Pier 57 cops also exposed to toxins during 2004 RNC
By Chris Lombardi
As lawsuits proceed in the case of detainees hauled in to Pier 57 during the 2004 Republican National Convention, more than 42 reports filed by NYPD officers on the scene indicate they, too, were exposed to diesel dust, harsh solvents, black oil and asbestos.
The reports, obtained under the Freedom of Information Law (FOIL) by the Environmental Justice Law Project, appear consistent both with plaintiffs’ testimony in those suits, who are suing the city and Hudson River Park Trust, and the reported condition of the building before 2003, when it was still a bus garage run by the Metropolitan Transportation Authority.
Plaintiffs in the suits charge that the NYPD held them for an average of 33 hours at the pier in metal cages atop a floor covered in oily muck, and that HRPT, which loaned the pier to the NYPD for the week and protested when the detentions hit the news, should still bear some responsibility. Right now, the suits are still at the deposition stage, with the 500-plus plaintiffs spending days at the federal courthouse downtown.
“They’re keeping them for eight hours at a time, sometimes,” said Law Project co-founder Martin Stolar.
The Hazardous Exposure Reports from officers at Pier 57, released with all names and badge numbers blacked out, were produced by NYPD’s Occupational Health Nursing Unit (also known as the “sick desk”) during the period covering Sept. 224. Reporting forms like these have been standard in many city agencies for more than 20 years. Many of the Pier 57 officers, perhaps most, may have filled out the forms as a precaution in case of later health problems, especially after they saw the signs throughout the facility saying “Caution” and “Asbestos.” Others, from a close examination of the forms, were already undergoing some discomfort.
Despite limited space on the forms for details from medical staff, and only three boxes to check under ‘hazards”“Asbestos,” “Controlled Substance” and “Other”the essence of what the officers experienced comes through. Most checked the “Asbestos” box, perhaps unsurprisingly, but a fuller picture can be gleaned from what they included under “Other.”
For report #1760 it was “unknown sub-tarry,” #1494 “unknown contaminated air,” for #1997 “asbestos and carbon monoxide,” and for #1659 “black liquid.” Report #1989 provided a list: “sludge, fumes, asbestos, toxic materials.” A report whose number was also redacted said simply: “HAZMAT.” “Carbon dust,” or even just “dust” were common complaints, while other reports added the word “diesel,” as if the MTA’s diesel buses were still rumbling through the depot. And report #1678, describing an officer in active distress, gave more detail than most:
“MOS (member of service) performed 12 hrs X 8 days at [Pier 57].... [blacked out] because of sore throat, irritated eyes & chest congestion. Saw PMD [NYPD paramedic] 9/4. Was given antibiotics, cough syrup and a puffer,” the latter presumably to help her breathe. Alone among the reports released, #1678 also contained advice about how to protect herself and her family from the lingering effects of exposure.
“Work surfaces (desks, tabletops, etc) should be wiped down with a damp cloth. The cloth should then be placed in a plastic bag and then discarded. Keep all washable articles of clothing in a sealed plastic bag until they can be washed in a washer,” the report said. “Launder separately from the rest of the family’s wash. Run through two [2] cycles, then run the washer empty through one [1] cycle.” This advice echoes standard guidelines issued by the National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH) for persons exposed to hazardous chemicals, known as “aromatic hydrocarbons,” often included in the solvents used to wash buses and transportation facilities.
Mel Peffers, a former EPA clean-air expert now on staff with the Environmental Defense Fund, called the advice “smart” and completely appropriate. She told Chelsea Now last Friday that many of the aromatic hydrocarbons used to clean large vehicles are listed on the Center for Disease Control’s American Toxic Disease Registry. Peffers added that she was quite disturbed about the detention of protesters in such a place, before the building had been certified as free of either asbestos or other toxins.
“For solvents, all exposure routes are significant,” said Peffers. “Respiration can cause long-term breathing difficulties and neurological problems. And dermal, or skin, exposuredepending on how deeply the liquid seeps init can enter the blood system.” In that case, she said, “the long-term effects can include cancer.”
The lawsuits against the Trust hinge on plaintiffs’ charge that in August 2004, Pier 57 had not yet been cleared of the conditions that prevailed during its former use as a bus garage. And former transit workers have long described dangerous conditions at what the MTA called “Hudson Depot,” between the asbestos built into the old building, the diesel oil that fueled the buses and the solvents used to clean up the mess.
“I’ve heard horror stories,” said David Katzman, a spokesman for Transport Workers Union Local 100, on the phone last week. He said many at Hudson Depot, especially dispatchers and other sedentary workers, worked in close quarters at the pier, and registered a long list of health complaints.
“In the years that I worked there, it became my beliefand it still is my beliefthat there was a cluster of cancer cases at that depot,” said James Mahoney, a former dispatcher now works for TWU Local 100. In a phone conversation last Friday, he described a facility whose attitude toward worker safety was at best spotty.
In the cost-cutting 1980s, Mahoney said, even who removal at the pier was half-hearted: “First they had a company that was doing it properly, with the right equipment. Then suddenly it was a different outfit...and all they were doing was pulling it from the ceilings. They only had these plastic face masks, and that’s not what you use when you’re cleaning asbestos!” And after the depot was damaged in a January 1995 fire, he said, the MTA repaired and cleaned the building by borrowing MTA workers from as far away as the Bronx, offering extra overtime pay but little hazardous materials training.
Even normal operations, he added, were a recipe for exposure: “There were always oil leaks, rivers of oil, in the basement down below, where they washed the buses. A number of chemicals were there, in leaking barrels. It was a mess,” Mahoney said.
In addition to the police reports, the Environmental Justice Law Project also obtained the NYPD’s own environmental assessment of the pier, which reported in September that “there is not a hazardous condition at Pier 57,” using samples taken long after the 2004 Republican National Convention ended (see sidebar for details) and a copy of the memorandum of understanding between the city and HRPT, in which the city promised over and over that the Trust would not be liable for anything happening that week.
Now that the released police reports have been added to the exhibits in the RNC lawsuits, the Law Project also hopes to build on its success in obtaining them, to argue that all such reports should become publicly available, with all identifying information redacted. If hazard reports in a range of industries became public information, the benefits to both individuals and to community health efforts would be enormous, said Kupferman.
“Stuff like thischemical exposure, toxics on the job, your kid getting earaches from the paint at schoolone person goes through it, and people say it’s just anecdotal. But what if you could get real-life information about who else is complaining about this?” Kupferman asked.
Meanwhile, HRPT is continuing with its plans to develop the Pier 57, together with its chosen partner, the real estate investment firm The Witkoff Group. Witkoff’s first task, Trust spokesperson Chris Martin told Chelsea Now, is yet another environmental assessment, “so we all know what has to be done. But they have committed to us, in writing, to return the pier to a safe condition.”
Though the Trust and Martin still declined to comment on the lawsuit, the Trust is throwing considerable resources into the deposition proceedings downtown. Partners from many white-shoe firms, such as Proskauer Rose LLC., who have supported the Trust as donors and civic boosters, are also lending attorneys to work on behalf of the city and the Trust, with three such firms appearing pro bono on the counsel list in October.
“They have all the Big Firms. Here it’s just me, Joel [Kupferman] and the interns,” said Stolar, the Law Project’s co-founder.
Kupferman added wryly that the evidence from the reports moves away, finally, from earlier stages in the RNC litigation, when videotaped evidence contradicted police testimony. The officers, after all, filed these reports just as their boss, Police Commissioner Ray Kelly, was telling CNN that protesters’ descriptions of the pier were “exaggerated.”
Now, just as with the Law Project’s work on behalf of city employees who were exposed to toxins after 9/11, the nonprofit’s legal team has to make sure the words of these young NYPD officers will not be argued away, said Kupferman.
“We have to go to court now and argueagainst the citythat during that week, in those difficult circumstances, these police officers were telling the truth.”