Carus Spells Out Events It Believes Led To Fire

Jeremy Aitken, Starved Rock Media, Mar 30, 2023

“The chemical company says following a comprehensive review, the root cause of the La Salle plant fire was a combination of events stemming from damaged packaging of Potassium Permanganate.

A release from the company says the potassium was being transported from the warehouse to a waiting truck and was damaged in transit by a forklift truck.

Workers cleaned up spilled material and moved the damaged packaging to a separate location.

As the damaged packaging of chemicals was being moved, friction caused by the forklift truck moving a support pallet likely ignited material underneath the pallet.”

Update: Illinois Fire Marshal Report and warehouse security footage.

Read the full article: https://www.starvedrock.media/wlpo/carus-spells-out-events-it-believes-led-to-fire/article_1b1fbd26-cf37-11ed-85c4-ebd7be2b47f1.html?fbclid=IwAR0qwaVJLxQ_PPY2LAEu5UQuD5t7UP5ILnxDfWOcCT5Ybjp2YBBuPAHvDBY

EPA Recommendations from Sierra Club for Resident Safety after Carus Chemical Fire and Explosion

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.

Opinion | Write Team: Are we condemned to repeat the same mistake?

By Paul Wheeler, Shaw Local News

March 27, 2023

“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.

Read the full article: 👇

https://www.shawlocal.com/mywebtimes/opinion/columns/2023/03/27/write-team-are-we-condemned-to-repeat-the-same-mistake/

Is Toxic Wastewater From Carus Chemicals Manufacturing Plant in LaSalle, Illinois, Contaminating the Vermillion River & Ending Up In The Gulf of Mexico?

How much toxic waste from the Carus Chemical plant in La Salle, Illinois, ends up in the Vermillion River, pictured in these photographs, right next to Carus’ wastewater lagoons?

The Vermillion empties into the Illinois River just a few miles from Carus Chemicals’ LaSalle manufacturing plant. The Illinois River empties into the Mississippi River.

The Mississippi River empties into the Gulf of Mexico .

According to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), there is a 6,334 square mile dead zone in the Gulf of Mexico, an area of low oxygen which kills marine life. https://oceantoday.noaa.gov/deadzonegulf-2021/welcome.html#:~:text=The%202021%20Gulf%20of%20Mexico,over%20the%20past%20five%20years.

Agriculture chemical runoff has been blamed for this dead zone, but have chemical factories, industrial polluters and mines along rivers that connect to the Mississippi River been taken into consideration or studied for their contribution to the dead zone?

The effects of Carus Chemicals’ actions have consequences far beyond LaSalle.

Chemical Wastewater Pipe Discharging into the Vermillion River from Carus Chemical

Visit Protect Starved Rock to learn more:

Blog: http://www.protectstarvedrock.wordpress.com

Facebook: www.facebook.com/ProtectStarvedRock

Carus Chemical Fire | Moment of Ignition | YouTube Video

Carus Chemicals company burst into flames on the edge of a residential neighborhood, and not one alarm can be heard.

Neighbors who saw the smoke and flames didn’t know what was happening.

One resident, Jamie Hicks, ran out of his house, got in his truck, and drove down the street to check on his neighbor whom he thought her house was on fire.

When he Jamie got out of his truck, a purple granular chemical fell from the sky and covered his entire body.

The chemical cloud forming above the fire in this video rained chemicals over three communities.

Samples of air filters taken from residents’ homes show barium, copper, lead, manganese, zinc and mercury.

Homes where chemicals landed are damaged from the oxidation of the chemicals and metals.

Paint is peeling, shingles are deteriorating, metal is rusting, and neighbors have been experiencing health problems that not exist before the fire.

Carus has not taken responsibility for cleanup since this event and has moved illegally stored chemicals out of the Apollo Warehouse to an old mall in Ottawa located near a residential neighborhood.

Do you think there should be alarms on chemical plants and tier 2 storage facilities in fence line communities to warn neighbors if a disaster occurs?

Illinois Fire Marshal Report & Secrutiy Footage inside the Carus warehouse:

EPA: Carus Chemical Too Big to Fail

Carus Chemical is the only producer of potassium permanganate and sodium permanganate in the Western Hemisphere.

This explains a lot about the lack of accountability, and the City of LaSalle bending over backwards and covering for Carus as residents became aware of illegally stored product in a crumbling building behind their homes.

Because of its unique geology and minerals, La Salle County, Illinois, has become a center for resource extraction and chemical manufacturing.

Sierra Club Presentation – LaSalle City Hall Meeting – March 6, 2023 Full Audio & Slideshow

LS Council gets tough analysis of Carus fire Monday night

by: John Small, Starved Rock Media, March 7, 2023

LaSalle City Council got grim numbers about the Carus Chemical fire Monday night. At Mayor Jeff Grove’s invitation, the Sierra Club‘s MIla Kellen Marshall P.hD and Denise Trabbic-Pointer spoke to the Council about testing done immediately after the January 11th fire. Speaking by phone from Michigan, Trabbic-Pointer said particulate matter was sampled for about 19 hours after the blaze.

This dust is so fine, she said, it gets into the deepest parts of the lungs. More troubling said Trabbic-Pointer, were results showing levels 12 points above the 24-hour regulatory limit. Later, an examination of eight furnace filters taken from affected homes showed the presence of the metals Barium, Copper, Lead, Manganese and Zinc. Alderman Jim Bacidore asked Trabbic-Pointer is it safe outside for kids and pets:

For almost two hours, residents whose property took the brunt of the chemical laden smoke, took more shots at Carus and sometimes the city. The question of legal action against Carus was discussed. City Attorney Jim McPhedran said it’s something that’s costly and a deeply involved process. Carus Chemical officials continue to duck City Council meetings.

Photo Credit: Jamie Hicks
Photo Credit: Katie Dumke Troccoli

EPA Test Results & Sierra Club analysis of chemical samples taken 1/12/23 following the Carus Chemical explosion & fire

Careless Carus Chemical had another Spill

March 6, 2023

Less than eight weeks after the Carus Chemical fire and chemical plant explosion in LaSalle, Illinois, Carus had another chemical spill.

The purple chemical on the road, near the end of the video, is one of several chemicals that fell onto peoples’ homes, cars, and yards in January from a chemical cloud that formed during the explosion and fire at Carus.

This same purple chemicals is being released by the factory in LaSalle into the Little Vermilion River. The Little Vermillion empties into the Illinois River.

Carus also owns a landfill along the Illinois River, which is believed to be leaching toxic chemicals and heavy metals into the river.

The Illinois River empties into the Mississippi River, then into Gulf of Mexico, where there is a 6,334 square mile dead zone. NOAA: https://oceantoday.noaa.gov/deadzonegulf-2021/welcome.html?fbclid=IwAR0_i58Gde813KEsDG2DSrdMxmWv3qwp_IGbDMl8WKUqz3f-rxIBb-FDTMI#:~:text=The%202021%20Gulf%20of%20Mexico,over%20the%20past%20five%20years

Farmers have been blamed for the Gulf dead zone.

How much do Carus Chemical and other polluters contribute to this dead zone?

Carus is one of many polluters, which include manufacturers and mining companies that release toxic waste into the Illinois River near La Salle, Illinois.

The building in the video that resembles the Adams’ Family home is the Hegeler Carus Mansion, built in 1876 and considered “one of the Midwest’s great Second Empire structures,” according to the website. https://lnkd.in/gqdbyHBE

To learn more about Carus Chemical and industrial and mining pollution in the Illinois Valley. Visit our blog: https://lnkd.in/gNsx3BHq

Photos by: Marty Schneider

Carus Chemical Safety Data Sheets

Below are Safety Data Sheets (SDS) for chemicals manufactured and stored at Carus Chemical’s plant in LaSalle, Illinois, and stored at the former South Towne Mall, now known as Lotz Storage, in Ottawa, Illinois.

Carus Chemical Apollo Warehouse – LaSalle Police Reports

On January 11, 2023, the Carus Chemical manufacturing plant in LaSalle, Illinois had an explosion & started on fire. Chemicals rained down onto the neighborhood and damaged homes and cars.

Jamie Hicks and other residents have been complaining since 2017 to the City of LaSalle and Carus about the building behind their homes and semi-truck traffic on their dead-end road.

Despite many complaints and asking what the building was used for, they were never told there was a tier 2 chemical storage facility in the crumbling building in their backyards. After the fire, residents demanded answers.

The City of LaSalle has been more concerned with the chemical company’s ability to reach its illegally stored product than it is about the neighbors who are being put in harms way by the chemical company.

Below are police reports involving Carus Chemical, along with a video taken by Jamie Hicks showing what happened. Jamie’s video and comments conflicts with the reports written by the officers.

Our request for body cam footage from the officers who were at the scene was denied. We have also requested body cam footage showing what is in the building, but were denied.

The below photos are of chemicals that came out of the Apollo building, located behind Jamie’s home, being unloaded at the South Towne Mall in Ottawa, Illinois, Carus’ new tier 2 chemical storage facility. As of March 3, thirteen truckloads have been transported out of the Apollo building behind his home.

Jamie Hicks discussing the police reports and how the events unfolded: https://fb.watch/j23aQ8ZTMl/