Asbestos at Factory Blamed for Illness: State Health Department Links Disease to Former W.R. Grace Plant in Weedsport, by Mark Weiner, (Syracuse) Post Standard, July 28, 2006
Asbestos at Factory Blamed for Illness: State Health Department Links Disease to Former W.R. Grace Plant in Weedsport, by Mark Weiner, (Syracuse) Post Standard,July 28, 2006
http://www.syracuse.com/news/poststandard/index.ssf?/base/news-5/1154076939180830.xml&coll=1
Some former workers at an insulation factory in Weedsport have developed asbestos-related diseases, probably from exposure on the job, a new state health study concludes.
The former W.R. Grace Zonolite Co. plant on Dunn Road posed a health hazard to employees and their families. But it remains unclear whether the plant also placed the surrounding community at risk.
The conclusions are part of a 92-page final report by the state Health Department, which ordered a health assessment related to the former Weedsport factory in 2001.
Now state health officials are completing a wider study looking for asbestos-related cancers and lung disease in the surrounding community.
"We have not yet completed our health statistics review, which is looking for any unusual disease patterns," said Claire Pospisil, a spokeswoman for the state Health Department in Albany. "We expect to release the results of this review by the end of this year."
The Zonolite factory operated from 1963 until 1989. It is on a federal priority list of 28 locations nationwide that received asbestos-contaminated vermiculite from a mine in Libby, Mont.
The vermiculite, a raw material that was heated and made into home insulation products, contained a particularly dangerous form of asbestos called tremolite.
Since the Libby mine closed in 1993, studies found that former workers have a death rate from asbestosis, a lung disease, that is 60 times as high as the national average.
Pospisil declined to say how many former workers in Weedsport developed asbestos-related diseases.
The department generally withholds such numbers when there are fewer than six cases of a disease, she said. The idea is to protect patient privacy.
"Some former employees and residents were seen by a physician," Pospisil said. "There were six or less in each of these groups."
No asbestos-related illnesses were found in any of the Weedsport-area residents, she said.
Up to 11 people concerned about their potential exposure were examined at the Central New York Occupational Health Clinical Center at Upstate Medical University in Syracuse.
"About half of them were actually workers at the plant," said Dr. Michael Lax, the center's medical director. "The other half were people who had used the Zonolite as insulation in their homes."
Lax said he found that four or five former workers had signs of asbestos-related disease in their lungs.
"Some of the people we examined worked there in the mid-1960s," Lax said, adding that he hoped officials from the federal Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease Registry would help find more workers who were exposed and may have moved out of the area.
"As far as I can tell, there has been no systematic tracking down of the people who worked there or were involved in disposing of this stuff," Lax said.
State officials do not know how many people worked at the Weedsport plant between 1963 and 1989 but say it was likely to have been a small number.
The larger number who may have been exposed to asbestos in dust clouds coming from the Weedsport plant are the roughly 1,900 people who lived in the area in the 1970s.
A state health report said some of the waste from the plant may have been trucked around the neighborhood for use as fill, for driveway surfacing, for soil amendments or other applications.
Weedsport Mayor Jean Saroodis said few residents have expressed concerns to her about their potential exposure.
"To be honest, I haven't heard a thing" from residents, Saroodis said.
The mayor said she has received but not read the state report. She said it would be too early to comment on its contents.
The state began its study after federal health officials learned that vermiculite from Libby was used at the local plant.
© 2006 The Post-Standard.