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WEST VA. GUARD STILL SEEKING TROOPS IN
POSSIBLE
CHEMICAL EXPOSURE -- Guard is still trying to
locate
about 25 troops who may have been exposed six
years
ago to a toxic chemical at an Iraqi water
treatment plant.
For more about chromium exposure in Iraq... click
here...
http://www.yourvabenefits.org/sessea
rch.php?q=chromium&op=and
Story here...
http://www.chicagotribune.c
om/news/chi-ap-wv-soldiers-chemical,0,5359241.story
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-------------------------
Guard seeking WVa troops in possible chem
exposure
By JOHN RABY
Associated Press Writer
CHARLESTON, W.Va. - The West Virginia National Guard is still trying to
locate about 25 troops who may have been exposed six years ago to a toxic
chemical at an Iraqi water treatment plant, a Guard spokesman said Monday.
The Guard was notified in November that as many as 150 members were in the
Basra area and were potentially exposed to hexavalent chromium in 2003.
Lt. Col. Mike Cadle said that number has since been narrowed to about 125.
About one-third of the troops are still with the Guard and contacting them
was simple. But those no longer active members aren't required to maintain
contact and Cadle says efforts to reach them have proven difficult.
The Guard wants the soldiers to get health screenings through the
Department of Veterans Affairs.
"We want people to know. That's the goal, whether they were exposed long
term, short term," Cadle said. "We just want people to know there's a
potential and that they should get the appropriate assessment at the VA.
Whether the outcome is somebody has an illness related to this or not,
it's not the point."
A handful of letters from the latest notification effort were returned to
the West Virginia Guard because the former members had moved and left no
forwarding address.

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"When we get those, we call people who may have known that person, (but)
we want to make personal contact," Cadle said. "We don't want somebody to
hear about it outside of the Guard."
A lawsuit filed in December by 16 Indiana National Guard soldiers against
defense contractor KBR Inc. claims the troops now have respiratory system
tumors associated with exposure at the site.
Hexavalent chromium, the chemical featured in the 2000 movie "Erin
Brockovich," is used to remove pipe corrosion and has been linked to lung
cancer.
Cadle said the Guard plans to bring in some VA officials this month from
Washington, D.C., to answer soldiers' questions.
"We're trying to reach out and do as much as we can to make sure people
understand the situation," Cadle said.
Last
month, two U.S. senators wrote to the Army and Defense Secretary Robert
Gates saying Houston-based KBR allowed soldiers to be exposed to the
chemical for more than two months in 2003 even though they say KBR knew
the plant was contaminated.
The letter from Democratic U.S. Sens. Byron Dorgan of North Dakota and
Evan Bayh of Indiana said KBR's Army contract for the Qarmat Ali plant
appears to have included a risk assessment of the site, but that the
company failed to detect "what we all now know to be significant
quantities" of the chemical.
Bayh and Dorgan said Indiana National Guard troops based at the water
plant only learned of their possible exposure after seeing KBR workers
wearing special protective clothing. The senators also asked the Army to
update them on efforts to alert soldiers with Guard units from Oregon and
South Carolina that they may also have been exposed.
KBR was responsible for restoring Iraq's oil infrastructure shortly after
the March 2003 invasion by U.S. troops. The Qarmat Ali plant is needed to
pump water into Iraq's southern oil reservoirs.
KBR has said it notified the Army Corps of Engineers upon discovery of the
chemical at the plant site. It also said military officials had determined
that the air at the plant did not contain dangerous levels of the
chemical.
-------------------------
posted by Larry Scott
Founder and Editor
VA Watchdog dot Org
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