8/9WAPT.com
Toxicologist: Arsenic Levels In Soil Are Not DangerousJACKSON, Miss. -- Mississippi Poison Control Center director Doctor Robert Cox said there are no findings to support claims of dangerous levels of arsenic in the soil on the coast.
Cox was responding to claims by Wilma Subra, a chemist who last week said arsenic levels were dangerously high.
Subra said she came to work along the Gulf Coast after Hurricane Katrina, and has taken soil samples in Mississippi, Louisiana, Texas and Alabama.
She said 90 percent of the samples have exceeded the Environmental Protection Agency's standards for arsenic.
WAPT.comChemist Finds High-Level Of Arsenic In Katrina's WakePOSTED: 9:07 am CDT July 31, 2006
UPDATED: 9:14 am CDT July 31, 2006
BILOXI, Miss. -- A chemist said soil samples taken in the wakes of hurricanes Katrina and Rita show dangerously high levels of arsenic in some areas along the coast.
Wilma Subra said she believes arsenic, other heavy metals and bacteria in the soils of coastal areas battered by hurricanes last year are causing residents to become sick with unexplained illnesses.
Some who attended a meeting organized by the Outreach of Love to publicize Subra's findings said they or their family members are suffering from unexplained health problems.
Subra said 90 percent of the samples taken in Louisiana, Mississippi, Alabama and Texas have exceeded the Environmental Protection Agency's standards for arsenic.
She found the highest levels in Mississippi at Moss Point, Gulfport and Pearlington, where arsenic is at levels 27 times beyond what the Mississippi Department of Environmental Quality considers safe.Copyright 2006 by
The Associated Press. All rights reserved.
Found on Gulf Coast News
www.GulfCoastNews.comHigh level of arsenic found in Katrina's wakeThe Associated Press
BILOXI — A chemist said soil samples taken in the wakes of Hurricanes Katrina and Rita show dangerously high levels of arsenic in some areas along the coast.
Wilma Subra believes arsenic, other heavy metals and bacteria in the soils of coastal areas battered by hurricanes last year are causing residents to become sick with unexplained illnesses.
"It gets kicked up in the air so you can inhale it, ingest it and you can come in contact with it," she said. "If you walked through it, once it started drying, it would scoop up into the air."
Some members of the public who attended the meeting, which was organized by the Outreach of Love, said they or family members are suffering from unexplained health problems.
Subra said she came to work along the Gulf Coast after Hurricane Katrina, and has taken soil samples in Mississippi, Louisiana, Texas and Alabama. She said 90 percent of the samples have exceeded the Environmental Protection Agency's standards for arsenic.
She found the highest levels in Mississippi at Moss Point, Gulfport and Pearlington where arsenic is at levels 27 times beyond what the Mississippi Department of Environmental Quality considers safe.
Subra said the arsenic built up in the Gulf Coast's riverbeds and was spread by the hurricanes. After the storm surge receded, many residents found the ground covered with a toxic sludge.
"It looked like when your mom would make a chocolate cake," she said.
Subra contends the sludge should have been removed and will now be even more difficult to dispose of. She claimed health problems such as skin allergies, infections or respiratory problems that do not respond to antibiotic treatment can be caused by the toxic sludge, which also contains petroleum products stored in houses that were destroyed.