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WSWS : News
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Government indifference as a second toxic blaze threatens
West Australian residents
By Celeste Ferguson
19 April 2002
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Just over a year after the worst toxic chemical fire in West
Australian history, state government inaction has allowed another
inferno to threaten the lives of residents in Perth, the state
capital. A state Labor government has replaced the previous Liberal
Party administration, but companies are still being given free
rein to operate dangerous facilities, without monitoring them,
near working class suburbs.
Despite two near disasters in 12 months, the government has
done nothing to stop the establishment of storage facilities containing
noxious or inflammable goods without notice to local residents,
nor has it instituted regular government safety inspections.
In the early morning of March 7, more than 1.5 tonnes of fireworks
exploded at the Cardile fireworks storage facility in Carmel,
a Perth outer eastern suburb. Shrapnel was scattered over houses
up to 600 metres from the site, shattering windows and damaging
roofs. Residents were evacuated from many homes within a kilometre
radius. Emergency workers had to check a wide area for unexploded
fireworks, some of which could have caused serious injury if handled
incorrectly.
The blaze was so intense that explosives experts declared the
site too volatile for emergency services to enter
for several hours. Residents were shocked to learn that they lived
only a few hundred metres from a site that had been licensed to
store up to 12 tonnes of fireworks. A secondary school is also
close by.
The Department of Minerals and Energy (DME), which oversees
the regulation and licensing of such sites, had renewed the plants
licence last year without even visiting the Cardile factory. DME
had also approved an increase in the tonnage of fireworks permitted
on the site, without informing local authorities.
DME officials admitted that they had no idea of the chemicals
involved in the fire or the quantity of explosives present.
Under public pressure, they revealed that another 24 depots hold
blasting explosives. Their admissions confirmed comments by one
DME employee that the department relied heavily upon corporate
self-regulation and conducted few inspections.
This policy has continued despite the February 2001 inferno
at the Hazardous Waste Solutions (HWS) dump at suburban Bellevue,
which endangered the lives and health of residents in nearby low-income
housing areas. Temperatures reached up to 1200 degrees and sent
44-gallon drums of red-hot waste through the air, landing just
short of houses.
Voluntary firefighters, not trained or equipped to fight chemical
fires, were instructed to attend a nearby bushfire,
caused by the initial explosion. Some of the drums that had catapulted
through the air burst. Yet the crews worked with no protective
apparatuses. Some volunteers bled from the nose or vomited and
had to be hospitalised.
The HWS dump was just 500 metres from Bellevue Primary School.
The next day, children were allowed to attend school even though
storm water drains were still full of toxins. Clean-up staff were
not provided with protective clothing until four days after the
fire.
Official indifference
The blaze was a product of protracted official indifference
to the health and safety of workers and residents. For 10 years,
the state government had licensed the site as a recycling plant
for chemicals and solvent wastes but in reality it was a stockpile
of thousands of drums, many of them leaking. Poisonous waste produced
by panel beaters, hospitals and large industrial companies were
dumped there.
They included heavy metals, acids, sodium aluminate and polychlorinated
biphenyls or PCBs, which are among the worlds most toxic
chemicals, as well as percloroetgylene, a dry cleaning fluid that
is a known carcinogen and which, if burnt, can produce phosgene,
a lethal substance.
Government officials clearly knew the true character of the
dump. Departments recommended HWS to industry and used the plant
themselves. Large quantities of leftover pesticides and herbicides
had been collected from farms under an official Chem Collect
program.
In 1994, under the Liberal government, DME served a one-month
safety notice on HWS. But the dispute did not reach court until
April 2001, two months after the fire.
In the meantime, in 1999, the Department of Environmental Protection
(DEP) found evidence of significant soil and groundwater
contamination present beneath the site. Toxic water may
have entered a regional water table and possibly reached the Leederville
aquifer, part of Perths drinking water system.
The DEP issued three official warnings to HWS to clean up the
site or face closure. However, the Liberal government stepped
in, fearing that it would be left to rehabilitate the site at
a cost of $1 million. Instead, the Liberals lent Waste Control
$100,000 to keep the site open. It was the cheapest option,
former Environment Minister Cheryl Edwards admitted.
Maintaining this history of official cover-up, a Labor-run
parliamentary inquiry has now concluded that the long-term health
effects of last years inferno were minimal. It recommended
the establishment of a medical register for local residents, but
the register is still not yet functioning. Residents have been
told to go to the local hospital or to a doctor for a free blood
test, only to find that the doctors know nothing about the proposal.
Bellevue Action Group representative Lee Bell accused Health Minister
Bob Kucera of misleading residents.
When journalists from the Four Corners TV program returned
to Bellevue one year after the incident, they reported that the
government had abandoned the people whose health may have been
affected by the toxic fumes. Residents revealed that no health
department officers had visited them.
Former HWS worker Brian Blair told Four Corners of chemical
spills at the site. In one incident, he had been pumping an unknown
acid. A lot of things were unlabelled, so we were using
this acid to neutralise some other chemicals, just pumping it
through these pipes about three to four metres up into the tank,
and then the aluminium fittings started to get eaten away by the
acid and started spraying out everywhere.
Officially, the cause of the fire is still unknown.
The sites owner, Jeff Claflin, remains the national treasurer
of Waste Management Association of Australia, a lobby group that
represents industry and government bodies. He has been charged
with four breaches of his companys environmental licence,
with each count carrying a maximum penalty of only $62,500, a
small sum compared to the health dangers involved.
Ron Jones, spokesman for the Contaminated Sites Alliance, which
has been campaigning for the closure of dangerous sites in residential
areas, condemned DEPs performance. Unfortunately people
do not know what they are living next to until something goes
dramatically wrong, he said.
Confronted with angry former HWS workers, emergency personnel
and Bellevue residents, state Premier Geoff Gallop has sought
to reassure them with empty platitudes. He was not happy
with the performance of the health, environment and fire and emergency
services agencies, he claimed.
Yet, even in the aftermath of the latest fire, the government
has maintained the policy of allowing corporate operators to set
their own standards. Left in these hands, sites dotted around
Perth and other parts of Western Australia will inevitably cause
further life-threatening incidents.
No action has even been taken on a damning October 2000 report
by Auditor-General Des Pearson, who found gross inadequacies in
DMEs regulation of explosives and dangerous goods. It is
clear that despite warnings from some of its own agencies, public
safety is the governments last consideration, while the
profit interests of business are its first.
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