Little Oversight from EPA Leads to Big Pollution Problems from Carus Chemical

BY: Karry King

November 9, 2023

LA SALLE, Illinois – Dan Murphy likes to take his dog fishing at the Little Vermillion River near his home in La Salle, Illinois, a rural community located ninety miles southwest of Chicago.

Murphy, 44, has been fishing and four-wheeling along the banks of the Little Vermillion River his entire life. He says that when he takes Baby Blue, his nine-year-old pit bull, she often gets a bacterial infection when she goes in the water.

“She doesn’t understand what danger she’s in,” Murphy said.

Murphy says the infection has happened at least a dozen times. His vet usually prescribes antibiotics, and it goes away. He rinses her with Bactine when they get home to prevent an infection.

Murphy lives near Carus Chemical, a company that manufactures chemicals used to treat drinking water. Potassium permanganate, the company’s main product, is used by municipalities in the U.S. and all over the world for water treatment. The chemical is also used in mining, fracking, refining crude oil, explosives and manufacturing cocaine. Since January, residents have learned there are heavy metals in their soil, water and air filters. They believe it is from the chemical factory and say the factory is not being properly regulated.

Murphy says Carus Chemical has a discharge pipe that empties wastewater from its factory into the river and says the river water smells like bacteria and chemicals in some areas. He recently took a sample of the mineral scale off the pipe that had built up over the years from the wastewater. When the test results came back, it showed that barium, cadmium, chromium, copper, lead, manganese, zinc and mercury were present in the scale.

Many LaSalle residents are concerned about Carus’ effect on the community after an explosion and massive fire at its factory near their homes in January 2023. During the fire, a chemical cloud formed above the town and rained green and purple chemicals onto the people and their properties. After the fire, many residents sent soil from their yards and furnace filters from inside their homes to a lab for testing and found the same metals that are in the scale.

Marty Schneider, 46, also grew up near the Carus plant, fishing, hiking and riding dirt bikes along the river. He bought a home ten years ago several blocks from Carus. He wasn’t worried about the plant.

“The neighborhood was up and coming,” Schneider said. “Carus has two signs outside about its safety record, promoting it. So, I never really paid any attention to it.”

He later learned that his home was part of a superfund site but was told by the U.S. EPA that Carus was not the source of the pollution. Carus’ sister company, M & H Zinc, no longer in business, was said to be the source of the metals in Schneider’s yard. The EPA replaced the soil in his and several other residents’ yards a few years ago. After the fire, heavy metals are back in Schneider’s yard.

Schneider is worried about his water now, too. He purchased a whole house filter after the fire and installed a reverse osmosis system at his kitchen sink for cooking and drinking water. He said that when he changed his whole house water filter this summer, it was black.

“I took my concerns down to the city and to the City Council meeting, and they brushed it off. So, I pulled out my whole house water filtration system filter and showed them how black it was,” Schneider said.

Schneider says that at the September meeting, he asked the city what was wrong with the water treatment, and the city said there was nothing wrong.

However, EPA Enforcement and Compliance History Online (ECHO) shows the City of La Salle’s water treatment plant has been in violation since July and has had multiple violations over the past three years.

The ECHO website shows pollutants found in the city wastewater include the same metals that were in the discharge pipe scale, soil and furnace filters from residents’ homes: barium, cadmium, chromium, copper, lead, manganese, mercury and zinc.

Carus has a permit to discharge 1 million gallons of chemical wastewater per day into the Little Vermillion River. Its National Pollution Discharge Elimination System (NPDES) permit, issued by the Illinois Environmental Protection Agency (IEPA), a state branch of the federal EPA, lists chloride and zinc as effluents allowed to be discharged by Carus.

There are no limits mentioned on the permit for the pollutants. It also does not list the other metals that were found in the scale.

Denise Trabbic Pointer, a chemical engineer and certified hazardous material manager emeritus, who has been volunteering to help La Salle residents with testing and analysis, says that metals and suspended solids found in the scale are leaching into the Little Vermillion River, but it’s difficult to know how much without regular testing.

“Carus is discharging with little oversight and an NPDES permit with few restrictions,” Trabbic-Pointer said. “The IEPA needs to pay more attention, perform more inspections and update the permit in 2024 to include more metals with actual criteria to reduce their impact to the river.”

She says the two lagoons where the chemical factory wastewater is held before discharge, and the river near the outfall and downstream, are not clear, and there appears to be a lot of algae growth.

“The Little Vermillion is already ‘impaired’ due to a total maximum load (TMDL) of chlorine pH, total suspended solids and zinc. Carus is listed in a 2018 TMDL review as a major contributor to zinc and chloride,” Trabbic-Pointer said.

Each metal in the scale has a slightly different effect on aquatic life. Mercury is particularly hazardous to the environment and to people.

“My opinion, just based on what I know, is that their discharge permits need to be amended to include more strict control on their discharge of zinc and other metals, chloride and suspended solids,” Trabbic-Pointer said. “Carus is rarely inspected.”

The company had two noncompliance items in 2020 and 2021 for air pollution violations but nothing for water in the IEPA document system.

Murphy and Schneider are both concerned about the effect these metals may have on their health. They want the EPA to regulate Carus better and for them to stop dumping chemicals into the river.

“It seems like they’re giving permits out and not following up,” Schneider said.

“It explains the amount of mental health problems and Alzheimer’s and diseases we have in this area, and the dementia rate, cancers and mental health issues,” Murphy said. “I’ll probably be crazy because I grew up down there.”

“I’m going to be demented from all the mercury soaking in through my clothes,” Murphy said.

LaSalle Resident Letter to IEPA Letter about Carus Chemical Fire

To Whom It May Concern:

As a resident of La Salle, IL and as a homeowner affected by the fallout from the Carus Chemical LLC. Fire that occurred on January 11, 2023, I have several concerns that lead me to contact you today. Please understand that I have been working through the process, as are the other residents, and feel that as of writing this there are some concerns that I feel have not been addressed properly and I would like to see them looked into.

Allow me to return to my experience starting from the day of the fire through today as I feel that is the only way to fully paint the picture. The day of the fire my wife was at work in Ottawa, IL and I had dropped both of my children off at school. I myself left early to go to a doctors appointment in Oglesby, IL that morning. I was in my appointment when I received several urgent messages from friends concerning the fire. Despite being on the list for the city of La Salle’s contact hotline to allow community members to know of any important information, I was not notified and, therefore, unaware of what had occurred. Once leaving the office I was able to visibly see the large, black clouds to the North where the fire was happening.

Upon rushing home I found several streets surrounding the Carus Chemical LLC building starting to be closed down between Route 6 and my home,. I was able to get to my home (two blocks North of the plant) to find no obvious particles (again no information was relayed as to what to look for) barring a “freckled” appearance to my porch railing.

The smell outside can only be described as an open car battery running through a car wash, a strange combination of chemical and corrosion. Finding no obvious large material such as building material (steel, wood, etc.) I decided that I still needed to run my errands. I had wrongfully assumed that if there were any health concerns I would have been notified. I made my way to my children’s school as I was contacted by my son that they were potentially sending children home. The school informed me at that time they were in fact not intending to do so. I continued my errands as normal, noticing that the strange smell was still in the air in Peru, IL at the Target store.

Once finished, I returned home. By this time a friend of mine had posted on Facebook that Carus was telling people to clean the black/green material that was dotting my porch and everything outside my home with a combination of vinegar, water, and hydrogen peroxide mixed in equal parts. This would “inactivate” any chemicals that may remain active. As I was outside spraying down my porch I was notified by my wife that the school said they are keeping kids in until 3:00pm rather than the usual 2:00pm time they usually would be released. I continued to clean my porch, now using my pressure washer to spray off the remaining particles as a van from NBC pulled up asking for an interview. I declined as I had to get everything cleaned prior to picking up my children so they wouldn’t come in contact with the material on my porch.

Later that evening the news of the event came out from a press conference. There was a shelter in place order that was now (as of the evening news) lifted… something I had yet to hear about. The first call from the city coming at 7:58pm. We were informed that the IEPA and USEPA were monitoring the air quality as per standard protocol. The news that they had ended the air monitoring came January 13th.

Now, my first concern regarding this event is the lack of information from the city of La Salle. We have discussed this with them at city meetings, meetings that Carus to this day refuses to attend despite several requests from both the city and the residents. The emergency contact did not go out to many residents. That, as we have been informed, is now currently remedied. My second concern is that at no point was there an IEPA or USEPA person in my neighborhood to inform residents of any potentially dangerous chemical in the air.

Air quality results from the USEPA show that they have a 24-hour average standard that the main particulate matter concern (PM 2.5) should come to a total below 35.5 ug/m3. I looked at all of the published information from the USEPA and found several discrepancies in their numbers. First, the numbers are in mg/m3, a number that needs to be multiplied by 1000 to convert to the correct ug/m3 standard. Secondly, the air monitoring numbers for A-2 and A-3 (my home is between those two monitoring sites) show exactly two measurements, one taken the day of the fire (January 11, 2023) at 4:48pm (A-2) and the other at 6:32pm (A-2) that same day. As for the A-3 site the same, one taken at 4:59pm and the second at 6:47pm, both on January 11, 2023. No further testing is listed for either monitoring location (or any of the four locations north of the fire, the direction the wind was blowing that day). The numbers indicate levels at or above the indicated standard as the A-2 location was 35ug/m3 at 4:48pm and 52ug/m3 at 6:32pm. The A-3 location was 35ug/m3 at 4:59pm and 58ug/m3 at 6:47pm. Both numbers went up during the monitoring, both going from the Moderate/Unhealthy to Sensitive Groups range up to the Unhealthy [for all] range. There is no indication anywhere for these numbers past that point. Again, the standard [according to the USEPA website] is a 24-hour monitoring AVERAGE.

To further the concern, the last result listed for any of the monitors in any direction is on January 12, 2023 at 6:03am (SR-02). This would mean that the 24 hour standard was missed on the minimum number of hours by 10 hours and 20 minutes, using the data of the first collected sample taken at 4:23pm on January 11, 2023 (A-01). Did I mention that at the time of the last sample (SR-02 at 6:03am, January 12, 2023), if converted correctly was at 40ug/m3? That’s still listed at the level of Unhealthy for Sensitive Groups. My next concern is that the soil samples taken that day were taken from the Carus Chemical LLC site. We, as residents did have some sampling taken from Brownsfield via the City of La Salle, though there has been questions as to the validity of the samples taken. Similarly the wipe samples taken by the IEPA on January 12, 2023 were, in the laboratory report listed as (X301-X306) not a quantitatively valid unit [as reported].

Furthermore many samples “failed to meet the quality control criteria.” This also raises a red flag as the IEPA and USEPA are involved in our area as part of an ongoing superfund site. Most of the affected homes have already had their yards remediated (us as residents question the job done during the remediation as we now have drainage issues we didn’t have prior) and now are faced with the unfortunate question: what is now in our soil?

The original testing was based upon what the Carus representatives said went up in the explosion, nearly one million pounds of potassium permanganate. Under the assumption that Carus was truthful about what was in the fire, agencies only tested for potassium and manganese. What was missed was the potential for many other hazardous metals and chemicals that may also have been involved, many of which are health hazards. I am concerned that the standard should not be on what the company at fault contests is the risk rather than what are all of the potential risks?

We as citizens are becoming aware of the many potentially dangerous substances that are housed at their factory (or in the case of the Apollo warehouse, in our back yards without any local officials being aware of their existence). We also question why the EPA is still doing much more extensive testing at the site of the fire and plant while declining any further testing for the residents. We were exposed to the same chemicals and do not understand the logic.

Currently we as a community have been in contact with the Sierra Club in regards to what we may be able to do about the above concerns and many others that are being raised. Several of our homes had furnace filters tested that revealed levels of several of the aforementioned hazardous metals including Barium, Copper, Lead, Manganese, Zinc, and in a few cases Mercury. The USEPA, IEPA, and IDPH have all raised several questions as to the validity of the furnace filters and the chain of command.

Please let me be very clear, my filter was one of the filters tested with all but Mercury in it. My filter was 2 weeks old as of the explosion, having been changed at the beginning of the new year. The filter was removed by me and taken directly to my neighbor who was in contact with the Sierra Club and followed the proper handling as per their recommendations.

As to the validity of the indoor air quality, nobody in my home smokes, there is no fireplace, we have not painted anything in our home for several months, our furniture is several years old, we don’t use cleaners regularly and minimally when we do, and rarely, if ever, use candles and/or air fresheners. The sampled filter should have no reason to be contaminated given the idea that these metals (many of which don’t normally exist naturally in the environment) go down and do not “float” upwards according to information shared with us. My furnace is in my attic, not my basement. They would have to defy gravity to get there.

We are looking into what options we have as residents to make sure that the air we breathe is not toxic or harmful with long-term exposure for not only ourselves, but our children. The continued concern is that several residents that initially tested filters have had a second filter tested with results continuing to show all of the above toxic metals, some of which have even increased.

We worry that Carus Chemical LLC is continuing to pollute the air for our community and its citizens.

Other concerns we have encountered within this process is the ever moving target for property damage reimbursement via insurance claims. Originally, when the Carus hotline was opened up (and the third phone number we were given finally was a valid number) we were told to go through our homeowners insurance company and to give them a form from the Carus Chemical LLC website. Carus would use the Davies Company to work with our insurance after all claims are finalized to settle with the insurance company that had paid for our repairs. As such, I have been working with my insurance.

However, Carus is now sending “adjusters” to our area that will not verify the agency they work for, nor give us information regarding the insurance company being used by Carus. The company has also denied the information to the city of La Salle. The people that are coming out are handing residents paperwork with a check (covering a small portion of damages, including in one case I heard a car wash reimbursement). The paperwork includes the title of the resident’s name Vs Carus. This is a legally binding agreement in which the person signs away any right to further payments for property or health reimbursement.

This is not only deceptive, but fraud as the residents are led to believe it is to take care of a current claim and not to take care of the entirety of the claim. And if Carus had previously said they were only taking care of things not covered by our homeowners insurance, how can they be making offers of settlement when our homeowners claims have not been fully processed?

Something is not right here. We have concerns regarding local news sources removing or revising content to the extent of painting Carus in a more positive light. This pertains to multiple online articles and radio broadcasts that later were missing from the on-demand content. We have concerns that the city officials were made aware that the Apollo warehouse was vacant except for old machine parts, only to find out that it took fifteen semi loads, all without the proper hazardous labeling (our city and state police were made aware) to remove chemicals being stored there.

The warehouse is, come to find out, listed as a tier two chemical facility. It had a hole in the roof, boarded up windows, no security or security cameras, and no water sprinkler system. Furthermore the only alarm up until recently went directly to Carus, not to a local switchboard for emergency personnel. We have concerns that Carus continues to stonewall our local officials for any further testing or reimbursement for any testing that has already been done due to being cleared by both the IEPA and USEPA, even after the testing results being highly suspicious, even when posted on their own website and not meeting the standards set by their agencies. Carus continues to dodge all public forums and refuses to call residents back regarding any concerns they may have.

At no point during this process have I, or any resident I have spoken to, felt as if the governing bodies that we should believe are for the people have met a fraction of the expectations we should receive at a minimum. It feels as if our tax dollars are hard at work to keep us from getting answers and peace of mind. We ask for further, and proper, testing to make sure the health of the citizens of La Salle, IL are not being put at risk as a byproduct of this corporation’s operation so the rest of the world can have clean drinking water. We do not wish for our families to suffer significant health risks due to insufficient testing from what has already occurred and lack of further oversight of emissions by Carus Chemical LLC in the future.

It is a bit alarming to step back and realize that Carus Chemical LLC is responsible for a vast majority of the filtration for drinking water worldwide, giving them unimaginable influence and power politically. We recognize that Inga Carus has been on a number of trips with governors and elected officials representing plans for economic growth, potentially creating a vast interest in the company’s profitability and expansion. With this in mind, it is difficult to think anything other than the lack of concern and further testing by IEPA, US EPA and IDPH on behalf of the residents smells of political influence in play here.

Josh Busche

La Salle, IL resident, affected by the January 11, 2023 Carus Chemical LLC fire

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.

Don’t Be Fooled by Local Food and Craft Beer at Tangled Roots.

Tangled Roots is one of many companies owned by Inga Carus, CEO of Carus Chemical.

Don’t be fooled by local food and craft beer at Tangled Roots in Ottawa. https://tangledrootsbrewingco.com/about-us/

CL Enterprises. the parent company of Tangled Roots and the Lone Buffalo, is owned by Inga Carus, the CEO of Carus Chemical, LLC, in LaSalle, Illinois. https://cl-enterprises.com/who-we-are/

According to CL’s website, they’re committed to investing in small towns. https://cl-enterprises.com/

However, LaSalle residents say CL does not maintain their properties, and they have several unfinished projects downtown, including the historic Kaskaskia Hotel building, which they purchased from the city for $1 in 2003, and have not done anything with. The once stately hotel is deteriorating in downtown LaSalle.

In addition, Carus has not taken responsibility for damage or cleanup of residents homes and property after the Carus Chemical plant blew up on January 11 and rained chemicals onto the community.

Tangled Roots, the Lone Buffalo and CL Enterprises are just a few of many companies that are owned by Inga Carus. https://cl-red.com/projects/

LaSalle 4th Ward Former Alderman Mark Schneider on Sierra Club at LaSalle City Council Meeting

LaSalle 4th Ward former alderman Mark Schneider gives his thoughts on the Sierra Club‘s presentation at the LaSalle City Council meeting on Monday, March 6

“Now that we have test results, not only do these air filters to show all these heavy metals, we have soil test results from a yard that was cleaned up in the EPA Superfund cleanup, and now with soil testing has shown that it has actually a higher heavy metal contents than it did prior to the superfund cleanup.” 

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