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Posted Wednesday January 2, 2008
     
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IBM cancer-rate study will proceed

NIOSH committed to project despite Bush veto, Hinchey says

By Tom Wilber
Press & Sun-Bulletin
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After a stop-and-go attempt to fund a $3.2 million study of cancer rates among IBM Endicott employees, a federal agency has committed to move ahead with the project in 2008, U.S. Rep. Maurice D. Hinchey said.

The National Institute of Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH) will do the work, even though a mandate making it a priority was not included in an appropriations bill signed by President Bush last Wednesday, said Hinchey, D-Hurley.

In November, Bush vetoed the Labor, Health and Human Services and Education appropriations bill, which included language, authored by Hinchey, making the study a NIOSH priority. The House passed a subsequent spending bill that included the same clause, but the Senate did not, Hinchey said.

"We've been assured by them (NIOSH) they will be able to proceed," said Hinchey, a member of the House Appropriations Committee. "I'm very confident, despite the fact that it's been a very rugged road with this bill."

Christina Bowles, a spokeswoman for NIOSH, said people in the agency informed about the status of the study were out for the holidays and could not be reached last week.

NIOSH, part of the national Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, works on a budget of approximately $250 million to conduct studies that help researchers learn more about occupational hazards in the interest of preventing them.

Lynne Pinkerton, a NIOSH official, proposed the study in March to a community group called the Western Broome Environmental Stakeholders Coalition. At that time, she said funding was a potential barrier to the project, but not insurmountable if community interest was high.

The IBM-Endicott study would determine whether employees suffer disproportionately from cancer, a question asked by residents, workers and activists concerned about exposure to TCE and other hazardous solvents once widely used in the microelectronics industry.

To answer the question, NIOSH would draw on 28,000 personnel files dating to the early 1960s that document the IBM work force at the sprawling Endicott facility, now owned by Huron Real Estate Associates. Researchers would cross-reference them with cancer and death records kept by state and federal government agencies to see if people who worked for the company developed cancer during their employment or any time after.

The study also would tap IBM's industrial hygiene records to track likely exposure scenarios for workers in various departments.

Proponents have said the study would be a significant contribution to worldwide occupational safety, including in countries that use chemicals and processes being phased out in this country.

The interest in chemical exposure became more intense in the Southern Tier after the 2003 discovery that a subterranean plume of trichloroethylene and similar chemicals was flowing from the microelectronics plant on North Street and forming gases that pushed into hundreds of basements through a process called vapor intrusion.

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To bignsmall:

The main reason for the aggressive effort by Congressman Hinchey and the Western Broome Environmental Stakeholders Coalition's petition of NIOSH was to find out the answer to your question "I wonder if there is any connection.... Question "

Bldg 18 was basically ground zero for where chemicals were used for panel processing, throughout the 1960's, 1970's and 1980's. Even the spill that IBM admitted to, in 1979, occurred behind Bldg. 18 near the Conrail railroad property.
Bldg 18 could possibly be the origin of the majority of chemicals that are today, part of the 275 acre underground 'plume' that Endicott residents are dealing with.

You most certainly were exposed; However, making the direct connection to your breast cancer from those exposures is very difficult, scientifically.
This NIOSH study will get closer to the smoking gun, but won't find it definitely.
Please go to the Alliance@IBM web site and fill out an online "Health Focus Survey" (on-line or printout, fill in and mail). With your permission, the detailed information you supply can be used to inform health authorities and legal representatives; if there are requirements for further investigation.
Web site : http://www.allianceibm.org/ultimatetakeaway.htm

The IBM employees and their families deserve to know whether they could have gotten sick from the exposures to those chemicals.

You should also write a letter to Maurice Hinchey; as well as Assemblywoman Donna Lupardo and thank them for all the work they have done to get this study underway.
Also visit the RAGE web site: http://www.rage-ny.org/

Whitedog

Posted by: Whitedog on Wed Jan 02, 2008 5:47 pm

The odds are against it, if it were 20+years ago now and all. You could have been exposed to millions of different carcinogens in the meantime that could have caused your cancer.

Good luck!

Posted by: Integral Reality on Wed Jan 02, 2008 1:02 pm

I worked for IBM for 22 yrs, got laid off in 2004, just found out in Sept. I have Breast Cancer...I worked in bldg 18 for over 3 yrs back in the late 70's. I wonder if there is any connection.... Question

Posted by: bignsmall on Wed Jan 02, 2008 12:37 pm

Every time there is any discussion about the Hillcrest Children's Cancer Cluster we would all make sure that it is called that. The inclusion of the word "children's" makes it more accurate and is more likely to garner the outrage it should by those in the position to do something about it. No child should be living in that area--all residents should shiped out of there. If there is outrage about places like New Orleans and conditions there, this is even worse! We have children living in places that are known to be toxic for them. How can our country allow this?

Posted by: Upswing on Wed Jan 02, 2008 8:32 am

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