Chattanooga Times Free Press

Rossville spill contains cancer-causing PCBs

- BY TYLER JETT STAFF WRITER Contact staff writer Tyler Jett at 423-757-6476 or tjett@ timesfreep­ress.com. Follow him on Twitter @LetsJett.

Two days before Walker County, Ga., developmen­t officials planned to review offers to buy an old mill, a hazardous material linked to cancer spilled from the building.

Police officers and emergency workers in hazmat suits responded to the former Coats American plant in Rossville around 7 p.m. Sunday, when a resident reported seeing an oily sheen on the water in a ditch across the street. The oil came from a transforme­r that had tipped over inside the abandoned mill. Emergency responders said it contained polychlori­nated biphenyls, a chemical linked to several health risks.

No longer made in the United States, manufactur­ers once used PCBs as a coolant in transforme­rs. Multiple studies in the 1980s and 1990s concluded long-term exposure to the chemical can cause cancer. Eating PCB-contaminat­ed fish can stop men from reproducin­g and increase the risk of neurologic­al developmen­t problems in children.

Walker County spokesman Joe Legge said emergency workers contained the spill in about four hours. They believe only about as much oil spilled as would run off from a large parking lot during a rain shower.

Investigat­ors found copper in a knapsack and some tools inside the building. They believe thieves came to strip the copper out of the building and tipped over a transforme­r. Each transforme­r holds a 50-gallon drum of oil.

Legge said a $1,000 reward is offered for informatio­n leading to the arrest of the thieves.

“If anyone has seen anybody coming or going in that building recently,” Legge said, “please contact Rossville police or the Walker County Sheriff’s Office.”

Georgia Environmen­tal Protection Division spokesman Kevin Chambers said the oil spilled into a storm drain inside the building. The drain runs to the Williams Street tributary and eventually to the Tennessee River.

Chambers said, responders contained the oil with booms, long tubes that block water from running downstream. They also put pads of absorbent material in the water to soak up the oil.

He said four of the eight transforme­rs inside the building were empty Monday. But that doesn’t mean they all spilled over at once. He added that nobody has reported dead fish as a result of the spill.

“That leak could have occurred over time,” he said of the other empty transforme­rs. “So it’s not likely all of it flowed into the tributary at once.”

The EPD has asked Walker County to amend its Corrective Action Plan for the site. The county must test soil taken from the site for PCBs, which have not been found at the Coats American building before now, and for volatile organic compounds such as benzofluor­anthene and metals. If those are found, they will have to be cleaned up, EPD said.

In January, the Walker County Developmen­t Authority issued a request for proposals on the Coats American building, formerly a textile manufactur­er. The county has owned the abandoned 200,000-square foot mill on Maple Street since 2007.

The authority is supposed to review the bids during its meeting this morning, Legge said. Walker County Economic Developmen­t Director Robert Wardlaw did not return a call seeking comment Monday.

In 2005, the EPD placed the building on its Hazardous Site Inventory because benzofluor­anthene, a chemical, leaks into the groundwate­r in the building. According to an EPD assessment, the leaking does not contaminat­e drinking water. The closest well is somewhere between a half mile and one mile away.

The EPD ranks the building as a Class II site, meaning someone needs to investigat­e it more before deciding whether the environmen­tal agency needs to take action. The listing does not mention PCBs.

According to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, researcher­s have linked PCBs to several health risks.

A 1987 study of two plants that produced electrical capacitors found a “significan­t increase” in cancer among its workers, primarily in the liver, gallbladde­r and biliary tract. Three other studies of workers at plants with PCB found links to skin cancer, and two studies found links to brain cancer.

 ?? STAFF PHOTO BY ERIN O. SMITH ?? An SRT Safety team works along a blocked-off portion of Williams and Maple streets in front of the abandoned Coats American building Monday in Rossville. That’s where an oil spill with polychlori­nated biphenyls was discovered.
STAFF PHOTO BY ERIN O. SMITH An SRT Safety team works along a blocked-off portion of Williams and Maple streets in front of the abandoned Coats American building Monday in Rossville. That’s where an oil spill with polychlori­nated biphenyls was discovered.

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