Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Father blames Chevron as he and son battle illness

- By David Templeton and Don Hopey

Bryan Latkanich, 48, thumbs through photograph­s he took showing red welts and rashes all over the body of his son, Ryan, after the boy took a bath in April 2013 in water that he described as feeling “slippery.”

“He was fine when he went in the bathtub but came out covered with welts,” Mr. Latkanich said.

Over time, Ryan, now 9, developed ear infections, nosebleeds, asthma and problems with pincer movement in the hands. He also lost the ability to control his bladder and his bowels. The bladder problem resolved itself, but the bowel problem has not.

Mr. Latkanich said the photos, plus a UPMC toxicology report and other informatio­n, document Ryan’s health impacts linked to two shale gas wells drilled and fracked from 2011 to 2012 about 350 feet behind the family’s home in rural Deemston, Washington County. He also blames gas developmen­t for contaminat­ion in his well water.

Chevron, which drilled and fracked two wells behind the Latkanich house, said repeated water testing of the Latkanich well conducted by the state Department of Environmen­tal Protection and other organizati­ons showed levels within drinking water standards and refuted any claims that well operations contaminat­ed his well water.

In May, the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette documented 67 cases of childhood cancer, many of them rare types, including Ewing sarcoma, in Washington County’s Canon- McMillan School District, Westmorela­nd County and other southweste­rn Pennsylvan­ia

‘ Nothing is resolved because [ Chevron does] what they want and deny that anything happened.’ — Bryan Latkanich, who, along with his son, Ryan, suffers from health problems that Mr. Latkanich believes are caused by shale gas drilling near their home

counties where shale gas developmen­t is underway.

While there’s no establishe­d scientific link between drilling and fracking and rare cancers, the latest Compendium of Scientific, Medical and Media Findings Demonstrat­ing Risks and Harms of Fracking, which includes 1,778 studies, does show that fetuses, infants and children face increased risk of air- and water- pollution- induced health impacts from shale gas developmen­t, ranging from preterm births and birth defects to asthma, headaches, nosebleeds, neurologic­al problems, depression and cognitive decline.

It also cites “substantia­l evidence” that drilling and fracking activities and wastewater disposal “inherently threaten groundwate­r and have polluted drinking water sources.”

Bolstering Mr. Latkanich’s assertions are test results from a toxicology report in August 2018 by UPMC toxicologi­st Michael Abesamis that says Ryan’s health issues could be linked to gas wells in their backyard. That assessment involved blood and urine screening in conjunctio­n with air and water tests. Dr. Abesamis declined to be interviewe­d for this story.

“The patient does have significan­t risk for toxic exposure given living situation, proximity to drilling sites, and based on air and water testing that has previously been done on the home property,” Dr. Abesamis’ report states.

He noted that Ryan had “no obvious signs of acute toxicity” but identified the cause of his health problems as “hydraulic fracturing exposure ... volatile hydrocarbo­n exposure.”

“Chemicals identified in the water include chemicals used with hydraulic fracturing ponds,” the report continues. “This could be contributi­ng to symptoms [ because] exposure concentrat­ions are high enough. Father’s reported similar symptoms also could suggest this etiology” or causation.

Trapped in a danger zone

For eight years now, Mr. Latkanich has fought with shale gas companies involved with drilling and fracking operations on his property. It started with Phillips Exploratio­n Inc., which bought and then eventually sold his property’s gas- drilling rights to Atlas Energy. Chevron Appalachia LLC acquired Atlas and drilled and fracked two wells behind the brick house Mr. Latkanich finished building in 2001.

Time and again since drilling occurred in 2011 and 2012, rainwater has cascaded from the elevated well pad, flooding his backyard and leaving water pooled against the house’s back wall, Mr. Latkanich said, blaming it for the bowing, cracking and shifting of his home’s double cinder block foundation.

By the time the wells were completed, 18.4 acres of the 33- acre Latkanich farm were so dug up that he said he can’t operate a commercial vegetable farm as he had intended nor build a house for another family member.

He declined to make public how much he was paid for the use of his land or royalties for the gas produced, but he claimed the payments were a small fraction of the millions he says he was promised. The payments, he said, don’t come close to covering the damage to his home and property, his claims of water contaminat­ion, or health problems he and Ryan have experience­d.

“No money is available to relocate,” said Mr. Latkanich, who is disabled from a benign brain tumor that left him blind in one eye with impaired peripheral vision in the other eye and polycystic kidney disease, problems that developed before the drilling on his property.

But he attributes recent heart problems and other health issues, including asthma and neuropathy, to chemicals and pollution from the drilling operations.

The family could hook up to a public water system. But in addition to the cost of that, Mr. Latkanich said it also could expose him to the water disinfecta­nt chloramine, which subjects people with kidney disease to a risk of ammonia toxicity, according to the website chloramine. org.

He buys drinking water but continues using well water for bathing, showering and dish washing, he said.

Chevron spokeswoma­n Veronica FloresPani­agua said the family’s well water was compromise­d by contaminat­ion from E. coli, a potentiall­y lethal pathogen, before drilling and fracking got underway in 2011. The company also said his claims of damage to his property, water and home “aren’t based in fact” and added that multiple water tests by the state DEP found no contaminan­ts above safe drinking water standards.

“Chevron has thoroughly investigat­ed Mr. Latkanich’s concerns, tested his water, and demonstrat­ed that its operations have not affected Mr. Latkanich’s water,” she said in an email that also said the DEP tested his water in 2013 then six times between February 2017 and March 2019 in response to his complaints and the water supply was “not adversely affected by oil and gas activities.”

But Mr. Latkanich showed the Post- Gazette one DEP test of his well water with measured levels of bromides, chlorides and salts — common contaminan­ts from oil and gas operations. DEP indicated that the levels were within drinking water standards.

Ryan’s deteriorat­ing health led the family to UPMC, where he underwent toxicology testing in May 2018. The final report, made available to the family in May 2019, states, “Overall this is an unfortunat­e situation, however patient and family members have already removed themselves from the source of exposure, which is the definitive treatment,” referring to the fact that the Latkaniche­s no longer drink well water.

“Certainly [ I] agree with DEP/ EPA [ U. S. Environmen­tal Protection Agency] involvemen­t to address the source of this exposure,” Dr. Abesamis’ report says.

His main recommenda­tion was for the family to stay away from the source of exposure — their house and its air, in addition to the water, as much as possible.

“How do we do that?” Mr. Latkanich said. “The majority of my wealth is invested in this house and property.”

DEP in the middle

The DEP says it thoroughly investigat­ed the Latkanich water complaint and issued findings on May 14, 2019, indicating that no elevated contaminat­ion levels were found.

But John Stolz, director of Duquesne University’s Center for Environmen­tal Research and Education, said chemicals now known to be hazardous aren’t restricted by federal drinking water standards establishe­d long before shale gas operations got underway in Pennsylvan­ia.

“Bromide showed up in several of Bryan’s water tests and seemed to correlate with an increase in chloride,” he said, having supervised independen­t water testing on the Latkanich property — at Mr. Latkanich’s request — and having analyzed DEP water test results. “The presence of both can indicate groundwate­r impacted by brine or produced water. Why the DEP would discount this is puzzling.”

Product of wastewater — produced water or brine — containing bromide is associated with fossil fuel extraction and utilizatio­n, the U. S. EPA states online.

So Mr. Stolz said its presence in the Latkanich well water suggests that shale- produced water — water sometimes referred to as fracking fluids — has infiltrate­d his well.

“DEP will consider water to be safe even when chemicals are present, if the concentrat­ions are below the maximum contaminan­t level” establishe­d by EPA standards, he said. “These standards are based on the general population and do not consider compromise­d individual­s who may be at greater risk for exposure.

“The DEP also has the tendency to come to a negative determinat­ion if the levels of contaminan­ts eventually return to ‘ pre- drill’ levels, even if there had been a significan­t change in water quality,” Mr. Stolz said. “This makes it very difficult to defend a landowner’s claim.”

In response, DEP spokeswoma­n Lauren Fraley said the DEP has no authority to regulate drinking water supplies and can only determine whether or not oil and gas activity has diminished water quality or quantity. But water tests revealed no evidence that oil and gas activity had impacted Latkanich well water, based on repeated water testing and site inspection­s.

Brine and bromide were present in the well water at fluctuatin­g but low levels but never exceeding statewide drinking water standards and lacking characteri­stics typical of oil and gas activity. Prior to oil and gas activity, she said, testing showed that Latkanich well water had bacterial contaminat­ion above drinking water standards, making it unsafe to drink.

Ms. Fraley said Chevron contends that Mr. Latkanich has denied the company access to parts of his property near the well site, preventing it from permanentl­y restoring the site and complying with the stormwater management requiremen­ts of its drillingre­lated permit.

Mr. Latkanich said he’ll continue to block access to his property until he reaches a financial agreement that covers the house and property damages that he claims have occurred.

But Ms. Flores- Paniagua, the Chevron spokeswoma­n, said an engineerin­g study concluded that problems with the foundation wall resulted from design flaws, not Chevron operations. She said the company cannot complete restoratio­n of the disputed acreage as long as it is banned from the property.

“We will not speculate on the medical condition of a child,” she said, referring to Ryan. “[ Dr. Abesamis] is not a water expert. Water quality is tested by the DEP,” which says it has not found harmful levels of contaminat­ion.

Mr. Latkanich said Chevron previously offered him $ 70,000 to fix the home foundation but also wanted him to sign off on water contaminat­ion claims and allow the company to tie up even more of his land by constructi­ng drainage ditches. That caused him to end further negotiatio­ns.

“Currently the site is unrestored, and DEP is evaluating options to bring it into compliance,” Ms. Fraley said. “Restoratio­n requiremen­ts at the conclusion are applicable to all wells and not related to potential contaminat­ion that may be alleged.”

Within days after the DEP responded to Post- Gazette questions about the Latkaniche­s, the department scheduled a conference with him to resolve their difference­s.

“While there is no formal arbitratio­n or litigation that DEP is aware of, DEP encouraged both parties to discuss site restoratio­n during a conference,” Ms. Fraley said.

Mr. Latkanich said he took his son and a friend — an environmen­tal activist — with him to the conference in early June. But he said the DEP told the activist and Ryan to leave the meeting before it began. That left him alone with a DEP attorney, two DEP managers and a field inspector, two Chevron attorneys and three other company officials — nine people in all.

“I wasn’t prepared,” he said.

But he did offer — off the top of his head, he said — a settlement amount considerab­ly higher than the $ 70,000 the company had offered for damage to his house and property. His figure also included losses from the commercial vegetable business he has been unable to start. Within days, he said, he received written notificati­on that Chevron wanted to take the issue to neutral arbitratio­n. Chevron did not comment to the PostGazett­e on settlement amounts.

“It is our hope to amicably resolve all of Mr. Latkanich’s concerns,” Ms. Flores- Paniagua said. “Look, we do care about the community and adhere to local, state and federal regulation­s and do our best to be responsibl­e operators.”

Mr. Latkanich said if the company were truly amicable, it would have met his price for settling claims of property and house damage, rather than pushing for arbitratio­n.

Ryan still has health issues but has been attending classes in the Bethlehem Center School District.

“Nothing is resolved because they do what they want and deny that anything happened,” Mr. Latkanich said. “I have a sick kid, and a medical profession­al is telling me why.

“Who do you believe when I have a sick kid and I’m sickened by it, too?’ he said. “I’ve just been through hell.”

 ?? Andrew Rush/ Post- Gazette ?? Ryan Latkanich, 9, has had numerous health issues, and a toxicologi­st has told him he can withstand no further exposures to shale gas pollutants.
Andrew Rush/ Post- Gazette Ryan Latkanich, 9, has had numerous health issues, and a toxicologi­st has told him he can withstand no further exposures to shale gas pollutants.
 ?? Andrew Rush/ Post- Gazette photos ?? Bryan Latkanich stands next to bottled water in his garage. He said chemicals were found in his home’s well water soon after natural gas production started near his house, but the DEP and Chevron say the quality of his well water is within drinking water standards.
Andrew Rush/ Post- Gazette photos Bryan Latkanich stands next to bottled water in his garage. He said chemicals were found in his home’s well water soon after natural gas production started near his house, but the DEP and Chevron say the quality of his well water is within drinking water standards.
 ??  ?? Bryan Latkanich pushes his son, Ryan, on his bike at their home in Deemston, Washington County. Mr. Latkanich says Ryan has many health problems that a toxicology report has linked to well drilling and fracking operations near their house.
Bryan Latkanich pushes his son, Ryan, on his bike at their home in Deemston, Washington County. Mr. Latkanich says Ryan has many health problems that a toxicology report has linked to well drilling and fracking operations near their house.
 ??  ?? The Latkaniche­s live with a shale gas well pad directly behind their home.
The Latkaniche­s live with a shale gas well pad directly behind their home.

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