Carus LLC in LaSalle-Peru, Illinois, makes chemicals that are put in over 50% of the water consumed in the United States (U.S. EPA 2023 document). Its chemicals are shipped throughout the world for water treatment. Carus’ flagship chemicals, potassium permanganate and sodium permanganate are also necessary for manufacturing cocaine.
Potassium permanganate was originally made by Carus Chemical to use as an explosive for war, which they sold to the U.S. Government. Carus’ chemicals are also used in fracking, mining, and refining crude oil.
In addition to potassium permanganate, the company makes phosphates. Carus is protected as a chemical weapons manufacturer under Executive Order 2023-03 signed by Illinois Governor Pritzker in March 2023, shortly after the Carus chemical factory warehouse started on fire and rained chemicals onto the town of LaSalle, Illinois.
The excerpt below is from an article published by Chicago Reader in 2001:
Power House: The scions of the Carus family of La Salle-Peru have a hell of a tradition to contend with: every generation so far has changed the world.
“During the war Marianne had been drafted into Hitler Youth, and she worked at the western front, peeling potatoes for the soldiers digging trenches. Her father, an eye doctor, was also drafted–into the Nazi Party. After the war he spent a year and a half in an English prison camp then returned to his practice and his family.
Blouke and Marianne were married in 1951. Blouke hadn’t planned to go into the family business, but his father asked him to come up with a new manufacturing process for permanganate. So the newlyweds moved back to La Salle, and Blouke and his brother Paul spent ten years working out the kinks in their new process.
A hearing date has been set for a lawsuit filed with the Illinois Pollution Control Board against the City of LaSalle by the Illinois Attorney General’s Office for continuous violations at the LaSalle wastewater treatment plant.
The hearing will take place on Feb 29, 2024, 10:00 am, at the Ottawa Downtown Courthouse, 119 West Madison St., Ottawa, Illinois 61354, Room 206.
The public is invited to attend and comment.
The lawsuit alleges the City of LaSalle discharged pollutants into the Illinois River on multiple occasions, and it failed to file the required quarterly discharge monitoring reports for over two years.
This comes as La Salle residents have complained to LaSalle City Council about their water being yellow and having a foul smell.
Many of the chemicals that are listed on the EPA ECHO website as potentially being discharged into the Illinois and Vermillion rivers by the City of LaSalle were also in soil and furnace filters that residents tested from their homes, and in the hardened scale from a discharge pipe at Carus Chemical tested by residents in September 2023.
According to the EPA ECHO website tutorial, chemical manufacturers are allowed to discharge wastewater into municipal wastewater treatment systems (sewage plants) without reporting to the EPA’s Toxic Release Inventory system (TRI). While municipalities are not required to report to the TRI, they are required to file Discharge Monitoring Reports with the EPA, which the City of LaSalle failed to do, according to the lawsuit.
Below is a clip of the of January 8, 2024, LaSalle City Council meeting when resident Marty Schneider questioned LaSalle Mayor Jeff Grove about water quality. Mayor Grove stayed silent with his head bowed as residents complained about their water. Video by Dawn Hicks.
On the morning of January 11, a chemical manufacturing warehouse in La Salle, Illinois exploded.
Orange flames ascended into a thick black cloud over the rural town, ninety miles southwest of Chicago. Over one million pounds of a chemical called potassium permanganate were released into the atmosphere, and the purple residue coated roofs, decks, cars, and yards. Streams of purple runoff flowed into the river via storm drains, according to reports.
La Salle’s fire chief ordered residents to stay in their homes and students to stay in their schools.
“I had purple stuff on my face and in my hair,” said Jamie Hicks, a LaSalle resident caught outside when it happened.
No alarms sounded. Townspeople could see smoke but didn’t know where it was coming from and wondered what was going on.
The company’s primary product, potassium permanganate, is best known as a chemical for treating municipal drinking water, and it is also used in mining, fracking, and refining crude oil. Illicit drug manufacturers also make cocaine with it, though there is no evidence that Carus’ chemicals are diverted for this purpose.
The explosion took place after a bag of potassium permanganate was accidentally torn open by a forklift while being loaded. Known to enhance combustion, the chemical ignited a piece of cardboard, and the fire quickly spread through the warehouse, causing several explosions. The U.S. Department of Labor fined Carus $14,000 for putting their workers’ lives in danger.
The company advised community members to use peroxide and vinegar to clean their homes, and offered free car washes. Sales representatives visited homes to assess the damage and assured residents that the chemicals were safe, say locals.
“This stuff etched into fiberglass on my boat,” said La Salle resident Don Gaddis. “[It] physically burnt right into the gel coat. It ate the paint off my vehicles…. But they’re telling us it’s safe.” (The company did not respond to our request for comment, but has made public claims about its chemicals’ safety, such as that fallout can be “safely rinsed away with water.”)
Metals including barium, manganese, copper, and lead have shown up in the soil, drinking water, and air filters inside residents’ homes.
Angry neighbors have held protests outside Carus’ headquarters. Convinced that the media isn’t telling the full story, they’ve also requested documents through the Freedom of Information Act from the EPA and state and local governments.
After five months of protests, Carus finally held a town hall meeting at the local high school on May 10. La Salle residents questioned Carus executives for two hours about the company’s history, practices, and EPA violations.
Some were upset that Carus stored chemicals near their homes in a building without a permit, neglecting to inform residents that it contained potassium permanganate, which is an explosive chemical.
“You could have killed all of us!” shouted Linda Battaglia at the meeting. “Sorry means nothing if there’s no action behind it.”
Erik Dyas, a certified hazardous materials trainer, said Carus should have enlisted a HazMat team to clean up the spill.
“Is the reason you didn’t call HazMat because it costs money?” asked Dyas. “If you’re putting your workers in danger, shame on you, not to mention you’re endangering everybody else.”
The uproar stands in contrast to the company’s previous peaceful coexistence with its neighbors in La Salle, where it has operated for over 100 years.
Its founding family members emigrated from Germany in 1856 to start a smelting company, choosing La Salle because of its resources — coal and zinc — and its proximity to the Illinois River and I & M Canal. They supplied zinc for Union armaments during the Civil War.
In 1915, grandson Edward Hegeler Carus began making potassium permanganate in a bathtub in the horse barn behind the family’s mansion after learning supplies had been cut off from Germany. He sold it to the U.S. government to use in explosives.
During the second World War, Carus Chemical supplied potassium permanganate to the U.S. government and was honored by the Navy for their contribution.
Edward’s son Blouke studied chemistry under Nobel Prize-winning chemist Hermann Staudinger at the University of Freiburg, Germany. After returning to the U.S. in 1951, Blouke and his brother Paul took over the management of Carus and revolutionized how potassium permanganate was made. By 1961, the company began marketing directly to U.S. cities. Today their chemical is used in over 50 percent of water consumed in the U.S.
Blouke’s daughter, Inga Carus, took over as Carus chairman in 2005, and Carus has continued dominating the industry, expanding across the globe. The company has opened branches in China and Spain, and remains in the midst a $20 million expansion of the La Salle plant, having resumed production and shipping within a week of the January explosion.
Yet many La Salle residents continue to be furious about the explosion and its fallout, saying it has negatively impacted their health, and that the company hasn’t taken full responsibility.
Lisa Dyas, who lives near the explosion site, says her 14-year-old son spent weeks in the hospital with severe pneumonia after the fire, and the fluid had barely left his lungs four months later.
“The chemical burned a hole in my chair. Don’t tell me it’s not harmful,” said Dyas.
April Stevenson, a La Salle single mom, said she had to get three teeth pulled because of infection from the chemicals and couldn’t breathe properly when Carus resumed production. She was forced to visit the emergency room twice, and her kids became sick with respiratory issues and infections. Others complain of headaches, racing heartbeats, nausea, and sick pets.
Stevenson said Carus’s insurance rejected her medical claims and offered her only $774 — for her ruined bicycles. Many residents want a full federal investigation of the company.
“Cancer and dementia are too common in our area,” said Marty Schneider, whose yard is full of dust from the factory’s smokestacks. “My dog gets sick as hell every time that stuff is in my yard. People are getting sick. It’s time [for Carus] to start being honest.”
The company said it has received over 100 insurance claims from affected residents; some used their personal carriers instead of going through Carus, and others refused to accept a settlement that required signing a form exempting Carus from future liability.
Reads the release: “The Releasor…will not make any statements, comments, or communications that … may be considered to be derogatory or detrimental to [Carus’] good name or business reputation.”
Karry King, a student at the University of Florida College of Journalism and Communications, originally hails from the Illinois Valley. She has been covering chemical contamination and mining issues in the area since 2014.www.karryaking.wordpress.com
The U.S. Department of Labor Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA) fined Carus Chemical $15,191 and issued two citations resulting from the January fire at their manufacturing plant in La Salle, Illinois. Carus is contesting the violations and fines that were issued after the investigation was completed on July 7, 2023.
One of the violations has a gravity of ten, which OSHA spokesman Scott Allen said is the most serious violation a company can receive. “This means it could have resulted in a serious injury or fatality,” said Allen.
According to the citation, “[Carus] failed to provide employees with non-combustible materials for use in storage and handling of potassium permanganate,” and their actions were “likely to cause death or serious physical harm to employees in that employees were exposed to fire hazards due to an oxidizer coming into contact with combustible materials.”
The fire, which rapidly spread through the warehouse and resulted in several explosions and the formation of a chemical cloud that caused chemicals to rain onto the community, started after a bag of potassium permanganate was ripped open while being loaded into a semi.
The damaged bag was placed on cardboard and moved to a different location in the warehouse. The chemical that spilled onto the floor was cleaned up and put in a plastic bucket.
Security camera footage obtained from the Illinois State Fire Marshal shows the pallet with the bucket and cardboard being pushed across the warehouse floor by a forklift with a trail of black powder behind it. Smoke and flames can be seen within seconds of the pallet being put into place. Security cameras from outside the warehouse show multiple explosions coming from inside the warehouse as the product spontaneously combusted.
Denise Trabbic-Pointer, a chemical engineer and certified hazardous material manager emeritus, who is volunteering in La Salle, said the cardboard provided fuel for the strong oxidizing agent, potassium permanganate. According to the fire marshal report, heat was created from the friction of the pallet dragging across the warehouse floor, which ignited the potassium permanganate and started the cardboard on fire.
“The potassium permanganate continued to propagate the fire and caused a much larger fire with all the surrounding combustible materials in the warehouse,” said Trabbic-Pointer.
Carus is no stranger to potassium permanganate spontaneously igniting when it touches cardboard. In 1986, the company lost a case before the New Jersey Supreme Court, Mahoney v. Carus Chemical Co., Inc., in which it was sued by Thomas Mahoney, a firefighter who was injured when he responded to a fire that broke out at Inversands, a customer that Carus shipped potassium permanganate packaged in fiber-cardboard drums.
Internal documents obtained by the court revealed that Carus was aware of the risks of using fiber drums and discussed installing a sprinkler system in the warehouse as a preventative measure. Court documents state that when questioned, Carus did not dispute that they knew “the bottom and sides of the fiber drums used for shipping potassium permanganate were combustible.”
In 1975, Carus had switched from metal drums to fiber-paper drums to package potassium permanganate after estimating it could save the company $35,000 annually by using the less-expensive drums. After a series of spontaneous, unexplained fires that occurred at their warehouse in February 1976, Carus decided to stop using fiber-based packaging, but continued to ship potassium permanganate in the remaining drums that were left. On June 13, 1978, two hours after Inversands received a shipment of potassium permanganate, the fiber drums spontaneously combusted and a fire broke out. On May 21, 1986, the N.J. Supreme Court concluded that Carus was guilty of “willful and wanton misconduct.”
At a town hall meeting after the January 2023 fire, in March, Erik Dyas, a certified hazardous materials trainer, questioned Carus about their procedure for cleaning up the spill that led to the fire in January. Dyas said that proper protocol was to contact a HazMat team to clean up the spill and accused Carus of not following proper procedures. Dyas said it costs a minimum of $4,500 each time they call, and if a team must come, it costs an additional $5,000.
OSHA representative, Scott Allen, said that because Carus contested the violation, it will go to the Occupational Safety Review Commission and could take up to a year for a decision. “They will look at it and try to determine whether the violation could stand or not. They’ll have discussions with both parties to try and determine whether the violation is going to stand and whether they should pay all the penalties or not,” said Allen.
Carus was contacted for comment but did not provide one for this article. The company gave a link to a Shaw News article that was published on July 26th, which includes a comment from Lindsay Bliss, vice president of human resources at Carus Chemical.
LA SALLE, IL – Residents from La Salle and Ottawa met with Carus Chemical on Wednesday to discuss community concerns after the massive fire at Carus’ manufacturing plant in January. This was the second town hall meeting with Carus since the fire.
“As of last Friday, we have 123 outstanding claims,” said Chryss Crockett, Senior Vice President & Chief Financial Officer at Carus LLC. “Some of the clients have gone through their own personal carriers,” said Crockett. She then said that Carus will reimburse homeowners up to $2500 for their insurance deductibles and that information about filing claims and deductible reimbursement is on their website. Crocket said that coverage on vehicles is different by carrier but did not go into details.
Rich Landtiser, vice president of innovation and technology at Carus, discussed data from the PurpleAir monitor on the roof of the La Salle library that measures particulate matter in the air. He also talked about the chemicals that fell from the sky during the fire.
“There was potassium permanganate that went up in the atmosphere. It was raised up in the updrafts of the fire,” said Landtiser. He went on to say that some of the potassium permanganate decomposed in the fire and turned into potassium manganate manganese dioxide, which fell in the neighborhood, along with some potassium permanganate.
“The library data shows there isn’t any difference in the pre-fire or post-fire and plant restart in the air quality,” said Landtiser. Residents pointed out that Carus’ analysis conflicts with the Sierra Club’s analysis of the library air monitor data. Carus did not give details about how they made the analysis and announced they purchased an air monitor for the city of LaSalle to track data.
Sierra Club analysis of air monitor data during phosphate and catalyst start-up
Carus also said they were going to revamp community emergency response plans, which they did not have in place prior to the fire and are working with the city to put together a committee. Nick Mazzarelli, a resident of La Salle, asked if he could be part of the committee.
Questions were raised about safety and evacuation plans for the old K-Mart in Ottawa that is now being used by Carus to store potassium permanganate, catalysts, phosphates, sodium and zinc, among other chemicals, according to Alan Gibbs, vice president of operations at Carus.
The warehouse where the chemicals are stored is part of the Ottawa South Towne Mall, where several government offices are also located that are open to the public, including the Illinois State Dept of Employment, Health and Human Services and others. It’s also located next to a senior housing complex, recreation facilities and schools. When pressed about where safety and evacuation plans could be found for employees who work inside the building and the community, Carus did not respond.
“Does anyone here know what to do?” asked an unidentified citizen, to which the crowd replied, “No.”
“So, this can happen again. What happened in La Salle can happen again,” said the blonde-haired woman at the microphone.
LaSalle resident Marty Schneider responds to resident being served a warrant at the Town Hall meeting & the dumpster fire: https://youtu.be/pQm99ITAstk
LA SALLE, IL – The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency is proposing changes to the groundwater contamination status and monitoring at the Matthiessen and Hegeler Zinc (M & H) Superfund site in La Salle, Illinois. The contaminated site includes nearly 5,000 homes, covers most of the city of La Salle and incorporates an 80-foot-tall slag pile owned by Carus Chemicals. The 17-acre pile of slag and sinter borders the Little Vermillion River, which empties into Illinois River. From there, it empties into the Mississippi River and the Gulf of Mexico.
Clay will be used to cap the slag on the top and three sides, with terracing, which will allow wildlife and fish to nest along the base. A layer of soil will go over top of the clay so grass and native vegetation can be planted. The slag will be capped according to Illinois EPA 724 regulations.
“We didn’t originally include the groundwater because it was assumed there were institutional rules and ordinances in place, and it wasn’t a concern,” said Demaree Collier, EPA remedial project manager for the M & H Superfund site. Collier has managed the M & H site for over 20 years, before it was placed on the National Priority List.
Slag Pile along the Little Vermillion River, owned by Carus Chemical, Photo Credit: U.S. EPA
The towering pile of slag that resembles coal with burnt red sinter and appears as a wall that runs along the river, contains arsenic, lead, cadmium, copper, zinc, manganese and other contaminants, according to EPA documents. SVOCs and PCBs were also found onsite. The groundwater underneath exceeds the standards for allowable contaminants. The City of La Salle draws its drinking water from four wells located approximately three-quarters of a mile south of the contaminated site, with the closest one being approximately 3,700 feet away.
Slag Pile along the Little Vermillion River, owned by Carus Chemical, Photo Credit: Jamie Hicks
The U.S. EPA defines principial threat waste as being highly toxic, highly mobile, and cannot generally be contained. If released, it would pose a significant threat to human health and the environment. Because slag can be contained by putting a cap on it, the EPA is posing a change to the 2017 Record of Decision (ROD) from principal threat waste to a low-level threat.
The proposed amendment will change the threat level status of the groundwater contamination from principal threat waste to low level threat waste. According to Collier, this change will allow the EPA to begin designing a plan that will encapsulate the slag waste and reduce groundwater contamination.
“The cap they’re going to use is an Illinois EPA regulated cap that allows for that kind of waste with hazardous components to be held within it because it meets a whole bunch of standards, so nothing can infiltrate the cap,” said Collier.
“The idea is once we do a source control, cap the giant slag pile, consolidate the onsite main industrial slag and cap that, it could potentially reduce leaching into the groundwater. The idea is that it will reduce the level of contamination that is leaching every day,” said Collier.
Slag Pile Cap Concept Drawings, U.S. EPASlag Pile Cap Concept Drawings, U.S. EPA
The total cost of cleanup for the M & H Superfund site is estimated to be around $200 million. Once the ROD has been amended and signed, Collier said they will begin working on the cleanup design, which is expected to take approximately two years. After the design has been approved, the cleanup and capping will begin.
“Because we’ve been lucky enough that this site is receiving infrastructure bill money from the federal government, we’re getting an inpouring of millions of dollars just for this community, and we’re able to put that towards cleanup, so it’s happening a lot faster than it would have if we didn’t have this infrastructure money coming from the federal government,” said Collier. “The next step is negotiating with any responsible parties.”
M & H Superfund Site, Photo Credit: Google Earth
Sources and Contacts:
U.S. EPA, Collier, Demaree, 312-886-0214. Collier.demaree@epa.gov. Remedial Project Manager for the M & H Superfund Site.
U.S. EPA, Muhtsun, Ruth. 312-886-6595. muhtsun.ruth@epa.gov. Community Involvement Coordinator.
June 11, 2023, LA SALLE, IL – Carus donated over $300,000 to LaSalle Public Library shortly after the Sierra Club testified at the city council meeting about heavy metals and air pollution being emitted from Carus Chemicals.
Since the day of the meeting, the PurpleAir monitor on the roof of the library that records airborne particulate matter has been down.
Coincidence, or are they trying to hide something?
See for yourself. Following is a link to the purple air website that shows airborne particulate matter in LaSalle. As you will see, the monitor has been down since Thursday when they all met at the library. https://map.purpleair.com/1/a/i/mAQI/a30/p2592000/cC0…
PurpleAir Monitor, LaSalle Public Library, 5:16 am June 11, 2023. The monitor stopped recording airborne particulate June 8, 2023 at 5:41 am.
As you can also see, the particulate matter was at dangerously high levels for much of last week until the monitor went down.
Denise Trabbic-Pointer is a Toxic and Remediation Specialist at the Sierra Club Club Michigan Chapter. She serves as a national technical resource volunteer for communities impacted by releases of toxins to air, water and/or soil.
She is a Chemical Engineer with a BS and MS in Hazardous Materials Management, an EHS professional and a Certified Hazardous Material Manager (CHMM) Emeritus. She retired in 2019 after 42 years at Dupont and a spin-off company, Axalta Coating Systems.
Denise sent the below letter outlining her concerns and recommendations to the EPA and LaSalle City Council about Carus Chemicals’ manufacturing plant, Ottawa storage building and toxic waste landfill.
“Potassium permanganate. It is an oxidizer used throughout the country in the water purification process. The highlights of its classification include its ability to intensify fires and its known potential for explosion when in contact with combustible substances….
Following the Jan. 11 Carus explosion in La Salle, plans were made to move all stored materials from the La Salle location to an alternative site. Though investigation of the fire and explosion has not been completed, it might be fair to assume potassium permanganate was involved, with Carus being the largest producer of the substance in the country and the fact it was a substance released in the fire’s aftermath.
Oddly, that “alternative storage site” has turned out to be in the very midst of three of Ottawa’s primary elementary schools. Two of those schools, Central and Shepherd, are 300 yards from the main storage building. McKinley Elementary School is located approximately two blocks away….
There are about 1,000 students occupying all three schools on any given day. Young minds utterly unaware of the decisions being made on their behalf, or not being made on their behalf, by the adults in charge. Yet, given all the warehousing alternatives present in spacious La Salle County, why would one prefer a site so closely situated to so many vulnerable children? It boggles the mind.