| DoD's IG TO
INVESTIGATE CHEMICAL EXPOSURE IN IRAQ
Pentagon's Inspector General will look
at troop exposure to hexavalent chromium, also known as sodium
dichromate.
NOTE from
Larry Scott, VA Watchdog dot Org
... For more about troops being exposed to dangerous chemicals,
including information on the burn pits in Iraq and Afghanistan,
refer to our Iraq War Toxins page ... here ...
http://www.vawatchdog.org/iraqwartoxins.htm
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Were Oregon Guard members
exposed to carcinogen?
New investigation, sought by senators, will try to come up with
answers
From KTVZ.COM news sources
http://www.ktvz.com/Global/story.asp?S=11236068
The Inspector General for the Department of Defense will
investigate whether actions by the U.S. Army and a contractor
exposed Oregon
National
Guard troops to a harmful carcinogen in Iraq in 2003, Oregon's two
U.S. senators said Wednesday,
The investigation is in response to a letter written by Senators
Ron Wyden (D-Ore.), Jeff Merkley (D-Ore.) and five other senate
colleagues calling on Inspector General Gordon Heddell to
investigate whether the U.S. Army and KBR - a contractor hired to
restore the Qarmat Ali Water injection facility to safe working
order -- adequately protected service members from harmful toxins.
In addition, the Department of Veterans Affairs has pledged a
"complete and comprehensive response" to questions raised about
the health and well-being of those service personnel.
"Oregon National Guard members have suffered serious health
problems as a result of the deliberate contamination of the
facility by the Iraqi army," Wyden said. "This investigation will
determine whether the U.S. Army and KBR took appropriate
precautions to safeguard the health of National Guard members and
appropriate action after exposure. I thank the Inspector General
for conducting this investigation and look forward to his report."
"There are many questions as to how American service personnel
were exposed to this dangerous chemical," Merkley said. "I am
pleased the Departments of Defense and Veterans Affairs have
responded to our request for further investigation and look
forward to a full and fair accounting of exactly what transpired.
I will be monitoring this process carefully to ensure our men and
women in uniform get the answers they deserve."

In April 2003, National Guard members from Oregon, Indiana, West
Virginia, and South Carolina guarding the Qarmat Ali water
facility in Iraq were exposed to sodium dichromate, a deadly
carcinogen. Many soldiers reported that a distinctive orange
powder covered the facility and was swept into the air, onto their
clothes, faces and other areas of exposed skin. Soldiers quickly
began to experience symptoms of sodium dichromate poisoning,
including nasal perforations, and severe nosebleeds. At least one
death has been attributed to the exposure and 420 Oregonian
National Guard members have been exposed.
Testing for possible exposure did not begin until October 2003 and
an initial investigation performed by the U.S. Army Center for
Health Promotion and Preventative Medicine concluded that there
was not significant inhalation exposure from sodium dichromate
despite independent estimates of exposure rates approximately 80
to 200 times the current limit allowed by the Occupational Safety
and Health Administration.
In March, Senators Wyden and Merkley joined Senators Evan Bayh (D-Ind.)
and Byron Dorgan (D-N.D.) in introducing the Health Care for
Members of the Armed Forces Exposed to Chemical Hazards Act which
will allow service members exposed to harmful chemicals during
deployment to receive lifelong medical care from the Veterans
Administration as well as shift the burden of proof away from the
veteran when seeking care for exposure related ailments.
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TOPICS:
veterans, veterans' benefits, VA, Department of Veterans' Affairs,
KBR, hexavalent chromium, sodium dichromate, DoD, Inspector
General |