[CPEO-BIF] "Chemical vapors contaminate hundreds ofproperties across Minnesota"
Larry Schnapf
larry at schnapflaw.com
Tue Feb 28 19:31:18 PST 2017
I have found that reporting of environmental issues is often replete with
errors and misunderstandings. Probably because most journalism majors did
not have science backgrounds....
Lawrence Schnapf
55 East 87th Street #8B
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-----Original Message-----
From: Brownfields [mailto:brownfields-bounces at lists.cpeo.org] On Behalf Of
Laurent C. Levy
Sent: Tuesday, February 28, 2017 8:25 PM
To: Lenny Siegel <LSiegel at cpeo.org>; Brownfields Internet Forum
<brownfields at lists.cpeo.org>
Subject: Re: [CPEO-BIF] "Chemical vapors contaminate hundreds ofproperties
across Minnesota"
A couple of errors in this article when writing the following statement:
"For instance, in Minnesota, the new long-term health limit for fumes from
dry-cleaning solvents has dropped 10-fold, from 20 parts per billion to an
infinitesimal 2 parts per billion, said Jim Kelly, environmental health
manager at the Minnesota Department of Health. That's because long-term
exposure to even very low concentrations can result in cancer, as well as
fetal development problems for pregnant women."
First, a unit error. It should be micrograms per cubic meter and not parts
per billion. The ppb to ug/m3 conversion is compound specific (molar weight
dependent) when contemplating indoor air or soil gas concentrations (for
PCE, 1 ppb = 6.78 ug/m3; for TCE 1 ppb = 5.37 ug/m3). It is correct,
however, that MN dropped the residential indoor air screening level for PCE
from 20 ug/m3 to 3.4 ug/m3 (or 2 ug/m3 depending on where you look).
Second, the fetal development relates to TCE, which unlike PCE is not a
common dry-cleaning solvent. It is my understanding that the drop in the PCE
screening level is due to MN deciding to follow Calif. and Mass. approach
and consider the leukemia endpoint
(http://www.health.state.mn.us/divs/eh/risk/guidance/air/tetrachloroethylene
.html) rather than the liver cancer endpoint, which EPA and many other
States use and results in a larger screening level for PCE (basically, by
one order of magnitude). The next few years will tell us whether other
States decide to follow suit.
Laurent
---
Laurent C. Levy, Ph.D., P.E. | Senior Project Manager
617-395-5566 | llevy at gradientcorp.com
http://vapor-intrusion.blogspot.com/
Gradient | 20 University Road | Cambridge, MA
02138 | 617-395-5000 | www.gradientcorp.com
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-----Original Message-----
From: Brownfields [mailto:brownfields-bounces at lists.cpeo.org] On Behalf Of
Lenny Siegel
Sent: Sunday, February 26, 2017 12:58 AM
To: Brownfields Internet Forum
Subject: [CPEO-BIF] "Chemical vapors contaminate hundreds of properties
across Minnesota"
Silent but toxic, chemical vapors contaminate hundreds of properties across
Minnesota
By Josephine Marcotty
Minneapolis Star Tribune (MN)
February 25, 2017
You can't see it. You can't smell it.
But toxic vapor rising from soils contaminated decades ago by industrial
solvents is creating new and expensive headaches for property owners across
Minnesota.
Pollution officials have identified hundreds of sites across the state that
are contaminated by "vapor intrusion," and this month they began rolling out
a new set of rules requiring property owners to test for vapors and address
them before transferring property.
Even as state officials scramble to understand the scope of the problem,
business owners are facing millions of dollars in new costs to make their
buildings - and their neighbors' buildings - safe from the carcinogenic
fumes that collect inside from widely used solvents long since discarded.
...
For the entire article, see
http://m.startribune.com/silent-but-toxic-chemical-vapors-contaminate-hundre
ds-of-properties-across-minnesota/414787933/?section=local
--
Lenny Siegel
Executive Director, Center for Public Environmental Oversight a project of
the Pacific Studies Center 278-A Hope St., Mountain View, CA 94041
Voice: 650/961-8918
Fax: 650/961-8918
<lsiegel at cpeo.org>
http://www.cpeo.org
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