News from USW: Steelworkers Charge DuPont with Hiding Information on Health Effects of Teflon Chemical.PITTSBURGH -- News from USW USW Und So Weiter (German: and so on) USW Undersea Warfare USW United Steel Workers USW US Wheat Associates USW Ultrasonic Welding USW Ultra Short Wave USW US West Telecommunications (stock symbol) : The United Steelworkers (USW) is condemning DuPont (NYSE NYSE See: New York Stock Exchange :DD) for contaminating employees around the country with some of the highest levels of the Teflon chemical, PFOA PFOA Perfluorooctanoic Acid (suspected carcinogen used in making Teflon) PFOA Problem Formulation and Options Assessment PFOA Peninsula Friends of Animals (Sequim, WA) , yet to be found in human blood, while denying workers information on potential health effects. DuPont is refusing to release certain data the company collected on Parkersburg, West Virginia
Parkersburg is a city located in Wood County, West Virginia, United States at the confluence of the Ohio and Little Kanawha Rivers. employees to a court-appointed panel of scientists who are investigating potential health effects suffered by thousands of Ohio and West Virginia residents after drinking water was contaminated by PFOA. DuPont has also failed to release the study and other PFOA data to a USW local union after it made a formal request. "We condemn DuPont's refusal to make the study available to its employees and the public," said Ken Test, Chairman of the USW DuPont Council. "DuPont is obviously hiding something." DuPont informed its USW-represented Deepwater, New Jersey Deepwater is a community in Pennsville Township, in Salem County, New Jersey, lying at the east end of the Delaware Memorial Bridge. Deepwater is the location of the United States Postal Service area covering ZIP code 08023. plant employees on November 14 that levels of PFOA in their blood were as high as 6330 parts per billion (ppb), thousands of times higher than the average level of 5 ppb in the general population. "If PFOA is not harmful as DuPont keeps telling the world, then why the secrecy and unwillingness to share information on its effects with its employees who comprise the most exposed population," asked Jim Rowe, President of USW Local 943 in Deepwater. PFOA has also been found as high as 800 ppb in the blood of workers at DuPont's Spruance plant in Richmond, Virginia, even in the wake of DuPont's statements that it stopped using the chemical years ago. "We've been asking for information on PFOA since 2004, and DuPont is demanding a confidentiality agreement that would prevent us from giving information to government agencies, public interest groups and workers at other plants," said Jay Palmore of the Ampthill Rayon rayon, synthetic fibers made from cellulose or textiles woven from such fibers; more rayon is manufactured than any other synthetic fiber. The name was adopted (1924), in preference to "artificial silk," by the U.S. Dept. Workers Union. "So we are more than suspicious." The USW has been conducting its own blood testing of workers and monitoring the situation at several DuPont plant locations. Publicly available data indicates that PFOA average levels of 422 ppb and levels as high as 1870 ppb have been found in employees' blood at DuPont's Fayetteville, North Carolina Fayetteville is a city located in Cumberland County, North Carolina. As of the 2000 census, the city had a total population of 121,015. It is the county seat of Cumberland County GR6, and is best known as the home of Fort Bragg, a U.S. plant, and the levels appeared to have doubled since 2002. The plant is the sole manufacturer of PFOA in the U.S. "We believe that DuPont's actions over PFOA fly in the face of Verb 1. fly in the face of - go against; "This action flies in the face of the agreement" fly in the teeth of go against, violate, break - fail to agree with; be in violation of; as of rules or patterns; "This sentence violates the rules of syntax" its stated commitment to environmental sustainability and worker health and safety," said Test. "It's green-washing and safety-washing at its best." The USW represents 1,800 workers at DuPont's plants in the U.S. |
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