West Virginia authorities were aware of the hazardous chemicals stored at Freedom Industries’ facilities long before Thursday’s chemical spill, a newly released document reveals.
According to the Charleston Gazette, Freedom Industries, the company at the center of the massive spill, filed the required “Tier 2” form with the state back in February informing officials that thousands of pounds of the coal-cleaning chemical 4-methylcyclohexanemethanol (MCHM) were being stored in tanks at the Etowah River Terminal along the now-polluted Elk River.
Under the federal Emergency Planning and Community Right to Know Act, Freedom Industries was required to alert the state of the chemicals at its facilities so authorities and emergency responders were aware of the potential risks.
“Obviously, the whole idea of the chemical inventory reports is to properly inform local emergency officials about the sorts of materials they might have to deal with,” chemical safety expert Fred Millar said, according to the Gazette. “It’s just head-in-the-sand to be ignoring this type of threat.”
At a press conference Sunday evening, Jimmy Gianato, director of Homeland Security and Emergency Management for West Virginia, confirmed that Freedom Industries filed the proper paperwork, but since MCHM was not listed as an extremely hazardous or toxic substance, it was not subject to the same regulatory requirements.
State authorities also pushed back on reporters questioning the timing of the leak and asking how 7,500 gallons of the chemical spilled so quickly from an “inch-sized crank” in the storage tank. “It had not been leaking for too much longer than before it had been discovered,” Mike Dorsey, chief of the Department of Environmental Protection’s Homeland Security and Emergency Response, said. “As you can tell, everybody could smell it and they could smell it downtown very quickly.”









