Hundreds of workers need someone of influence to "stand up for them" 
as it is a slow version of  9-11 in their situation 
 
Do you know any EVOS workers? Publicity can find them - Help People to Care!
 
 
 Dave Page, Exxon researcher gave 60 minutes a hard time on their March, 1999 story about the Valdez area Prince Wm Sound damage from oil.  He was right that the winter storms really did the cleanup...
what a shame they ever used the surfactant (only 'technically' a fertilizer) inipol EAP 22
- health damaged for no reason... but maybe there can be a stop put to using it in the future! 
 
Not much but prayer can help the workers health damaged in the Exxon Valdez Oil Spill cleanup
- but future lives could be protected if inipol EAP 22 was removed from EPA's OK to use list  http://www.valdez.com/inipol/pages/epa_approval.htm
 

These workers could be anywhere in the country now... can you help find them? 

Much info here; big story; write your own

www.valdezlink.com/inipol/pages/check.htm

 

What happened to the Exxon Valdez Oil Spill cleanup workers...

should never have happened to anyone. 

The untold story.

 

Do you know any EVOS workers?

www.valdezlink.com/contact.htm 

 

 
Health study starting up soon!  www.valdezlink.com/inipol/pages/all.htm  Funding & helpers needed

... even check the jail population ...

 
 Could you inquire of folks if any of them worked on the Exxon Valdez Oil Spill Cleanup Aug, 1989 &/or through the second season of 1990?  These could have had some exposure to the inipol EAP 22 chemicals used in EVOS bioremediation
 - depending on the job they did.      
 
 
For those that did have over exposure, they should have a low red blood cell count.  Dry skin.  Gushing bleeding possible.  But what might look like a heart attack, could actually be a collapse from the body ceasing to make red blood cells.  Hemolytic anemia, whether immune or non-immune, I don't know - but caused from solvents:  the body's premature destruction of its own red blood cells.  If chemically exposed, check for hemolytic anemia; if exposed to oil, check for aplastic anemia  www.valdezlink.com/editor.htm 
 
Thank you for keeping this in mind.  (Enlarged liver, spleen, gall bladder is a side effect also)  After a few years kidney failure is common; but blood damage shows up right away; also central nervous system damage causes a clinical type depression & their temperament is grouchy to say the least.
 
 

It would be very good for the newspapers to include in their obituaries (for those ages 31-73)

whether or not the deceased worked in the EVOS cleanup. 

Cancers are very probable.  It might be something for you to keep your own tally on.

Worst of all the inipol EAP 22 bioremediation chemical was a surfactant... & should never have been put on the beaches... maybe you can help to keep that from harming people in the future

 

 
Worker Survey   http://www.valdezlink.com/inipol/pages/survey.htm

 
On a personal note:  Pass on to a friend.... www.valdezlink.com/enjoy.htm  cute!

Care 'n Share