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NEWS & LETTERS, July 2002 

Velsicol workers fight toxic poisoning

Memphis, Tenn.—I started working for Velsicol Chemical Company in January 1990 as a utility worker and worked up to a maintenance mechanic. On May 24, 1994, my supervisor, the shift supervisor and the department supervisor met me in the department that makes heptachlor and pentadiene and wanted me to take aluminum insulation off an eight-foot-long vessel that housed chlorine gas.

It was actually an OSHA violation to have me touch the vessel because it was still in operation and they knew that it was a leak. But they don't like to lose the downtime by shutting down production. It takes almost a day for production to come back up.

I started taking the insulation off and the supervisor said he smelled chlorine. Even though I couldn't smell it, I knew I had been chlorinated. It happens all the time at Velsicol. When we get chlorinated they tell us to get peppermint and oxygen. I was gasping for air. I tried some peppermint out of the candy machine, but as I got outside I couldn't move. I was coughing and sweating profusely.

A worker drove me to the nurse's station, where they tried to figure out how to use the oxygen. The nurse was gone for the day. She got back and mixed a breathing solution that didn't do anything for me.

My wife said I was gasping all night. My physician told me the chlorine shocked my body into an asthmatic state, and I didn't have enough oxygen in my blood. From that point on I experienced a snowball effect.

I asked the president of the union, OCAW (now PACE) Local 3-357, what to do about my chest. We went to the nurse, who drove me to my primary physician. The doctor told the plant nurse that the environment at Velsicol was killing me, and she took me off work as of that day. But when we got back to the plant, the personnel manager chastised the nurse until she cried.

Velsicol never wanted me to file for worker's compensation. They would call the house and tell my wife they would take care of things. I was denied worker's comp because Velsicol said the accident never happened—I have the incident report and the statement of the emergency room doctor. One witness told me that Velsicol wanted him to lie. He told the union local, but the union refused to take a position on my case.

I was denied benefits on the long-term disability insurance that I was paying for because they say I'm still employable. If I couldn't have gone to the VA hospital, there would've been no way for me to receive medical care. I get a shot every week and it takes three days to get back around. Whenever it gets hot I feel like I'm suffocating.

Inhaling carbon tetrachloride when making heptachlor and chlordane did something to me, but it wasn't considered a big deal. My breathing had gone down every year from 1990 to 1994 on a pulmonary function test, but their doctor never said anything.

It's happening to all the workers. One guy who I'd never known to be sick said he was hoarse one day. I never saw him again. He died. There are workers there that I know that are sick, and people are dying in the community (See June N&L). Velsicol never tells workers about the community meetings because they don't want the public to know what they've done to the workers. So why would they be concerned with the people outside that gate?

I would like to see justice for me as well as for the people that work inside the plant, and those who live around it.             

—Rodney McCray

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