On this week's episode of Mountain Stage, you'll hear two premier West Virginia arts and culture organizations join forces for an epic show combining orchestral and pop tunes.
For the latest in understanding the chemical compound Crude MCHM that was leaked into the Elk River, we reached out to the West Virginia Water Research Institute.
Paul Ziemkiewicz, Director of the West Virginia Water Research Institute, describes the chemical leaked from Freedom Industries into the Elk River, Crude MCHM, as a kind of detergent used to clean coal, a surfactant.
“You’re trying to separate the coal from the non-burnable stuff like shales, clays, stuff like that,” Ziemkiewicz says. “The process takes advantage of the fact that coal is lighter than these clays and rocks, but they have to be separated. So you use these surfactants to help that separation process.”
He says that water ends up in slurry impoundments, and then often is recycled to wash more coal.
Ziemkiewicz says he would be surprised if the reported 2-5k gallons would be getting into water supplies in concentrations that are “acutely toxic,” meaning that small amounts ingested could potentially make someone very sick. Given the amount leaked, over the hour it was leaked, and the flow of the Elk River, Ziemkiewicz estimates concentration levels of about 40miligrams/liter.
Ziemkiewicz explains that there are primary drinking water standards that regulate chemicals that pose serious health risks, and that Crude MCHM wouldn’t be on that list. He says as a foaming agent it would fall in the secondary drinking water standards which are regulated at about half a milligram/liter. Secondary standards, Ziemkiewicz says, are more to regulate aesthetic issues such as color, taste, and texture. He says while ingesting Crude MCHM poses few health risks, it is considered an irritant.
“My estimates would indicate that the concentration getting to the water intake of the water distribution system would be well above that because they’re both on the same side of the river and it may not have mixed 100 percent by the time it got to the water intake. So given all that, I think it was prudent to shut down the water system,” he says.
Ziemkiewicz speculates that the compound was likely distributed into the far reaches of the water system before it was shut down. The time it will take to thoroughly flush the system is perhaps the biggest and most challenging concern by his estimation.
ZiemkiewiczMCHM.mp3
Unedited remarks from Paul Ziemkiewicz, Director of the West Virginia Water Research Institute.
Attorneys with the PSC’s Consumer Advocate Division argued the company's lack of improvement in facility operations failed to justify another rate hike. Since 2005, American Water customers have seen 14 rate increases.
Mountaineer Gas Company filed a lawsuit against West Virginia American Water Company Monday in response to a three week gas outage on the West Side of Charleston.
Mountaineer Gas said that the 46 miles of gas lines affected have been dried and fully restored. However, many home appliances like water heaters, furnaces and stoves were damaged or destroyed when water entered the gas lines. Many households, like Mahr’s, are still without hot water or heat because of it.
Kara Vance, a physical education teacher for both Alum Creek Elementary and Kenna Elementary in Kanawha County, earned West Virginia Public Broadcasting's Above and Beyond Award for October, which recognizes excellence and creativity of Mountain State teachers.