EARTHWORKS

Wyoming gas-field residents call for Public Health studies related to oil & gas chemicals and drinking water contamination

August 18, 2010

Pavillion health survey reveals high rate of respiratory impacts affecting residents living amidst water contamination

Joint Release:
Powder River Basin Resource Council * EARTHWORKS' Oil & Gas Accountability Project

Pavillion, Wy - EARTHWORKS and Powder River Basin Resource Council today released the results of a community-based health survey conducted in Pavillion, Wyoming. The survey results come after the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) identified known oil and gas chemicals in residents' drinking water wells last year as part of a Superfund Investigation. The voluntary health survey was conducted by Wilma Subra on behalf of the groups. Ms. Subra is a chemist and MacArthur Genius award winner renown for her work with communities impacted by industrial contamination.

People here are sick. Our water, air, soil, and our health are all connected, says John Fenton, Pavillion resident with a contaminated drinking water well. Thanks to the EPA we will know what chemicals are in our water. Now we need to know the chemicals in our air, our homes and our bodies.

Since the development of the oil and gas resources in the area, Pavillion residents have reported contamination and health impacts that they suspect are coming from Encana's Pavillion/Muddy Ridge gas-field. Residents' symptoms have ranged from rashes and headaches to neurological disorders and cancers. The survey found 94% of participants reported health impacts that are known effects of chemicals identified last year in drinking water wells.

A significant survey finding also includes 81% of participants reporting respiratory ailments. This indicates that a primary pathway of human exposure to chemicals in the area may be occurring through air pathways, such as industrial releases and from showering or washing dishes with contaminated water. Based on the survey, the landowners and groups are calling for regulators to identify the source of contamination, conduct residential and regional air-monitoring, and to implement medical monitoring in which residents with health impacts can receive blood and urine testing.

"We have spent thousands on doctors and tests", says Jeff Locker, a Pavillion landowner with contaminated water. Locker and his wife have struggled with respiratory and neurological symptoms, constant nausea and headaches, and aggressive pre-cancerous growths. "It's big profit over people's health. Our health officials need to step forward. "

While Encana and regulators claim that the source of the water contamination has not been identified, oil and gas production is the only industrial activity in the area. The EPA is planning to release additional drinking water tests to the public on August 31st. The State of Wyoming's Department of Environmental Quality is slated to place an air monitor in the Pavillion area in late September that will assess regional air quality.

"It's critical that our agencies identify the source of the contamination and study human health", said Subra. " We can't adequately address health impacts without fully understanding the source of the contamination on both a cumulative and household level. " Subra insists that in addition to more water testing and regional air sampling, the community needs residential air sampling and medical monitoring.

-- ENDS --


For more information:

Survey:

Community Health Survey Results of Pavillion, Wyoming Residents

Contacts:

Tagged with: wyoming, public health, oil and gas, drinking water

On Twitter

Bare-Knuckled Advice From Veteran Lobbyist: ‘Win Ugly or Lose Pretty’ -- Energy Industry Talk Secretly Taped nyti.ms/1wOx2Fq
Denton #fracking ban: reasonable regulation or property rights violation? | @DallasBizNews bit.ly/1wJTOfp

On Facebook