Suffer the Children

Carcinogen samples from local schools are off the charts

"I find myself in a very uncomfortable position," says baby-faced 38-year-old Somerville Independent School District Superintendent Charles Camarillo, clutching his elbows one recent morning while seated at a conference table inside his office.

When the San Antonio native accepted his first-ever job as a district superintendent two years ago, he knew almost nothing about the Somerville wood-treatment plant—only that the acrid smell of creosote sometimes made his eyes water while he was visiting the high-school campus set less than a mile away.

Now environmental tests indicate grossly elevated levels of contamination inside the school buildings, and at least one health expert says students should be evacuated immediately.

"I feel I'm in uncharted waters from what I was trained to do," Camarillo says. "What I don't want to cause is mass hysteria prematurely."

This summer, the rookie superintendent fielded a call from Barbara Lewis, veteran food-service director for the tiny school district—which has a $5.1 million annual operating budget and comprises one elementary, one junior high and one high school with a grand total of 525 students.

Lewis is one of more than 200 Somerville residents suing the tie plant's owners, alleging that toxic emissions caused her 50-year-old husband John's death in 2002 from colorectal and liver cancer. She also blames the facility for the intense allergies and frequent nosebleeds suffered by her 16-year-old son Colton, who attends Somerville High School.

Lewis asked the superintendent to allow her attorney's environmental scientists into the school buildings to conduct testing. Camarillo had heard rumors that the recent death of a middle-aged school custodian from stomach cancer might have also been linked to the tie plant. He assented without ever consulting an attorney, seeking approval from the seven-member school board or informing parents, students and teachers.

"It was my decision," he says. "I thought it was worth it to find out what was here."

On July 25, Santa Monica, California-based environmental consulting company Soil/Water/Air Protection Enterprise collected dust samples from the attics of five different school buildings—including the areas directly above the elementary school cafeteria and gymnasium. The samples were then sent by FedEx to a lab in Sacramento and tested for several known cancer-causing chemicals.

In mid-August, Camarillo received the results in the form of a 13-page report filled with inscrutable numbers and charts. On September 4, he asked the spouse of a friend who works as an environmental engineer at Texas A&M University to decipher the information. The contamination levels, he learned, were off the charts.

Levels of benzo(a)pyrene, a polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbon found in coal-tar creosote and linked to various cancers, were as much as 15,000 times higher than protective health levels deemed acceptable by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency. Levels of dioxin, a known carcinogen found in the defoliant Agent Orange and linked to severe birth defects and developmental problems, were as much as 76 times higher.

The lab also tested for arsenic, chromium, hexavalent chromium and copper. "All were significantly high," says Camarillo, who shared the grim results with the school board at its monthly meeting in October.

Two members of the school board are involved in the litigation against the tie plant. Arvis Hutson, a reserve officer for the Somerville Police Department, is a plaintiff in the suit. Robert Urbanosky, a tie plant employee from 1977 to 1995 who is now a Burleson County justice of the peace, provided a sworn statement affirming many of the allegations against the facility—for instance, that treated materials were burned at night to limit complaints from Somerville residents, and that hazardous chemicals from the treatment process were used for dust control. Both Hutson and Urbanosky declined to comment on the contamination found in the schools.

At the October meeting, two-term board member Olen "Pete" Pederson called for independent environmental testing and warned against the school district being used as a pawn by plaintiff attorneys.

"What do we do?" Pederson asks during an interview at his home in Somerville. "Do we have our maintenance people wearing masks, our teachers walking around wiping common surfaces?"

Pederson generally opposes the lawsuits against the tie plant and does not believe that any found contamination can be linked conclusively to the facility. He expresses concern about the children, then adds: "You can't overprotect them from everything day in and day out."

After the school board meeting, Camarillo consulted an attorney from Bracewell & Giuliani LLP in Houston. The school district, he learned, cannot be held liable for the contamination. "The only concern is perception at this point," Camarillo says. "I don't ever want the perception that we're hiding." He says he's willing to meet with tie-plant representatives as well.

Camarillo already has met twice with Houston-based plaintiff attorney Jared Woodfill and nationally known toxicologist James Dahlgren, who believes Somerville's schools should be evacuated and remediated. "Nobody wants contamination in their cafeteria where children eat or their gymnasium where children play," says Paul Rosenfeld, the environmental scientist who conducted the sampling.

Rosenfeld also notes that cancer risk is tripled for children ages 2 to 16 who are exposed to carcinogens, according to a March 2005 EPA report titled "Supplemental Guidance for Assessing Susceptibility from Early-Life Exposure to Carcinogens."

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  • former educator 12/12/2007 4:02:00 PM

    I must comment in favor of Mr. Camarillo, tho' he and I disagreed on many issues, he walked into an already messed up school district needing MAJOR work! I honestly feel that tho' the previous article is totally true, as one who is there regularly, this school was in deep poo poo long before Mr. Camarillo came here. He's trying to clean up the messes of his predcessors and that, folks, was a HUGE undertaking. Now I feel like he's trying, but he needs to be visible to ALL campus' and open minded about all issues, not just a select few. Good job Chuck.

  • Christine 12/11/2007 4:54:00 PM

    After reading this article, I am amazed at the denial of what's been in our school for MANY years. The trouble is, or should I say has been, that the school doesn't allow for budgeting for having regular cleanings in those attics, the Rock Gym's floors are rotten because of the lack of the maintenance department fixing it. The basement floods, causing all sorts of mold and despite numerous complaints over the years, there is "not enough money" to fix these problems. It's not ALL due to creosote......lots of this is laziness to fix what the real problems are. I grew up in Somerville, attended all of my school years there and graduated from A & M in 1974 and I don't have any of these problems. I have said these same things to Charles Camarillo and he just blew me off. He is a good man and I really believe he has the best of everything in his heart for our schools. However, he let's too much dictation from others over rule some of his decisions which using his OWN judgement might have been a better choice. I taught there for 8 years........I saw the "hiding of descrepencies" for many years. I resigned April 5, 07, due to medical problems. A knee replacement. I seriously doubt that the tie plant did that to me, but falling through rotten floors at school helped that along. Of course, that school has it's problems, and since I've said that, TEACH OUR CHILDREN, stop the ONLY teaching to TAKS. We had graduates allowed to walk @ graduation who did not pass TAKS and still aren't legally graduated. Some couldn't even read!!!! Yes, Somerville has problems, as do all little towns, but it's not ALL the fault of the "tie plant". Come on folks, use your noggins.......think of how many died BEFORE these law suite, money hungry people who are or have been involved in several lawsuits before for their own monitary gains which were in all probability were caused by smoking, heavy drinking, lot's of drugs. You know who you are. Shame on you!

 

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