Houston Chronicle Sunday

Industry oversight shrinks as profits and disasters grow

Instead of cutting funds to TCEQ, Texas should take lead in protecting residents

- by Ilan Levin and Adrian Shelley

“The black stuff floating, don’t touch it,” said Troy Monk, the director of health, safety and security for the Texas Petroleum Chemical Group in Port Neches.

Port Neches residents had just survived two explosions at the TPC plant in their community. As the fire burned, they posted frightenin­g photos and videos taken from the front steps of their homes, windows blown out by the propulsive force of the first explosion at 1 a.m. the day before Thanksgivi­ng.

Three workers had been hospitaliz­ed, five residents injured by shards of glass. As many as 50,000 had been forced to evacuate. Now, they were hearing warnings that the very air might be unsafe. News stories were reporting something about cancer-causing butadiene, something else about asbestos.

“You don’t want to be downwind from this,” Monk said. But what choice did TPC give Port Neches, Groves, Nederland and

Port Arthur?

“This” was at least the fifth petrochemi­cal disaster — with Interconti­nental Terminals Co. in Deer Park, KMCO in Crosby and Exxon Mobil in Baytown, twice — this year in the region. Quickly, many observers drew a link from TPC to President Donald Trump’s recent gutting of the Chemical Disaster Rule. That link is difficult to establish without knowing what caused the Port Neches explosions, but the rule, enacted by the Environmen­tal Protection Agency during the Obama administra­tion after the deadly explosions in West in 2013, was designed to prevent exactly this.

The Trump EPA’s gutting of regulation­s meant that industry was never required to implement important protection­s for public safety, such as thirdparty audits of safety plans, root-cause analyses of disasters and anonymous reporting of safety violations. Now, companies such as TPC no longer have to inform communitie­s or first responders about the chemicals they have on site.

In the last decade, Texas has played host to the United States’ return to global energy dominance. The petrochemi­cal industry is flourishin­g everywhere from the Permian Basin to the Gulf Coast. But as industry profits have soared, Texas has cut funding for environmen­tal agencies. In fact, only one state has cut more funding than Texas. A report released this week by the Environmen­tal Integrity Project found that, adjusted for inflation, the Texas Commission on Environmen­tal Quality has faced — during this same decade of industrial expansion, the decade with disasters such as Hurricane Harvey and Tropical Storm Imelda made that much more destructiv­e by climate

change — a 35 percent budget cut, even as total state spending has climbed 41 percent.

Meanwhile, the EPA has considered the TPC plant a “highpriori­ty violator” every quarter for the last three years. And EPA data show that the plant has an unresolved violation from as far back as 2004. Right now, TCEQ is juggling several pending enforcemen­t actions against TPC for previous violations of environmen­tal laws. But the fines TCEQ levied this year to TPC were for just $41,191, $13,688 and $7,500, and the agency agreed to defer one-third of the amount. Companies know that TCEQ and the EPA will not hold them accountabl­e. They know

there can be an economic benefit for noncomplia­nce with permits. The industry-friendly approach behind the state’s enforcemen­t regime is simply not enough to prevent the disasters that threaten our lives, livelihood­s and health.

But these disasters are preventabl­e. Prevention requires more frequent inspection­s, stronger permits, improved air monitoring and more stringent enforcemen­t. But with a federal agency that guts rules designed to promote safety and a state agency with a plummeting budget, who will take the lead?

There is reason for optimism. Last week, in a moment of introspect­ion, TCEQ Executive Director Toby Baker acknowledg­ed the “unacceptab­le trend” in the region. TCEQ recently received a one-time infusion of $947,500

to pay for mobile air monitoring resources to focus on industrial pollution. This time, within days of the explosions, TCEQ was posting air quality data to its website and sharing informatio­n on a specially created one. That was an encouragin­g step, but both sites lacked informatio­n the public could use to take action. In fact, the Port Neches tesponse site posted an update claiming there were “no human health concerns” — different from Monk’s warnings.

Jefferson County ranks fifth among Texas counties for the number of stationary sources of air pollution. Right now, the county lacks the infrastruc­ture for environmen­tal monitoring and enforcemen­t. The TPC explosions could serve as the impetus for the county and other local jurisdicti­ons to take a more active role. They will find inspiratio­n in their neighbors in Harris County, including District Attorney Kim Ogg and Judge Lina Hidalgo. Ogg is aggressive­ly pursuing violators of environmen­tal laws, and Hidalgo has taken a hard look at county operations, investing millions after an analysis after the ITC fire in March found gaps in the county’s capacity to respond.

People in Port Neches may be giving thanks that this disaster was not worse. But Monk’s statements should serve as a reminder of the heavy physical and psychologi­cal tolls that come with them. Why do we tolerate it? Industry acknowledg­es it is impossible to bring the disaster rate to zero. But as Baker said, “It is imperative that industry be accountabl­e and

held to the highest standard of compliance to ensure the safety of the state’s citizens and the protection of the environmen­t.”

It’s his agency that could do that. Instead, Baker could say, “We, TCEQ, will hold industry accountabl­e. We will hold them to the highest standard of compliance.” Texans should not accept disasters as the cost of doing business. Texans should demand that industry and state and federal agencies make the necessary investment­s to protect our health and safety and stop allowing even one chemical disaster.

We should not have to live downwind of that.

 ?? Beaumont Enterprise file photo ?? The TPC plant fire in Port Neches was at least the fifth petrochemi­cal disaster in Southeast Texas this year.
Beaumont Enterprise file photo The TPC plant fire in Port Neches was at least the fifth petrochemi­cal disaster in Southeast Texas this year.

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