The Standard Journal

Company’s response to water worries: Silence

- By Emery P. Dalesio

RALEIGH, N. C. — Americans have grown accustomed to hearing apologies from everyone from cheating car-makers to cheating presidents, but a Fortune 500 chemical company with a pollution problem in North Carolina is following a different model: don’t apologize, don’t explain.

For six months, Wilmington, Delaware-based Chemours Co. has faced questions about an unregulate­d chemical with unknown health risks that flowed from the company’s plant into the Cape Fear River, which provides drinking water for hundreds of thousands of people.

The company has said virtually nothing in its own defense about chemicals it may have discharged for nearly four decades, and it skipped legislativ­e hearings looking into health concerns.

Earlier t his month, North Carolina environmen­tal regulators said t hey might f i ne Chemours, revoke its license to discharge treated wastewater into the nearby river and open a criminal probe.

State officials said the company chose silence over reporting a chemical spill last month as required.

In a rare response, Chemours said it’s committed to operating the plant, which employs about 900, “in accordance with all applicable laws and in a manner that respects the environmen­t and public health and safety.”

New tests have detected the chemical GenX, used to make Teflon and other industrial products, at levels beyond the state’s estimated but legally unenforcea­ble safety guidepost in 50 private water wells near Chemours’ Fayettevil­le plant and at a water treatment plant in Wilmington, about 100 miles downstream.

There are no federal health standards addressing GenX and the U.S. Environmen­tal Protection Agency classifies it as an “emerging contaminan­t” to be studied.

Lack of informatio­n about the chemical, its prevalence and health effects has disturbed people across eastern North Carolina.

John Fisher, 77, said when he moved into his home 20 years ago the company’s predecesso­r, DuPont, would invite neighbors through the gates for picnics and plant tours. But the only contact he’s had with Chemours was a notice a couple of weeks ago that his water well needed testing, and its outside vendor arranging to drop off bottled water.

“They haven’t officially gotten a hold of us saying, hey, we feel sorry for you, this is what we’re going to do for you,” Fisher said.

Fisher said he wonders whether GenX or other chemicals in his well water caused the cancer deaths of his dog and his daughter’s dogs next door.

“They would get big balls hanging off their bellies and they were all cancerous,” Fisher said. “We couldn’t figure out why all our dogs were dying of cancer.”

DuPont began using GenX to replace another fluorinate­d compound after neighbors of the company’s Parkersbur­g, West Virginia, plant claimed in more than 3,500 lawsuits that the compound made them sick. DuPont spun off Chemours into a separate company two years ago.

A j ury i n July 2016 found the two companies liable for a man’s testicular cancer that he said was linked to a chemical emitted by the West Virginia plant.

The two companies this year agreed to pay nearly $671 million to settle further lawsuits.

 ?? Ken Blevins / The Star-News via AP ?? This photo shows the Fayettevil­le Works plant near Fayettevil­le, N.C. Wilmington. Delaware-based Chemours Co. has faced questions for six months about an unregulate­d chemical with unknown health risks that flowed from the company’s plant near...
Ken Blevins / The Star-News via AP This photo shows the Fayettevil­le Works plant near Fayettevil­le, N.C. Wilmington. Delaware-based Chemours Co. has faced questions for six months about an unregulate­d chemical with unknown health risks that flowed from the company’s plant near...

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