Marines stationed at Camp Lejeune have higher cancer risk

AllardChardon

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VA quietly giving benefits to Marines exposed to toxic water
By Barbara Barrett - McClatchy Newpapers

WASHINGTON — Former Marine Corps Cpl. Peter Devereaux was told about a year ago that he had just two or three years to live.

More than 12 months later, at 48, he still isn't ready to concede that the cancer that's wasting his innards is going to kill him. He swallows his pills and suffers the pain and each afternoon he greets his 12-year-old daughter, Jackie, as she steps off her school bus in North Andover, Mass.

The U.S. Department of the Navy says that more research is needed to connect ailments suffered by Marines such as Devereaux who served at Camp Lejeune and their families who lived there to decades of water contamination at the 156,000-acre base in eastern North Carolina . Meanwhile, however, the Department of Veterans Affairs has quietly begun awarding benefits to a few Marines who were based at Lejeune.

"Right now, I would venture to say that any Camp Lejeune veteran who files a claim now is presumed to have been exposed to the contaminated drinking water," Brad Flohr , the assistant director for policy, compensation and pension service at the VA, told a meeting of affected Marines and family members in April.

It's estimated that as many as a million people were exposed to the water from the 1950s to the 1980s. The water was laced with trichloroethylene, known as TCE; tetrachloroethylene, known as PCE; benzene and other volatile organic chemicals.

Peter Devereaux doesn't expect to be around for Jackie's college years, but he hopes to be able to pay for them. Along with hundreds of other veterans across the country, he's convinced that contaminated water caused his cancer.

"It's like it's criminal, you know?" said Devereaux, who has male breast cancer.

While the Department of the Navy , which oversees the base, is funding continuing research on the issue, in some cases the VA has acknowledged that as likely as not, some Marine veterans' ailments were caused by drinking and bathing in poisonous water.

Despite the exposure, though, there's no presumption that a veteran's disease was caused by the contamination. Each case is judged on hits own merits, Flohr said.

Still, veterans' advocates have hope.

"It matters. That's an admission, right there," said Jerry Ensminger , a Marine veteran in North Carolina who lost his daughter to leukemia in 1985 after living at Camp Lejeune .

James Watters of Lubbock, Texas , was told in 2008 that he had a year to live. In June 2009 , he learned that the VA had linked his cancer to the Lejeune contamination.

"This thing is huge in its ramifications," Watters said. "I think it just opens the floodgates."

More Marine veterans are learning about what happened years ago at Camp Lejeune .

Two years ago, a new law required the Defense Department to contact veterans through the Internal Revenue Service and tell them about their exposure.

Many veterans interviewed by McClatchy said they had no idea that they'd been exposed until they opened the envelopes in the mail.

"You know what went off in my head? A light bulb," said Allen Menard , 47, of Green Bay, Wis. His doctor had told him years before that his form of non-Hodgkin's lymphoma, mycosis fungoides, was chemical-related.

He filed for VA disability in 2008, blaming his cancer on Lejeune's water, and was at first denied before finally he was granted a full service connection, a recognition that his illness is related to his service, this spring.

"I did my research. I had to fight," Menard said. "I had two professors at Boston University write letters for me."

One of those professors, epidemiologist Richard Clapp , said veterans deserve an answer about what effects the water might have had on their health.

"It's a horrific problem," said Clapp, who serves on a community panel that's studying the Lejeune contamination. "There are lots of people exposed, some to very high levels of these chemicals. Some for short periods for time, some for decades."

The public is only now beginning to realize the extent of the contamination.

Stories among the veterans indicate a handful have been given service connections. Each case means the VA has established that there's at least a 50 percent chance that the veteran's military service caused the ailment.

The awards are inconsistent, however. While a veteran in Wisconsin is offered payment, one in Florida with similar symptoms is denied. The VA doesn't keep track, and Flohr said this spring that he'd just learned about many of the successful appeals.

Legislation in the House of Representatives and Senate would establish presumptions between service connection and illnesses associated with the contamination, but those bills are still pending.

Although advocates are energized by recent VA benefits awards, a McClatchy review of some Veterans Affairs decisions shows that connections to the toxic water at Lejeune have been made in the past.

In 2002, for example, the agency granted a service connection to a veteran with cancer of the hard palate. The veteran, whose name is redacted, had served from 1982 to 1987 at Lejeune. His application was denied in 1995 and again in 1999.

After he sent in medical opinions about the contamination, an appeals board granted the service connection.

Another challenge for Veterans Affairs and federal scientists comes in deciding what diseases might have been caused by which chemical in the water.

For now, Flohr said the VA is trying to educate regional offices around the country. Last month, the agency sent a memo to its regional offices describing contamination of TCE and PCE.

The memo says there may be limited association between those chemicals and cancers of the kidney, breast, bladder, lung or esophagus.

The Veteran Affairs memo doesn't mention benzene, even though federal scientists said a year ago that benzene has emerged as a central suspect in the contamination. Benzene is a known carcinogen.

The distinction about which chemicals were present in the water is important, because they're associated with different diseases.

For years, Marine veteran Michael Schooler suspected that Agent Orange he was exposed to in Vietnam was responsible for his acute myoletic leukemia. Then McClatchy and other news outlets reported this year that benzene has had a far greater significance in the contamination than scientists had previously realized.

"I asked my doctor, 'Does benzene cause it?' " recalled Schooler, 61, of Jasper, Ind. "He lit up like a Christmas tree. He said, 'That's what causes it.'"

Schooler filed an appeal this spring. He expects to learn this month whether the VA will grant the service connection for benzene exposure.

In Massachusetts , Peter Devereaux also waits, drawing on the patience he learned while he was in the Marines.

"I'm terminal," he said. "Being a man, I only want to take care of my wife and daughter, like I always have."

FOR VETERANS WHO MIGHT BE AFFECTED

Veterans who think they might have been affected by contaminated water at Camp Lejeune can apply for service connection health benefits from the U.S. Department of Veteran Affairs . You can apply by filling out VA Form 21-526, Veterans Application for Compensation and/or Pension.

The VA recommends that if you have any of the following material, please attach it to your application:

— Discharge or separation papers (DD214 or equivalent)

— Dependency records (marriage & children's birth certificates)

— Medical evidence (doctor & hospital reports)

Veterans who have applied for benefits related to water contamination at Camp Lejeune say they strongly recommend a medical nexus letter from a doctor.

For more information, contact your local VA office or your local veterans service organization, or go online to http://www.vba.va.gov/VBA/

The Marine Corps also has a website about the Lejeune contamination, www.tftptf.com


This is simply deplorable.
 
During the time frame of 1950 to 1980, the USMC had two boot camps. All enlisting from east of the Mississippi River went to Camp Lejeune. All from west of the Mississippi River went to boot camp in San Diego.

Boot Camp varied in length, being shortened during the Vietnam War, but the DIs and staff usually stayed for long periods of time.
 
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Yes, the one friend of mine that went to boot camp there in the 80s died of drug- related abuse a few years ago, but I thought there might be some families out there that would want to know about this.
 
Yes, the one friend of mine that went to boot camp there in the 80s died of drug- related abuse a few years ago, but I thought there might be some families out there that would want to know about this.

And we thank you.

I have several friends that served there and went to boot camp there. A couple of them have been fighting the agent orange battle with the VA but this might have more to do with it. I'm passing it along to them and all the other vets I know that may have spent time there.
 
Since I have never been to either one, I had the idea that Parris Island was part of Camp Le Lejeune.

I went to the left hand coast.

Nope, Lejeune is in N. Carolina and Parris Island is in SC. They're a couple hundred miles apart.
 
What's criminal is that the pollution was reported to the Marines on several occasions and they just shined it on.
 
What exactly poisoned the water? Was there a toxic waste dump or chemical storage on the installation? I'm reading a book about Niagara Falls, NY and the whole damn area is a toxic chemical and radioactive disaster zone.
 
What exactly poisoned the water? Was there a toxic waste dump or chemical storage on the installation? I'm reading a book about Niagara Falls, NY and the whole damn area is a toxic chemical and radioactive disaster zone.

There are a couple of possibilities but given what a mix of toxins is in the water it's probable that all of them are true. The benzene seems to be from leaking storage tanks on the post but other sources include chemicals that must have come from a commercial dry cleaner in the local area.
 
There are a couple of possibilities but given what a mix of toxins is in the water it's probable that all of them are true. The benzene seems to be from leaking storage tanks on the post but other sources include chemicals that must have come from a commercial dry cleaner in the local area.

If this is as it seems, a cover up, there need to be a few brass hats court martialed. Why the hell the higher ups allow this sort of thing to happen to service members is beyond me. :mad:
 
We had a bunch of kids coming down with leukemia on the south side. The water table was tainted with TCE from Hughes Aircraft, and the Davis Monthan airbase. TCE was used as a solvent for cleaning airplane parts and circuit boards at the Hughes Aircraft missile plant. After it was used, it was dumped into ponds, where it leached into the water table. Of course, when the EPA came along, they had to stop, but by then the damage was done.

Here are a few random quotes from one of many articles on tce pollution, this one dating back to 2006:

http://www.purewatergazette.net/waterandthemilitary.htm

Today the U.S. military generates over one-third of our nation's toxic waste, which it disposes of very poorly. The military is one of the most widespread violators of environmental laws. People made ill by this toxic waste are, in effect, victims of war. But they are rarely acknowledged as such.

In 2003, when the Defense Department sought (and later received) exemptions from America's main environmental laws, the irony dawned on us. The military was given license to pollute air and water, dispose of used munitions, and endanger wildlife with impunity. The Defense Department is willing to poison the very citizens it is supposed to protect in the cause of national security.

Last week a study was released by the National Academy of Sciences, raising already substantial concerns about the cancer risks and other health hazards associated with exposure to TCE, a solvent used in adhesives, paint and spot removers that is also "widely used to remove grease from metal parts in airplanes and to clean fuel lines at missile sites." The report confirms a 2001 EPA document linking TCE to kidney cancer, reproductive and developmental damage, impaired neurological function, autoimmune disease and other ailments in human beings.

The report has been garnering some publicity, but not as much as it deserves. TCE contamination is disturbingly common, especially in the air, soil and water around military bases. Nationwide millions of Americans are using what Rep. Maurice D. Hinchey, D-NY, has called "TCE-laden drinking water." The Associated Press reports that the chemical has been found at about 60 percent of the nation's worst contaminated sites in the Superfund cleanup program.

The National Academy of Sciences study is a step in the right direction, but one that will certainly be met with resistance. In Tucson, because the lawsuit was settled out of court, none of the defendants had to admit that TCE is carcinogenic. Instead of acknowledging the link between TCE and local health problems, officials blamed the smoking and eating habits of local residents and said their cancer was the result of "eating too much chili." It was suggested to our parents, who are white, that Sunaura's birth defect may have been the consequence of high peanut butter consumption.

But people who have lived on the southside of Tucson don't need experts to verify that TCE is deadly. Some estimate that up to 20,000 individuals have died, become ill, or been born with birth defects. Providing further proof, the Tucson International Airport area is one of the EPA's top Superfund sites. Arizona state guidelines also assert that TCE is toxic; they say one gallon of TCE is enough to render undrinkable the amount of water used by 3,800 people over an entire year. Over 4,000 gallons drained into Tucson aquifers. As a result of this week's report, Arizona's environmental quality chief says the state is independently and immediately going to adopt stricter TCE soil standards.
 
DeeZire, Thank you for that informative post. What an eye opener. Somehow, the knowledge that our government is still treating us like guinea pigs does not make me feel any better, though. Par for the course, I would say.
 
The DoD concerns itself with achieving objectives. It does not concern itself with non-monetary costs, as a general rule.

If the Base Manager, doesn't have to clean up, then he can build that new Firing range for the M-XYZ 37mm Automatic Wog Destroyer, (AWD).:)

Short sightedness is a common failing.
 
I, personally, am intrigued my humankind's thinking that bodies of water are huge trash recepticles for their exclusive use. Whether creeks, sinkholes. ponds, lakes, rivers, streams or oceans, why do they took like a trash can? Erroneous thinking at best.
 
My GF was exposed to TCE while doing electronics assembly work, back when the dangers of TCE were known to employers, but not employees. Unfortunately, she kept working through the pregnancy of her first kid. That kid, now 25, has just been diagnosed with acute lymphoblastic leukemia. “Acute” means, if left untreated, he would be dead within a month.

Am I upset? You betcha. Do I have any patience with the Libertarian crowd who condemn government safety regulations because they impinge upon our personal freedoms? Fuck no. What’s the point of personal freedoms if you’re dead?

Strict enforcement of OSHA regulations could have saved David from his death sentence. Granted, he may survive, but he’ll be saddled with medical bills bigger than a mortgage, even after insurance, and he’ll have the chance of a remission hanging over his head for the rest of his life. Thank god Obamacare will prohibit the insurance companies from denying him coverage if he survives long enough to have a remission.

I just thought I’d drop in with an update, and to let you all know that Real Life has intervened in a stranger-than-fiction sort of way. I don’t anticipate returning to LIT any time soon. It was the anti-government libertarian extremists around here who drove me away, and, as you can imagine, I have even less respect for them now than I did before David’s diagnosis.

Peace

DZ
 
DeeZire, thanks for sharing these true effects of government negligence and you are welcome to post on a thread of mine, any time.

When will the truth about the prevalence and dangers of MRSA become known to Americans, I wonder? But that is another subject.
 
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