Citizens for
Safe Water Around Badger
E12629
Weigand’s Bay South - Merrimac, WI
53561
Phone (608)
643-3124 - Fax (608) 643-0005
Email:
info@cswab.org - Website: www.cswab.org
November 26, 2007
PRESS RELEASE
For Immediate Release
For more
information contact:
Laura Olah,
CSWAB (608)643-3124
Dr. Peter deFur,
Environmental Stewardship Concepts (804)741-2922
Dept of Public
Health Underestimates DNT Risks
Merrimac, WI
– A carcinogenic explosive which has been found in drinking water wells
near the Badger Army Ammunition Plant should have lower standards than those
proposed by the Wisconsin Division of Public Health (WDPH), a local
environmental group says. According to Dr. Peter deFur, a technical
scientific consultant hired by CSWAB, the health-based threshold for drinking
water should be 10 times lower or 0.005 parts per billion.
The WDPH recently issued an
Interim Health Advisory Level for dinitrotoluene (DNT), a common constituent of
explosives. DNT exists in six (6) different forms, termed isomers. All 6
isomers have been detected in groundwater beyond the plant boundary and in
private drinking water wells. The WDPH has recommended that the total
concentration of all 6 isomers of DNT should not exceed 0.05 parts per billion
in drinking water.
Wisconsin has
standards for the more common isomers of DNT (2,4-DNT and 2,6-DNT) but the
remaining 4 isomers do not have enforceable state drinking water or groundwater
standards.
The Army does not support the
establishment of any health-based thresholds and wants the remaining 4 isomers
to stay unregulated. Lack of regulation releases the Army from
cleanup of contaminated soils and groundwater. It also relieves the
military of requirements to replace affected wells. In an August 14 memo
submitted to the WDPH, Army toxicologists argued that available data is
“not sufficient to support the development of a health advisory for these
isomers.”
Dr. deFur maintains that the WDPH
used the correct approach by combining all the isomers together in one
limit. “If each isomer were evaluated separately, risks could be
substantially underestimated by ignoring the cumulative risks to human
health,” he said.
At the same time, deFur said that
proposed Health Advisory Level does not account for the high concentrations of
the more toxic isomers of DNT that are found in the environment, compared with
mixtures used to determine toxicity in laboratory studies.
“DNT mixtures at
contaminated sites like Badger are likely to be significantly more toxic than
those evaluated by health officials,” deFur cautioned. “Some
sensitive individuals may suffer health effects from long term exposure to DNT
concentrations that are less than the proposed limit, evidence that the
Advisory Level selected by WDPH needs to be lower.”
DNT is a powerful carcinogen, and
can also cause dizziness, headache, muscle weakness, and a blood disorder known
as methemoglobinemia. Infants are particularly susceptible to this anemic
condition.
Citizens for Safe Water Around
Badger (CSWAB) was first organized by neighbors of the Badger plant in 1990 and
continues to work for the cleanup and sustainable reuse of the site. Dr.
deFur’s report, together with the memorandums from the Wisconsin Division
of Health and the U.S. Army, are available to the public through CSWAB’s
website at www.cswab.org.
*
* *
STATISTICS:
· Technical
grade DNT is a mixture composed of approximately 76% 2,4-DNT, 19% 2,6-DNT, and
5% other DNT isomers (3,4-DNT, 2,3-DNT, 2,5-DNT, and 3,5 DNT). In
groundwater and drinking water, however, these isomers can be found independently
and in different ratios.
· At the
Deterrent Burning Grounds, a hazardous waste site at Badger Army Ammunition
Plant, the concentration of 3,4-DNT in groundwater was recently detected at
3.98 ppb and 2,3-DNT concentrations were detected at 1.16 ppb. The total
concentrations of these less common isomers are more than 100 times the safe
drinking water guidelines recommended by the Wisconsin Division of Public
Health. In comparison, 2,4-DNT and 2,6-DNT concentrations in the same
groundwater monitoring well were both found at less than 0.05 ppb.
· In Wisconsin, the
2,3-DNT isomer has been detected in 103 groundwater and private water wells at
concentrations as high as 2,200 ppb. The 3,4-DNT isomer has been detected
in 37 wells at levels as high as 419 ppb. The 3,5-DNT isomer has been
detected in 20 wells at concentrations as high as 23.9 ppb and the 2,5-DNT
isomer has been detected in wells at concentrations as high as 1.5 ppb.
· In
northern Wisconsin, the E.I. DuPont de Nemours
& Co. ran the DuPont Barksdale
Explosives Plant from 1905 to 1971. The company produced TNT, dynamite and
other explosives for the military during World Wars I and II, and for the
mining industry. Starting in 1997, tests found residues of explosive chemicals
in 17 drinking water wells located between the site and Lake
Superior. Two forms of dinitrotoluene (DNT) found in
private well water were above the State of Wisconsin
groundwater standard.
· According
to the Wisconsin Division of Public Health, DNT has been detected in soils and
groundwater at Fort McCoy, an
active military installation near Sparta, Wisconsin.
· DNT is
an environmental contaminant at dozens of military bases nationwide including
Fort Wingate Army Depot in New Mexico, the Joliet Arsenal and Savanna Army
Ammunition Plant in Illinois, Camp Edwards in Massachusetts, Weldon Springs
Ordnance Works in Missouri, Umatilla Army Depot in Utah, the Hawthorne Army
Depot in Nevada, and Radford Army Ammunition Plant in Virginia.
Examples of U.S. Sites where DNT has been identified as a Contaminant of
Concern:
Region I: Camp Edwards Study
Area (MA)
Region II:
Vieques, Puerto Rico (DNTs are potential contaminants
of concern; investigations are still pending)
Region III: Radford
Army Ammunition Plant (VA), Fort Belvoir – Engineering Proving Ground
site (VA)
Region IV: Alabama Army
Ammunition Plant, Milan Army
Ammunition Plant (TN), Volunteer Army Ammunition Plant (TN)
Region V: Badger
Army Ammunition Plant (WI), Former DuPont Barksdale Works (WI), Savanna Army
Ammunition Plant (IL), Joliet Army
Ammunition Plant (IL), Ravenna Army
Ammunition Plant (OH), Twin Cities Army Ammunition Plant (MN)
Region VI: Fort Wingate Army
Depot (NM), Louisiana Army
Ammunition Plant (LA), Longhorn Army Ammunition Plant (TX)
Region VII: Weldon
Spring Ordnance Works (MO), Nebraska
Ordnance Plant, Iowa Army
Ammunition Plant, Sunflower Army Ammunition Plant (KS), Cornhusker Army
Ammunition Plant (NE)
Region VIII: Pueblo
Chemical Depot (formerly Pueblo Army Depot)
Region IX: Hawthorne Army
Depot (NV)
Region X: Umatilla
Army Depot (UT)
ATTACHED PDF:
· Fact Sheet: Department of Public Health Underestimates DNT
Risks
· Fact Sheet: DNT – The Importance of Testing for All Six
Isomers (Testing & Trends)
· CSWAB’s Formal Comments to the Wisconsin Division of
Health on Interim Health Advisory Levels for DNTs
· Wisconsin Division of
Public Health, DNT Interim Health Advisory documentation
· U.S. Army Center for Health
Promotion and Preventive Medicine (CHPPM) DNT memo
--
Laura Olah,
Executive Director
Citizens for Safe
Water Around Badger
E12629 Weigand's Bay
South
Merrimac, WI 53561
(608)643-3124
Email:
info@cswab.org
Website: www.cswab.org