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"I can guarantee you that citizens in this valley are, at least in some instances, breathing formaldehyde, Scott Simonton, a Marshall University environmental scientist and member of a state water quality board, told a legislative committee in Charleston on Wednesday.
Environmental Quality Board adviser Dr. Scott Simonton told a state legislative panel Wednesday that he "can guarantee" some West Virginians are breathing in traces of formaldehyde while showering. It comes after the spill at Freedom Industries on Jan. 9.
Date: Jan 29, 2014
Category: Business
Source: Google
Official tells WV lawmakers formaldehyde was in the water
Scott Simonton is a professor with Marshall University and a risk assessment advisor on the Environmental Quality Board. He presented some research done on the harmful effects of the chemical in a Joint Committee meeting on State Water Resources Wednesday, Jan. 29.
Date: Jan 29, 2014
Category: Business
Source: Google
West Virginia official says residents are breathing cancer-causing agent after ...
In a recent meeting with a state legislative committee on water resources, Scott Simonton of the West Virginia Environmental Quality Board said that his tests have detected formaldehyde in water samples contaminated by the recent Elk River chemical spill.
Date: Jan 29, 2014
Category: Business
Source: Google
Expectant father's letter to Obama: When is the government going to do ...
Included among them is Scott Simonton, an environmental scientist from Marshall University and a member of the West Virginia Environmental Quality Board, whotestified before a legislative panel Wednesdaythat hes sticking to bottled water. According to his testimony, he foundformaldehyde,a cance
Date: Jan 29, 2014
Category: Business
Source: Google
Marshall scientist found formaldehyde in Charleston water
"It's frightening, it really is frightening," said Scott Simonton, a member of the EQB, which oversees water permits for the state Department of Environmental Protection. "What we know scares us, and we know there's a lot more we don't know."
The crude MCHM that spilled into the water supply ultimately can break down into formaldehyde, Environmental Quality Board official Scott Simonton told a state legislative panel Wednesday. He added that the breakdown can happen in the shower and that formaldehyde is most toxic when inhaled.