- Chemical spill pollutes the waters of West Virginia.
- OSHA officials are investigating to see how the chemical leaked in river.
CHARLESTON, W.Va. (AP) â" A company president apologized to West Virginia residents for a chemical leak that got into a public water treatment system, and a state agency ordered Freedom Industries to remove its remaining chemicals from the site.
About 300,000 people in nine counties entered their third day Saturday without being able to drink, bathe in, or wash dishes or clothes with their tap water. The only allowed use of the water was for flushing toilets.
Officials remain unclear when it might be safe again.
Federal authorities, including the Occupational Safety and Health Administration, or OSHA, began investigating how the foaming agent escaped from the Freedom Industries plant and seeped into the Elk River. Just how much of the chemical leaked into the river was not yet known.
âWeâd like to start by sincerely apologizing to the people in the affected counties of West Virginia,â company President Gary Southern said. âOur friends and our neighbors, this incident is extremely unfortunate, unanticipated and we are very, very sorry for the disruptions to everybodyâs daily life this incident has caused.â
Some residents, including John Bonham of Cross Lanes, were willing to accept Southernâs apology.
âChemical Leak Pollutes West Virginia Residents Waterâ
âYeah, I understand that stuff can happen,â said Bonham, who also works in the chemical industry. âI donât think itâs going to get him out of legal liability. OSHA is the one theyâre going to have to answer to.â
Officials are working with a Tennessee company that makes the chemical to determine how much can be in the water without it posing harm to residents, said Jeff McIntyre, president of West Virginia American Water.
âWe donât know that the waterâs not safe. But I canât say that it is safe,â McIntyre said Friday.
For now, there is no way to treat the tainted water aside from flushing the system until itâs in low-enough concentrations to be safe, a process that could take days.
The leak was discovered Thursday morning from the bottom of a storage tank. Southern said the company worked all day and through the night to remove the chemical from the site and take it elsewhere. Vacuum trucks were used to remove the chemical from the ground at the site.
âWe have mitigated the risk, we believe, in terms of further material leaving this facility,â Southern said. He said the company didnât know how much had leaked.
The tank that leaked holds at least 40,000 gallons, said state Department of Environmental Protection spokesman Tom Aluise, although officials believe no more than 5,000 gallons leaked from the tank. Some of that was contained before escaping into the river, Aluise said.
Freedom Industries was ordered Friday night to remove chemicals from its remaining above-ground tanks, Aluise added.
The company was already cited for causing air pollution stemming from the odor first reported Thursday, Aluise said.
The primary component in the foaming agent that leaked is the chemical 4-methylcyclohexane methanol. The spill has forced businesses, restaurants and schools to shut down and forced the Legislature to cancel its business for the day.
Gov. Earl Ray Tomblin said the Federal Emergency Management Agency and several companies were sending bottled water and other supplies for residents.
âIf you are low on bottled water, donât panic because help is on the way,â Tomblin said.
At a Kroger near a DuPont plant along the Kanawha River, customers learned the grocery store had been out since early Friday.
Robert Stiver was unable to find water at that and at least a dozen other stores in the area and worried about how heâd make sure his cats had drinkable water.
âIâm lucky. I can get out and look for water. But what about the elderly? They canât get out. They need someone to help them,â he said.
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Associated Press researchers Rhonda Shafner and Monika Mathur in New York and AP writers Jonathan Mattise, Brendan Farrington, Mitch Weiss and Pam Ramsey in Charleston; Ray Henry in Atlanta; and John Flesher in Traverse City, Mich., contributed to this report.
Copyright 2014 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
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