Residents sue
Texaco claiming MTBE contamination
Some Trevose homeowners say gasoline leaks have jeopardized
their health.
Bucks County Courier Times
May 24-25, 2002
Its been more than a year since residents along Brownsville
Road became alarmed that a nearby Texaco station was contaminating
their air and water with gasoline.
Now, about 30 residents have filed a class- action lawsuit
in county court against the company and the property owner.
They claim the company and property owner have acted with
“reckless indifference” to their health and safety
by exposing them to gasoline that spread from the station
into their homes and yards. The contaminants include benzene,
a known carcinogen, and MTBE, a gasoline additive linked to
cancer.
“Our children played in our back yards, our pets played
in our back yards. We had vegetable gardens,” said plaintiff
Karen Jaxheimer, a 24-year resident of Knable Lane in Bensalem.
“We worried [the station] is still leaking and what
effect it is going to have on our health.”
Neighborhood dogs have died from cancer, residents have suffered
with respiratory ailments and headaches, she said, without
knowing for sure the cause. And for eight years, Jaxheimer
said, residents were never told there was a problem.
Company officials said that residents were never at risk
and it has properly monitored and cleaned up the site according
to state environmental standards.
But residents said that contamination of their neighborhood
has been an ongoing problem.
As recently as February, the levels of MTBE and benzene contaminants
in one on-site monitoring well reached 13,100 parts per billion,
according to state environmental officials. The highest acceptable
level of MTBE is 20 ppb, according to the officials.
MTBE, or methyl tertiary-butyl ether, has been added to gasoline
since the late 1970s to help reduce air pollution. But it
also spreads rapidly through water.
Most of those who are suing live on Dara Faith Drive and
Knable Lane on the Bensalem side of Brownsville Road. They
are all connected to public water. But the gasoline, they
said, has contaminated the air and groundwater, entering through
their yards and basements.
SPOTTY RECORD
The Texaco station, visible from the top of a hill on Brownsville
Road, has had problems over the last 10 years with leaking
gasoline, according to the state Department of Environmental
Protection.
Since 1994, the DEP has ordered a cleanup at the site at
least five times because tests showed elevated levels of contaminants,
according to DEP officials.
The cleanup efforts included pumping out groundwater, fixing
cracked tanks and removing soil, DEP officials said. There
are a total of 15 monitoring wells that check for contaminants,
one of which is off-site.
Residents said they first learned about the contamination
in 2000, when they noticed orange- colored oily water standing
in their yards and noxious fumes in their homes.
That was the same year that MTBE levels soared to 161,000
parts per billion in one underground monitoring well at the
station, the highest recorded level ever at the site, DEP
officials said.
Jaxheimer said she and other residents began to look into
the cause of the problem.
“It became apparent that this was pretty big and that
we were not told about this,” she said.
Motiva Enterprises LLC, the marketing and legal wing of Texaco,
notified Lower Southampton and Bensalem about the contamination,
and they then notified residents, officials from both townships
said. But residents said they should have known that the station
was contaminated long before MTBE levels spiked so high.
Last year, air and water quality tests in nearby homes showed
that one had MTBE levels 44 times the state health limit and
benzene twice the state health limit, according to the suit.
Other homes checked out with acceptable levels.
TAKING THE CASE TO COURT
The lawsuit, filed in late February, is moving in court right
now to the discovery phase, in which attorneys on both sides
will take depositions from witnesses and conduct detailed
research.
The first hurdle plaintiffs will face will be gaining class
action status, which will enable them to act as a group in
the case, plaintiff’s attorneys said.
That’s important, they said, because a class action
is cheaper than filing individual cases and allows more people
to join a possible settlement.
Plaintiff attorney Mark Tanner said anyone who lives within
a 2,500-foot radius of the Texaco site - or about eight football
fields - is potentially affected and could join the suit.
That’s more than 100 people, he added.
“Here we have the ability to gather a lot of people
whose rights have been violated in a similar way and hopefully
help them,” he said.
Texaco, represented by Motiva, responded through prepared
statements. Motiva said there is “no indication that
this incident presents a risk to residents” and added
that the station has fully cooperated with the DEP in-site
monitoring and cleanup through pumping water, removing soils
and sampling vapors in residents’ homes.
“We believe we have acted responsible and in good faith,”
the statement said.
In March this year, Motiva sent a letter to neighborhood
residents with an update on the latest cleanup effort.
“First and foremost,” the letter began, “we
would like to emphasize that the health and safety of our
neighbors is our highest priority.”
That outreach has satisfied residents like Rich and Nina
Llorens, who knew about the contamination when they bought
a new house on Knable Lane, two doors down from the station.
“I used to manage a gas station years ago so I know
what it’s like,” Rich Llorens said, sitting on
his front porch smoking a cigarette.
Llorens said that since he is hooked up to public water and
has no basement, he doesn’t see how any contamination
might hurt him. Plus, he said, the station has been involved
in cleanup.
DEP officials said they’re also satisfied that Motiva
is acting responsibly.
“We have no problems with what Motiva’s doing
right now,” said Lauren Mapleton, a geologic specialist
for the DEP. “They have put in all the monitoring wells.
I feel Motiva’s doing that they’re supposed to
do under the environmental law.”
Motiva submits quarterly monitoring reports to the DEP, and
when levels of contamination spike, a cleanup effort stars
immediately, she said.
Gasoline leaks at a gas station aren’t unusual, she
said.
Gasoline can easily contaminate air and groundwater from
leaks in the tank, loose piping and even a customer overfilling
a car, she added.
Once gasoline gets into the air and water, it can be very
difficult to control, Mapleton said.
“It doesn’t come out easily,” Mapleton
said. “It gets stuck in bedrock, in fractures in the
rock, in unconsolidated soils. It’s not just something
that goes away on its own.”
Residents in the suit said that hardiness of the contaminants
is just what they fear.
They would like Motiva to include them in an ongoing health-monitoring
program, similar to what is gas station employees use. Residents
said their health and well-being are at stake.
“This week we saw a puddle of oily water in the back
yard,” Jaxheimer said. “We see it there all the
time.” |