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OREGON VETERAN DISABLED BY HEXAVALENT
CHROMIUM --
"This is our Agent Orange," says one veteran, who
served in the Oregon National Guard.

Larry Roberta, who served in the
National Guard in the Middle East, takes so many daily
medications to manage shortness of breath and other problems, he
needs a plastic tote box to keep them organized. "That's not the
man I sent," says his wife, Michelle. (photo: Rob Finch, The
Oregonian) |
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-------------------------
Oregon veteran
disabled by Iraq's 'Agent Orange'
by Julie Sullivan
The Oregonian
The soldiers worried about Saddam Hussein loyalists, not the dust.
Dust coated the Oregon Army National Guardsmen's combat boots and caked
their skin as they protected Halliburton KBR contractors restoring oil
flow in Iraq in 2003. Dust poofed from the soldiers' uniforms as they
crowded into vans at the end of the day and shared tents at night.
When the dust blew onto Spc. Larry Roberta's ready-to-eat meal, he rinsed
the chicken patty with his canteen water and ate it.
Six months later, doctors discovered the flap into Roberta's stomach had
disintegrated. Six years later, the Marine and former police officer can
no longer walk to the mailbox or work.
Another Oregon soldier, Sgt. Nicholas Thomas, died of complications of
leukemia at age 21. Three others have reported lung problems to
headquarters. Five more told The Oregonian they suffer chronic coughs,
rashes and immune system disorders.
The same Oregon Guard soldiers who went into Iraq without adequate body
armor or up-armored Humvees face another dubious first: exposure to
hexavalent chromium, which greatly increases their risk of cancer and
other diseases. It was in the orange and yellow dust spread over half the
Qarmat Ali water treatment plant by fleeing Saddam supporters.
Scientists call the carcinogen a Trojan horse because the damage may not
be immediately obvious. Over time, people can develop different cancers,
breathing problems, stomach ulcers or damage to the digestive tract.
"This is our Agent Orange," says Scott Ashby, who served in the Oregon
Guard.
Guard tries to notify soldiers

click for more information -- a disabled veteran
owned business
Ninety-three Oregon soldiers may still not know that they have been
exposed to hexavalent chromium. The Oregon Guard sent registered letters
notifying them Friday, six years after their deployment.
Officials say they didn't learn of the problem themselves until November,
when the Army, spurred by lawsuits in Indiana and Texas and a subsequent
Senate investigation, alerted the Oregon Guard. The suits claim KBR
ignored both a United Nations report and its own employees' warnings about
the danger.
The Oregon Guard has sent 286 letters to soldiers of the 1st Battalion,
162nd Infantry Division, about possible exposure. Fewer than 20 have
responded to the Department of Veterans Affairs or the Guard.
The 1-162 was broken up in an Army reorganization in 2006. And fewer than
half of the soldiers who were deployed are still in the Guard. Forty
letters have been returned unopened. The Portland VA's chief
environmental-agent doctor has seen only four soldiers.
Larry and Michelle Roberta of Aumsville received the Guard's letter Feb.
26 notifying them of his possible exposure. They set the letter aside.
Roberta has known since July 2003 when an Army medic recorded exposure to
hexavalent chromium at the water plant.
"We knew he was exposed since the very beginning," says Michelle Roberta,
38. "I sent a very healthy man over there. He did not come back."
"Restore Iraqi Oil"
The 1-162 arrived at its base of operations in Kuwait on April 18, 2003,
and within weeks, the soldiers from Gresham and McMinnville were assigned
to escort and protect KBR contractors on a mission called "Restore Iraqi
Oil." Soldiers also came from combined units from Hillsboro and St.
Helens.
Houston-based Kellogg, Brown & Root Services, then a subsidiary of
Halliburton, won the contract to get the oil flowing in Iraq. Repairing
the water treatment plant, which maintained pressure in nearby oil wells,
was a top priority.
Soldiers,
officers and the undersecretary of the Army's manager for the project say
that Oregon platoons rotated from Kuwait into Iraq in three to four day
intervals from April 2003 until June 2003. Oregon soldiers met KBR workers
at a rest stop on the main highway into Iraq, then accompanied them in the
contractors' SUVs to pipelines, oil fields or the water treatment plant.
Just weeks after the Indiana Guard replaced the Oregonians, a new KBR
safety officer arrived at the water treatment plant at Qarmat Ali. Ed
Blacke was shocked by the widespread orange and yellow dust piled feet
deep in places. The powder, he learned, was a corrosion fighter that
contained hexavalent chromium. Soon he had sinus, throat and breathing
problems, and found that 60 percent of the soldiers and staff at Qarmat
Ali had identical symptoms. KBR managers told him it was "a nonissue."
Blacke described the sequence of events to a Senate committee in June
2008.
According to a subsequent Senate query, KBR did not test the site until
August 2003 or notify the Army until September 2003. The Indiana Guard
learned of the contamination when KBR managers showed up in protective
suits. KBR closed the plant shortly after.
In October 2003, the Army Center for Health Promotion and Preventive
Medicine evaluated 137 soldiers and others at the site. They reported
abnormalities including eye, nose and lung irritation that "could also be
due to dehydration, diet supplements, previous conditions or heavy
workouts." The Army also concluded that the low levels of exposure that
were found meant soldiers were not expected to suffer long-term health
consequences.
Finally, the Army concluded, KBR had fulfilled its contract. It paved over
the contamination, then completed the water-treatment center repairs in
2006. The oil was flowing.
Health issues persist
In March 2008, nine KBR employees, including whistle-blower Blacke, sued
KBR for damages. Under federal law, the case went to arbitration last
week. In December, 16 Indiana Guardsmen filed their own lawsuit,
contending KBR "disregarded and downplayed the extreme danger." The
Indiana commander is dying of a rare lung cancer that the VA has ruled is
related to being at the water treatment plant.
KBR has denied any assertion that it harmed employees or soldiers.
Sens. Byron Dorgan, D-N.D., and Evan Bayh, D-Ind., have challenged the
Army's handling of the issue, even after an independent panel backed the
Army. The senators also want to know why some Guard members -- including
some from Oregon -- still haven't been notified.
Col. William Farthing, the Army's project manager, says officials are
trying. "We still have soldiers exposed to a carcinogen, and if they
develop any health issues related to that we want to make sure they get
help." He urges the Oregon Guard to adopt Indiana's model in coordinating
with the VA.
But the Oregon Guard is busy. The medical command is readying half the
state's soldiers -- about 3,000 -- to return to Iraq this summer. And they
are still determining who served at the water treatment plant. Because in
the chaos of the early days of the war in 2003, no one kept an archive of
names of who served where, or day-by-day events.
Brig. Gen. Mike Caldwell says the first Oregon Guardsmen sent into combat
in 50 years paid a price.
"This was the low point of the Army's care of reservists, no doubt about
it," says Caldwell, commander of the Oregon State Defense Forces.
"The strategy was driven by former Secretary of Defense (Donald) Rumsfeld
and (Deputy Defense Secretary) Paul Wolfowitz, and the responsibility goes
right back to them. They thought we were going into Panama and we'd all be
home in a week."
From fit to frail
When Larry Roberta finally did come home, Michelle barely recognized him.
For Larry Roberta, the military had always been a way out. As a foster
child, he joined the National Guard for rent money. He served three years
in the Marine Corps, then went to work as a security officer and then a
police officer. Detective and forensic classes persuaded him to pursue
computer forensics. He rejoined the Guard in 2001 so he could afford
college. And he kept working as a technician at Xerox in Wilsonville.
At 38, he scored at the top of every physical category in the Guard's
exam. His only medications: ibuprofen and Tums. He left for Iraq tan, fit
and in his prime.
Within weeks of arriving and patrolling the water treatment plant, Roberta
had severe chest pains, sore throats, coughing attacks and wheezing,
according to his medical records. Although KBR and the Army did not move
to close the plant or alert the soldiers and civilians until weeks later,
as early as July 18, 2003, an Army medic wrote in Larry Roberta's chart:
"Possible irritation of lung from reflux/inhalation air toxicity (sodium
dichromate at Qarmat Ali WTP.)"
Roberta's commanders also were concerned, hounding him to get medical
care. When the Army began investigating exposure two months later, his
first sergeant thrust him at doctors: "This is the soldier you have to
see."
In December 2003, Roberta was evacuated to Madigan Army Hospital to repair
the disintegrated stomach opening. They also diagnosed reactive airway
disorder, upper chest pain and nasal polyps, noting his exposure to
hexavalent chromium.
Then he came home. Michelle Roberta noticed other changes. He erupted at
local boys on bicycles. The former policeman who despised domestic
violence, grabbed her by the throat. She hit him with a Dirt Devil and
went to the phone book for a therapist. After he climbed over the cubicle
at work angry at a colleague, he called his wife: "I need help."
With the help of an Oregon Department of Veterans Affairs counselor, he
was rated 100 percent disabled by lung disorders, tinnitus and
post-traumatic stress disorder. He needs two inhalers to breathe and
swallows eight kinds of pills a day for upper chest pain, migraines, high
blood pressure, mood swings and a mystifying low level of testosterone.
"The worst part was, I couldn't figure out what was going on," he says. At
one point, he plotted to kill himself -- "right down to the noose."
Michelle Roberta intervened. "I have ESP about these things."
With their son Larry, 20, living at home, Michelle, a dialysis technician,
has held the family together, working full time and meeting with the
landlord and creditors to cover bills. She uses their pugs Jimi and Frank,
who respond when a mood is coming.
And she introduced her husband to Donna Burleigh of S&D Exotic Bird Rescue
in Keizer. Larry Roberta began working with abandoned birds and the couple
have since moved 23 cockatoos, macaws and others into their home in a
dizzying array of squawks and color.
Larry Roberta has begun visiting schools with his birds. He is trying, he
says, to find purpose in his new life. Many of the birds are so
traumatized they have plucked their own feathers and are unadoptable. They
perch, beneath gorgeous heads, like whole chickens ready for the pot.
"They're misfits," he says, "like I am."
Hexavalent chromium
• Exposure to 40
micrograms of hexavalent chromium per cubic meter -- about the size of a
grain of salt in about a cubic yard -- has shown a high increase in not
only lung cancer, but also leukemia and stomach, brain, renal, bladder and
bone cancers.
• Erin Brockovich constructed the famous California case against PG&E
because of contamination by hexavalent chromium.
• The chemical is the toxic component of the corrosion fighter sodium
dichromate.
• Hexavalent chromium is part of the contamination problem at most
Superfund sites.
-------------------------
posted by Larry Scott
Founder and Editor
VA Watchdog dot Org
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