EXXON Valdez cleenup deaths.
Warning To Gulf Volunteers: Almost Every Cleanup Worker
From The 1989 Exxon Valdez Disaster Is Now Dead
Are you sure that you want to help clean up the oil spill
in the Gulf of Mexico? In
a previous article we documented a number of the health dangers
from this oil spill that many scientists are warning us of, and now it has
been reported on CNN that the vast majority of those who worked to clean up the
1989 Exxon Valdez oil spill in Alaska are now dead. Yes, you read that
correctly. Almost all of them are dead.
In fact, the expert that CNN had on said that the life
expectancy for those who worked to clean up the Exxon Valdez oil spill is only
about 51 years. Considering the fact that the oil spill in the Gulf of
Mexico is now many times worse than the Exxon Valdez disaster,
are you sure you want to volunteer to be on a cleanup crew down
there? After all, the American Dream is not to make big bucks for a few
months helping BP clean up their mess and then drop dead 20 or 30 years early.
By KEITH ROGERS
LAS VEGAS
REVIEW-JOURNAL
Posted: May
10, 2010 | 12:00 a.m.
Updated:May 10, 2010
| 7:27 a.m.
Updated:
They called it the "Valdez
crud," but it was more than a cough and diarrhea.
"We thought it was a flu that was going around and everybody
kept getting it," said Merle Savage, who was general foreman of the
cleanup crews of the 1989 Exxon Valdez oil spill in Alaska 's Prince William
Sound .
Instead, the stuff that was making cleanup workers sick was a
toxic cocktail of oil droplets in mist they inhaled from spraying the shoreline
with hot water and chemicals that were used to disperse the spill's massive
black wave.
Now Savage wants today's workers to be aware of similar risks they
might face in cleaning up the even bigger BP oil spill in the Gulf
of Mexico .
Savage, who wrote a book, "Silence in the Sound," about
the Exxon Valdez cleanup, recounts those risks as she sits in the upstairs
"Alaska Room" of the North Las Vegas home where she now lives with her
son and daughter-in-law.
Many of the thousands of Exxon Valdez cleanup workers have died or
have become seriously ill from inhaling the toxic mist and handling dispersants
that contained benzene and other chemicals.
Of dozens of lawsuits that were filed by sick workers, seven were
settled out of court and the records have been sealed.
One cleanup chemical, 2-Butoxyethanol, can be absorbed through the
skin and cause blood and kidney damage resulting in headaches, respiratory
problems and even death, according to the material safety data sheet for the
dispersant, INIPOL, which was used in the cleanup of the Exxon Valdez spill.
After she wrote her book in 2003, Savage teamed up with marine
toxicologist Riki Ott to warn about the dangers involved with cleaning up oil
spills. In a video with Ott, Savage described the shoreline cleanup as being
"like a war zone."
"What we know now is the oil is 1,000 times more toxic than
we thought," Savage said. "The BP spill is going to be worse. I'm
warning workers to understand how toxic the crude oil can be."
Savage's personal experience is that the ill effects have lingered
for years.
"When I came to Las
Vegas in 1995, I was sick. I had bronchial
problems," she said. "I lived with extreme diarrhea day in and day
out for years."
During that time she has had severe pain in her joints and
underwent a biopsy for a spot on her liver.
"They said I was an alcoholic, but I don't drink and I don't
smoke," she said.
While pain pills and other medications didn't work for her
problems, Savage researched some natural remedies.
"I found out about toxic chemicals and detoxed myself with a
lemon juice concoction," she said. "And I sleep on a blanket with
magnets in it. It gets your system back in shape.
After the Exxon Valdez ran aground on March 24, 1989 , Savage signed on to be
a cleanup worker.
"I worked two weeks on the spill, holding a hose with hot
water gushing out and steam coming up," she said. "At first we didn't
have masks. But later on we had paper masks that wouldn't last a day.
"There was crude oil and dead seaweed all around. The smell
from that was horrible."
The rain gear workers wore would be cleaned using a solution that
contained benzene and other chemicals, Savage said.
She eventually was promoted to the post of general foreman.
Even though workers would become sick, most didn't want to be sent
from the boats and barges back to Valdez
because they didn't want to lose their jobs.
"Everybody on my barge was complaining and throwing up,"
she said. "Even I was sick."
Before she left her boat at the end of the cleanup, she kept
computer printouts of the workers' roster.
Little did she know then that the names would become a valuable
resource in her effort to make them and their families aware of the toxic
exposures they endured.
"I've had children who had parents who were cleanup workers
and brothers, too. I know of 30 people who have contacted me since,"
Savage said.
"Thousands of people are suffering from the Valdez cleanup with no compensation. And
there were Exxon officials on each barge. I knocked heads with a couple of
them."
Contact reporter Keith Rogers at krogers@reviewjournal.com or
702-383-0308.
Just a Few Things BP Does NOT Want You to Know…
But there are even more downright criminal activities
taking place right now. According to a government panel, new calculations
suggest that "an amount equivalent to the Exxon Valdez disaster
could be flowing into the Gulf of Mexico every
8 to 10 days," the New York Times reported on June 10.
In addition, the CNN video above discusses the health
problems suffered by the clean-up workers, and the fact that BP is strongly
discouraging any type of protective gear, such as respirators and even rubber
gloves! In the video, Kerry Kennedy mentions that the average age at the time
of death of workers who cleaned up after the 1989 Exxon Valdez spill was 51!
Today, all those clean-up workers are DEAD!
Seems BP is far more worried about their PR, buying up search terms
on Google and other search
engines, than protecting the health and welfare of their clean-up crews...
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