UPDATED 9:30 p.m.
Roughly 300,000 residents have been left without usable water after chemicals spilled into a West Virginia river Thursday.
The West Virginia American Water Company has advised residents of nine state counties not to drink or bathe in their running water. Local stores have been flooded with customers looking for bottled drinking water.
The leak started in Charleston, West Virginia’s capital, the county seat for Kanawha County, and the state’s largest city. Local officials became aware that something was wrong around 10 am Thursday morning, after residents called to complain of a black licorice smell in the water, according to Kanawha County director of homeland security and emergency management Dale Petry. After consultation with the local health department and state authorities, the West Virginia American Water Company warning went out a little before 6 p.m.
“This has been devastating to the public at large and the people who live in our city,” said Mayor Danny Jones of Charleston, W.Va. in a Friday morning press conference.
The spill originated at a chemical storage facility run by the Charleston-based company Freedom Industries, when a 48,000 gallon tank dumped an indeterminate amount of the compound 4-Methylcyclohexane Methanol into the Elk River. The chemical, also known as MCHM, is used by coal companies to wash and prepare their product. People who are exposed to a sufficient quantity of MCHM may experience vomiting, skin blistering and shortness of breath. Very little is known about the other potential health consequences of exposure to the compound.
Freedom Industries president Gary Southern avoided answering questions from reporters until Friday evening, when he held a brief yet contentious press conference in front of the company’s plant. He told reporters that Freedom Industries discovered the leak around 10:30 on Thursday, and promptly alerted the authorities.
“Our intent is to be absolutely transparent and we’ll tell you what we know, as much as we know,” he said. When asked if the leak could have started on Wednesday or earlier, he said, “We have no information on that.”
At one point in the middle of the press conference, Southern tried to exit the podium, until reporters shouted that they still had questions.
“They’re still under investigation of how the leak occurred,” said Petry, who met with Freedom Industries representatives shortly before the press conference. “It was an older tank that might have had a leak out of a rivet, and they don’t know how long or how much leaked.”
Asked whether he believed Freedom Industries had complied with safety regulations, Petry said, “I would say that will come out in the investigation later.”
President Obama declared a state of emergency in West Virginia Friday morning and called on FEMA to coordinate an emergency response. The West Virginia National Guard has also been called in to help distribute clean water to residents of the affected area. A spokesperson for FEMA confirmed that the Department of Homeland Security would be delivering over 1 million liters of clean water to the affected area, though the exact amount of water to be delivered remains in flux.
The U.S. attorney for southern West Virginia, Booth Goodwin, announced on Friday that he would investigate the causes of the leak.
“Yesterday’s release of a potentially dangerous chemical into our water supply has put hundreds of thousands of West Virginians at risk, severely disrupted our region’s economy, and upended people’s daily lives,” he said in a statement. “My office and other federal law enforcement authorities have opened an investigation into the circumstances surrounding the release. We will determine what caused it and take whatever action is appropriate based on the evidence we uncover.”









