" I never saw a claim at all for injury
due to Valdez. And I worked there from 1995
through 1997"
OK, I would estimate that in
that time period you would have mostly issues
surrounding the oiled communities or fishermen's
claims
There were some lawsuites in
earlier years. Some even won, but I believe the
cases were 'sealed' or were supposed to be. I
think since Exxon has not even put up a deposit
for the lawsuits with fishermen and the punitive
damages they are appealing, workers may think
there is no hope of winning a suit, and what's
the point?
"Frankly, in all the
litigation, and through all the controversy
after the spill, nobody has ever asked the
question: What about human health?" said Dr.
John Middaugh, Alaska state epidemiologist.
LA Times Article
milestone article about workers
Riki Ott, PHd in biology and
also a fisherwoman from Cordova wrote a book
that came out not long ago. If you would be
interested in reading it, I will see if I can
get you a copy.
Sound Truth and Corporate
MYTH$:
The
Legacy of the Exxon Valdez Oil Spill
How to purchase a book?
for those who want
to buy it?
Award-winning
Sound Truth and
Corporate Myths: The Legacy of the Exxon
Valdez Oil Spill (2005) reveals the
new science showing that oil is much
more toxic toxic than previously thought
to humans and wildlife.
Sound Truth provides
critical new information
for people working in oil
issues and educators.
Also with excerpts with
workers ... & interviews with some of
them
Favorite Quotes and News
Articles
*
It is my personal opinion that
until we know what has happend health-wise to
the workers of the Exxon Valdez oil spill
cleanup, and those who were close to them
(second hand solvent exposure) and a true
epidemiology picture of what happened to the
health of citizens of Valdez after 1989 ... we
will never learn the truth about the exposure to
oil and the exposure to 2-butoxyethanol in
Inipol EAP 22 (now shelved) and Corexit (used
since 1972 until the present day). One MSDS
info that I found on Corexit indicated Exxon
sold it to the Dept of Defense. Onc soldier I
communicated with strong signs of 'gulf war
syndrome' said he thought he recalled seeing a
barrel of Corexit leaking out in the Arms Room
Inipol use on Humans 8-89
I also firmly believe that had
Exxon stopped the cleanup experiment and
announced that 2-butoxyethanol was harming
workers .... it would not have been continued to
be in such widespread use, and that there may
have never been a 'gulf war syndrome.'
Although military people have
many exposures to many things and have health
damage from an assortment of things, the one
that harmed them the most, the one that is a
'match' for the CFIDS they suffer, etc is the
effects of the flu-causing chemical,
2-butoxyethanol. AND there are also many
different ways to be exposed to this chemical:
it is in gun cleaners, jet fuel, paints,
cleaning products of all kinds, and somehow I
think it is in explosive vapors ... with fumes
in one's eyes as the worst exposure.
One EVOS worker of
bioremediation workers shared with me that Exxon
had a ship nearby for the EXXON observers of the
bioremediation experiment. Exxon thought they
could protect their own, but they could not.
The chemical could blow in their direction and
expose them also.
prove FATIGUE from
Inipol
Another issue I notice is
that there are so many other things that can
take the blame when a worker collapses from
lack of oxygen of 'the fatigue' ... like it
was a heart attack ... that something else
will generally get the blame, and this
chemical's effects goes unnoticed
Nor do doctors suspect that
one chemical could do so much harm, all by
itself