A chemical cloud moving around Atlanta's suburbs prompts a new
shelter-in-place alert
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[October 02, 2024]
By JEFF MARTIN
ATLANTA (AP) — Residents east of Atlanta were again warned Tuesday to
take shelter where they are if shifting winds push the still-billowing
chemical cloud from a chlorine factory fire over their neighborhood.
A shelter-in-place order had just ended Monday evening for Rockdale
County, where the chemical fire sent a huge plume of orange and black
smoke into the Georgia sky on Sunday. People complained about a strong
chemical smell and haze for many miles around the BioLab plant in
Conyers, about 25 miles (40 kilometers) southeast of downtown Atlanta.
“Due to the weather, the plume is banking down and moving throughout the
county. If the cloud moves over your vicinity, please shelter in place
until the cloud moves out,” Rockdale County officials told residents on
social media early Tuesday.
Later Tuesday, Rockdale County emergency officials extended the
timeline, recommending that residents shelter in place from 7 p.m. to 7
a.m. each night until Friday. They cited weather patterns in the evening
and overnight hours, when air quality readings “may dip to concerning
levels for those in direct exposure to the plume.”
The City of Atlanta said its firefighters continue to monitor the
fallout, and urged anyone with “nose, throat or eye irritation, or
difficulty breathing,” to call a Georgia Poison Center hotline.
“If you don’t have to be outside, if you don’t have to be on the
roadways, stay home,” Rockdale County Board of Commissioners Chairman Oz
Nesbitt said at a Tuesday morning news conference.
The fire was brought under control around 4 p.m. Sunday, officials said,
but firefighters were still actively engaged Tuesday as the smoldering
material kept sending up a plume of now grey-white smoke. The pollution
“constantly shifted,” and with no strong prevailing wind to disperse it,
smelly haze lingered across the Atlanta area.
BioLab’s website says it is the swimming pool and spa water care
division of Lawrenceville, Georgia-based KIK Consumer Products.
Residents around the area expressed frustration that company officials
in their public statements didn’t specify what “products” were burning.
Atlanta's fire department said it was testing for the presence of
chemicals including chlorine, hydrogen sulfide and carbon monoxide. The
U.S. Environmental Protection Agency also has been monitoring, for
“chlorine and related compounds.”
Federal officials are investigating what led to the fire and how it has
been handled. The sprinkler system showered water onto water-reactive
chemicals around 5 a.m. Sunday, Rockdale County Fire Chief Marian
McDaniel said. There were employees inside the plant, but no injuries
were reported.
Residents north of Interstate 20 were ordered to evacuate on Sunday,
while others were told to shelter in place. But residents of Atlanta's
densely populated eastern suburbs in DeKalb and Gwinnett counties also
reported seeing a haze or the strong smell of chlorine.
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Smoke billows from a fire at the BioLab facility in Conyers, Ga.,
Sunday, Sept. 29, 2024. (Ben Gray/Atlanta Journal-Constitution via
AP)
Hours passed Sunday before DeKalb emergency management authorities
said data suggested the air pollution was “unlikely to cause harm to
most people.” The DeKalb statement said anyone concerned about
breathing the chemicals could stay inside with their homes sealed up
and air conditioners turned off.
An EPA statement said “the odor threshold for chlorine is very low,
meaning people can smell it at very low concentrations that do not
cause harm.”
Nesbitt made a point of holding the news conference outdoors Tuesday
morning, to show that “it's all right for us to stand out here.” But
he said “this has happened too many times,” and promised to work
with state and federal officials to determine what's to be done
about the plant, once the immediate crisis is resolved.
Also Tuesday, lawyers for Fannie and Albert Tartt of Conyers,
Georgia, filed a lawsuit against BioLab on behalf of the tens of
thousands of people who had to evacuate or shelter-in-place,
accusing the company of “reckless and egregious conduct.”
“What’s especially egregious is that the defendants have been here
before — having exposed this community in a similar fashion over the
past 20 years,” said attorney Daniel R. Flynn, of the DiCello Levitt
law firm, one of several involved in the class action.
BioLab did not immediately respond to an email seeking comment about
the lawsuit.
There have been other destructive fires at the Conyers complex,
which opened in 1973.
In May 2004, multiple warehouse explosions led to a huge fire and
chlorine-laden fire that prompted the evacuation of 300 people, at
least nine of whom sought hospital treatment for burning eyes and
lungs, The Associated Press reported.
In June 2015, six Rockdale County firefighters were hurt in a fire
at the complex, and another fire in 2016 prompted voluntary
evacuations, the Rockdale Citizen reported.
In September 2020, a chemical fire prompted authorities to shut down
Interstate 20. Biolab workers tried to isolate decomposing chemicals
to prevent the catastrophe, but their forklifts slid on the wet
floor amid the fumes, and poorly stacked pallets of materials
hindered firefighters, nine of whom went to hospitals after inhaling
hazardous vapors, the Chemical Safety and Hazard Investigation Board
determined.
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Associated Press reporter Freida Frisaro in Fort Lauderdale,
Florida, contributed to this report.
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