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ARCHIVED REPORTS_XR0003172
Environmental Health - Public
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ARCHIVED REPORTS_XR0003172
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Last modified
2/11/2020 10:11:17 PM
Creation date
2/11/2020 9:05:44 AM
Metadata
Fields
Template:
EHD - Public
ProgramCode
3500 - Local Oversight Program
File Section
ARCHIVED REPORTS
FileName_PostFix
XR0003172
RECORD_ID
PR0545307
PE
3528
FACILITY_ID
FA0000932
FACILITY_NAME
DOMINO'S #8588
STREET_NUMBER
305
Direction
S
STREET_NAME
HUTCHINS
STREET_TYPE
ST
City
LODI
Zip
95240
APN
03319020
CURRENT_STATUS
02
SITE_LOCATION
305 S HUTCHINS ST
P_LOCATION
02
P_DISTRICT
004
QC Status
Approved
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EHD - Public
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10/12/1995 28.44 9153519357 ANNE M FARR PAGE 07 <br /> We have so far identified about 30 other sites in Maine where MTBE is a component of the <br /> spilled gasoline. This accounts for about 90% of the recent analyses which we have routed <br /> through the Public Health Lab. They all seem to follow the same general pattern that: <br /> 1)concentrations of gasoline and MTBE in ground water at the center of the plume can be <br /> extrememely high. Our record high concentration so far is over 600,000 parts per billion to one <br /> household well with the intake pipe beneath floating product in a sand and gravel aquifer. This <br /> contrasts with the usual maximum concentration for similar situations without MTBE of about <br /> 10-30.000 pans per billion. <br /> 2) MTBE can occur as the only contaminant above detection limit over large areas of the <br /> plume. In one plume, believed to have originated from a small driveway spill. MTBE was the <br /> only detected contaminant of the spill. <br /> 3) the MTBE plume seems to occur as a halo around the gasoline-plus-MTBE plume <br /> Where the plume is expanding. detection of MTBE precedes detection of gasoline in <br /> contaminated wells. <br /> Toxicity of MTBE <br /> The American Petroleum Institute. and several MTBEproducers have run a battery of <br /> toxicity tests to assess its hazards. A summary of the results of these tests is as follows. <br /> Within the limits of the testing. MTBE was found to be not very toxic, with effects similar <br /> to those which are characteristic of other ether compounds such as diethyl ether, formerly the <br /> standard surgical anaesthetic. It appears not to be genotoxic,and because it was "negative with <br /> and without activation"on the Ames test. it is probaby not carcinogenic. MTBE is,however, a <br /> skin and eye irritant in more than one rodent species at high doses. <br /> ARCas health monitoring of thea workers at MTBE manufacturing and transport facilities <br /> s seem to indicate no adverse effects at time weighted average doses of up to 3ppm in air But as <br /> is commonplace with any ground water contaminant getting into household water supplies, the <br /> concern it raises and the aggravation it causes the affected householders is a serious health effect <br /> independent of its toxicity. <br /> Four reasons for concern over the toxicity of MTBE, and its presence in domestic well <br /> water are the following. <br /> 1) It is very mobile in ground water. Thus concentrations recorded from a well one week <br /> may be quite different the following week Occassionally we have noted increases in the <br /> concentration of MTBE in domestic supplies of about an order of magnitude within a couple of <br /> days. Thus it is important to reduce concentrations in domestic water supplies as soon as they <br /> are discovered. <br /> 2) plumes of MTBE in ground water are associated with plumes of gasoline, with its more <br /> varied and toxic components. Thus detection of MTBE should be considered a warning bell <br /> 3)There is concern over MTBE's irritant pr+apetties. <br /> i 4) MTBE is probably a nervous system depressant (like other ethers and the BTX <br /> components of gasoline)at high concentrations. <br /> With these considerations in mind,the State Toxicologist for Maine has set a recommended <br /> maximum concentration level for MTBE in domestic water at 50.parts per billion. the same as <br /> for gasoline. <br /> 3�i <br /> t <br /> f <br />
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