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Midwest's postflood risk: toxic basements
July 11, 2008. The oil, gasoline, fertilizers, and herbicides swept away by
floodwaters in June pose an environmental challenge to the rain-soaked Midwest.
But some of the most serious pollution problems may not lie outdoors.
Instead, they could well lurk indoors in waterlogged basements and first floors
of homes and businesses, where everything from cleaning agents to toxic metals
accumulate in silt and mold.
These concerns about indoor toxins, which sprang up in the aftermath of the
New Orleans flood in 2005, have led researchers to begin working on tools that
could give emergency crews and homeowners a better idea of the risks they face
when they step through the front door once floodwaters recede.
Indoor muck following a flood is a common problem, says Nicholas Ashley, a
researcher at Louisiana State University in Baton Rouge involved in the work.
But, he adds, 'to the best of our knowledge no one had looked at the effect of
interior sediment deposits' on pollution levels until he and his PhD adviser,
Louis Thibodeaux, began to tackle the issue after hurricane Katrina flooded New
Orleans.
The problem is that flood victims get an OK to return and begin the cleanup
based on contaminant levels measured outdoors. But those measurements may
significantly underestimate what awaits when people walk inside, he says.
After Katrina, pollution levels in floodwater looked a lot like typical storm
water, according to measurements by another Louisiana State University team.
But the interiors of two homes Mr. Ashley and Dr. Thibodeaux sampled told a
different story: Levels of arsenic, cadmium, vanadium, and lead in the homes
were substantially higher than the maximum levels that the Environmental
Protection Agency (EPA) considers safe. 'Three of those metals exceeded the
outdoor concentrations in some cases by even greater margins,' Ashley says.
The metals, it turns out, cling to the fine silt particles that enter a home
as floodwaters seep in through chinks and cracks. The silt then settles out in
layers only a few millimeters deep.
Meanwhile, waterborne organic chemicals prone to evaporation also seep inside
or get augmented by what's already in the house. Mold can absorb and retain the
organics in the gas, then redistribute them when it releases its spores. A field
study led by Ginger Chew, with the department of environmental health sciences
at Columbia University in New York, found that spore concentrations in several
once-flooded New Orleans homes reached levels that outstripped the ability of a
popular respirator to deal with them.
Building interiors - from warehouses to residential garages and basements -
face other, better-known threats.
Many already store gasoline, cleaning agents, or home heating oil. When
floodwater fills a basement, it can float a 250-gallon heating oil tank. Once
the tank breaks free of its fittings, the oil leaks and can eventually spread
outdoors, notes Bill Simes, who heads a US EPA response team that has been
working with Indiana to scope out the extent of pollution triggered by the
floods. Submerged TVs and other electronic devices leach metals.
Depending on the location, add 'biologicals' to the list, Mr. Simes says,
recalling work he and his team did in New Orleans after Katrina. 'The fishing
industry stores large amounts of shrimp. When the refrigeration goes off for
about 30 days, it's not really shrimp anymore.'
Floodwaters also bring with them a background level of pollutants. And they
pick up more along the way.
In states such as Iowa, where farming is widespread, floodwaters pick up
organic material such as fertilizers and herbicides from cropland.
Now, Ashley and Thibodeaux are working on a model that
could give first responders and homeowners a clearer idea of the pollution
levels they are likely to face once the water recedes - particularly in farm
country, where organics can form the dominant class of pollutants. A key part of
the puzzle still to be incorporated involves how airtight the home is and how
long it remains buttoned up before restoration or demolition begins. The duo
acknowledges they are operating on sparse data - two houses. It's crucial, they
say, to develop simple water and sediment sampling kits that rescuers and other
first responders can use. Such data would allow them to expand their sample of
structures and provide information needed to run the model. Source:
Axcess News
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