide, or EtO.

Subsequent mathematic­al modeling using the companies’ self-reported emiss ions d ata by the state Environmen­tal Protection Division narrowed the concern to areas immediatel­y around the plants. Both B D and Sterigenic­s have committed to installing millio nsofdo llar sin new emission controls as part of receiving new operating permits.

Sterigenic­s’ operations are currently suspended, and the company is battling Cobb County over its building permit.

Last week, the city of Covington asked BD to suspend operations after results of seven days of air testing near the plant found elevated levels of ethylene oxide above EPA screening guidelines. The leak overlapped with several days of air testing.

BD officials refused. Ethylene oxide levels recorded in Covington are well below federal workplace guidelines, the company said, and the release was not a threat to public health. Industry groups contend the EPA guideline sa ref ar too strict.

At a Covington City Council meeting Monday night, th es tate’s complaint received a rousing ovation.

“We are going to work with BD towar ds a solution that is best for this community,” Mayor Ronnie Johnston said. “This is by no means done, but this process has tak en a giant step i nt he right direction.”

Jason McCarthy, who runs the Covington c hapter of an activist group cal led Stop EtO, told the council: “You guys did what no one else in this area wanted to do and that’s lead. And that wasn’t easy.”

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