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TexasTowelie

(112,136 posts)
Mon Nov 18, 2019, 07:33 AM Nov 2019

Poisoned Michigan: How weak laws and ignored history enabled PFAS crisis

In 1973, an accident at a chemical plant in the small town of St. Louis in the middle of Michigan’s mitten triggered one of the largest mass poisonings in American history.

Before the crisis was over, nearly the entire state population – about 9 million residents – ate food contaminated with a toxic fire retardant called PBB that workers erroneously mixed into cattle feed.

It was a nightmare that Francis “Bus” Spaniola remembers well: confused residents with unexplained illnesses; farmers facing bankruptcy after thousands of pigs, chickens and cattle from more than 500 farms were executed en masse and protesters hanging state leaders in effigy. A state representative at the time, Spaniola toured Michigan’s dairyland and spoke to devastated farmers.

His companion through the chaos: his 18-year-old son, Tony, who shadowed him in 1977 as state lawmakers investigated the catastrophe.

Read more: https://www.bridgemi.com/michigan-environment-watch/poisoned-michigan-how-weak-laws-and-ignored-history-enabled-pfas-crisis

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Poisoned Michigan: How weak laws and ignored history enabled PFAS crisis (Original Post) TexasTowelie Nov 2019 OP
Interesting. Just saw the movie Dark Waters. dhol82 Nov 2019 #1
I live downriver from Detroit. Srkdqltr Nov 2019 #2

dhol82

(9,352 posts)
1. Interesting. Just saw the movie Dark Waters.
Mon Nov 18, 2019, 07:38 AM
Nov 2019

It’s the story of how DuPont poisoned the town of Parkersburg, WV with PFOA.
Did not know there were other sites.

Srkdqltr

(6,271 posts)
2. I live downriver from Detroit.
Mon Nov 18, 2019, 09:45 AM
Nov 2019

There are places in Wyandotte and South where chemical plants were that are fenced off some places for decades. Our Huron River is restricted for fish. Signs posted to not eat fish from the river. People still do.
It's all over.

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