We
are receiving credible reports from the region that the National
Guard is out, that there has been looting and that the water supplies
for nine counties have been trashed.
---Mike
Ruppert
Crisis
In West Virginia: Wal-Mart Calls In Police To Guard Bottled Water
Delive
The
Federal Emergency Management Authority has confirmed that it will
deliver more than 1 million liters (264,172 gallons) of clean water
to residents of the nine counties in West Virginia after a chemical
used by the coal industry spilled into the Elk River on Thursday.
10
January, 2014
Approximately
300,000 people in West Virginia were told not to drink or use their
water after approximately 5,000 gallons of 4-Methylcyclohexane
Methanol (MCHM) — a chemical used to wash coal of impurities —
spilled from a tank owned by Freedom Industries. West Virginia
American Water Company president Jeff McIntyre warned consumers not
to use tap water for baby formula, brushing teeth, or showering.
“Toilet flushing only,” he said.
The
reports sent people rushing to stock up on bottled water, stripping
store shelves around the area, including local Wal-Marts. Tension
over the availability of clean water in the area seemed to be
growing. At around 3:00pm, the Kanawha County police scanner lit up
with reports of a shipment of water that was about to come in to a
nearby Wal-Mart, asking for police presence while employees could
restock.
“It
was chaos, that’s what it was,” convenience store cashier Danny
Cardwell told FoxNews.com.
Local
officials have described MCHM as smelling like licorice and looking
like “cooking oil floating on top of the water.” The West
Virginia Department of Health and Human Resources said symptoms of
MCHM exposure include “severe burning in throat, severe eye
irritation, non-stop vomiting, trouble breathing or severe skin
irritation such as skin blistering.”
Though
the spill occurred Thursday morning, West Virginia American Water
didn’t provide its customers with a warning until evening and, as
Al Jazeera reported, several were angered by the lack of information,
particularly regarding what should be done if they had already used
or ingested the water.
At
a press conference Friday afternoon, West Virginia National Guard
Adjutant General James Hoyer said the amount of MCHM in the water was
becoming more diluted.
“There
has been a reduction in the concentration in the water from two parts
per million to 1.7 parts per million,” Hoyer said. “The CDC says
one part per million would be an acceptable level. Point-one would be
the level there they would not notice any smell or taste difference.”
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