Vinyl Chloride in the Water.

It does not take much to contaminate a well or an aquifer.  We have seen this with other chemicals such as MtBE and benzene.  In this article you can see that people had used bottled water for years, but the regulators only recently seemed to catch up.

It is amazing to me to see how much we all really do not know about how these chemicals really are affecting water supplies around the world.

Earlier this month, Delaware's Department of Natural Resources and Environmental Control notified owners of four properties near U.S. 13 and Wrangle Hill Road that they would be eligible for free United Water Delaware connections. The offer followed the unexplained appearance of a cancer-causing chemical, ethylene dichloride, in a well near the St. Georges Getty service station just north of the car dealership.

Officials had assured area residents for more than two decades that pollution from the site of the old Stauffer Chemical Co. toxic-waste landfills to the north was under control. That they were wrong underscores how little is known about how toxic chemicals make their way through complex geological formations into drinking-water supplies.

If you don't think a little of this stuff in your drinking water matters, then check out these statistics:

Stauffer and its successor, Formosa Plastics, both were named as responsible parties for the chemical contamination found in groundwater in the early 1980s near what is now Formosa's plant. The pollutants, which leached from unlined pits and storage lagoons, included vinyl chloride, ethylene dichloride and trichloroethylene, solvents or chemicals used in plastics manufacturing.

When found in drinking water even in trace amounts, ethylene dichloride is considered nearly three times more potent than benzene, a known carcinogen present in materials ranging from gasoline to cigarettes and automobile exhaust, according to calculations released by the nonprofit group Environmental Defense.

Vinyl chloride, a common plastic, can pose a cancer risk nearly five times higher than benzene when dissolved in water.

Delaware Online

Common Household Pollutants

While we only pursue cases involving more intense exposure here is an interesting link from a website focusing more on household  toxins:

Vinyl chloride is the source of “new car smell”: The plastic interior of a new car off-gasses this known carcinogen. Water sitting in PVC pipes overnight may be steeping into a toxic tea. Very large exposures can lead to “vinyl chloride disease,” which causes severe liver damage and ballooning of the fingertips.

Source:  Kitchen Table Medicine

It's in Beauty Salons too

Careful.  These products (vinyl Chloride) are not just in industrial settings.  Vinyl Chloride was once very common in beauty salons.  It still shows up there...

One of the most common types of synthetic hair is made from fibers known as modacrylics. These consist of a long chain synthetic polymers composed of less than 85% but at least 35% by weight of acrylonitrile units. (-CH2CH[CN]-)x. (I’m sorry, but the Left Brain made me put in the chemical structure. I apologize in advance for the geekiness.) Modacrylics can also include mixtures of acrylonitrile and other materials, such as vinyl chloride, vinylidene chloride or vinyl bromide. (Yawn, enough organic chemistry already!)


Source:  The Beauty Brains

Australia Toxic Dump to close

There is concern around the globe about exposure to Vinyl Chloride.  Here is an article from Australia about a toxic dump closing.  One of the big concerns in that dump appears to be an ongoing vinyl chloride leak.  A leak that was leaching into water supplies.

THE controversial Tullamarine toxic dump was set to close yesterday — and may never reopen.

The dump will remain closed while the Environment Protection Authority assesses the site to determine whether it has reached its capacity.

Even if the site does reopen it will close its gates permanently no later than August this year — more than a year earlier than the previous September 2009 deadline.

Members of the Terminate Tullamarine Toxic Dump Action Group, who have led a hard-fought battle to close the dump for more than two years, declared victory last week.

“If we hadn’t been vigilant ... who knows what they would have been capable of,” TTTDAG spokeswoman Kaylene Wilson said.

“The fact that we’re here, making noise, keeping them accountable to everything they’re doing — I think it’s just all got a bit too hard for them.”

The closure of the Western Ave site came after Transpacific Cleanaway told the EPA the landfill would reach its capacity much earlier than expected.

Last week Star reported the EPA had ordered Cleanaway to relocate 15,000 cubic metres of contaminated soil to a designated landfill area.


Source:  Star News

What is Angiosarcoma?

Angiosarcoma is a type of cancer.  This type of cancer is one that lines blood vessels or lymph vessels.  Another word that you might here associated with this is hemangiosarcoma if it is associated with blood vessels and lymphangiosarcoma if it is associated with Lymph vessels.


Hemangiosarcoma is a rare, rapidly growing, highly invasive variety of cancer. It is a blood-fed sarcoma; that is, blood vessels grow directly into the tumor and it is typically filled with blood. A frequent cause of death is the rupturing of this tumor, causing the victim to rapidly bleed to death.

Sources:  Wikipedia: Angiosarcoma

Welcome to the Angiosarcoma Law Blog

Welcome to the Angiosarcoma Law Blog.  we have set up this blog to discuss the connection between Angiosarcoma and Vinyl Chloride.  The lawyers in our office are investigating cases where angiosarcoma has been caused by Vinyl Chloride exposure.