Sierra Club calls on EPA to take action after Carus Chemical explosion in LaSalle.

The Sierra Club has been a wonderful resource for the community as we navigate through the fallout of the Carus Chemical disaster.

As Hannah and Sonya wrote in the below article, what happened that day was straight out of a disaster movie – a chemical cloud covered the sky and rained down on the City of LaSalle, Illinois.

Residents who live closest to the chemical plant had the most fallout.

Emails obtained through FOIA revealed that Carus Chemical instructed the City how to handle the situation and when to inform residents as the events unfolded that day.

Residents were not made aware of the situation until approximately 45 minutes after the explosion of chemicals and the fire broke out.

They were told to shelter in place and not evacuate the area as toxic smoke filled the air.

Despite having a chemical plant next to a residential neighborhood, there was not a hazmat plan in place.

Brownfield, the company the City of LaSalle hired to perform tests to determine cleanup efforts, did not test for the full spectrum of chemicals and metals and released only partial results at the LaSalle city council meeting last Monday, February 6, 2023.

Thankfully, one LaSalle resident, Jamie Hicks, who lives in the neighborhood hit hardest, was not accepting their explanations or results.

Test results obtained through FOIAs sent to the EPA reveled much more than what the City of LaSalle and Carus Chemical released.

Below is a list of chemicals and heavy metals from samples taken by the EPA that were tested and had levels beyond what the EPA considers acceptable.

These chemicals and metals are in peoples’ yards, where their pets and children play, on their homes, decks, and in their pools and garden beds.

Some residents were outside when the cloud of toxins passed over.

As chemicals and ash rained down from the sky, their bodies were covered in it.

The Sierra Club has been incredibly helpful with helping us understand what this means.

Below is an article published by Sonya Lunder, the Senior Toxic Policy Advisor, and Hannah Lee Flath at the Sierra club.

THANK YOU, Sierra Club for your support and knowledge.

 

2-Butanone (MEK)

Acetone

Aluminum

Antimony

Arsenic

Barium

Boron

Cadmium

Chromium

Cobalt

Copper

Cyanide

Lead

Magnesium

Manganese

Mercury

Nickel

Potassium

Selenium

Sodium

Strontium

Thallium

Vanadium

Zinc

#rural#ruralamerica#contamination#cancercluster#Illinois#ResourceCurse#starvedrockcountry#carusfire Sierra Club IllinoisSierra Club

 

 

 

Read Sierra Club’s article:

Toxic Ash Is Raining Down in Illinois. It’s Time for the EPA to Step Up.

The nation’s environmental watchdog needs to enact the strongest possible protections for workers and fenceline communities

https://www.sierraclub.org/sierra/toxic-ash-raining-down-illinois-it-s-time-epa-step?fbclid=IwAR3O1q74dqs-m2ziUImTcpclOwEpQSiZcLCMwQvOwgmTNsdSZlTsBHo7DnQ

 

 

Brownfield Environmental Report Results – Carus Chemical Fire

Brownfield was hired by the City of LaSalle to conduct soil tests after the fire. However, they only tested for a few chemicals and did not test for heavy metals. The EPA rest results (posted above) show high levels of several metals and chemicals that were not tested for by the company hired by the City of LaSalle..