News -> INDReporter THU, SEP 2 9:22AM by Dege Legg

Corexit’s 2-butoxyethanol detected in Florida swimming pool

Over a month after BP claimed to have stopped using Corexit in the Gulf of Mexico in response to the BP oil spill (Unified Command claims to have stopped using the dispersant July 19), the chemical has once again turned up in an unlikely place: a backyard swimming pool in Homosassa, Fla., owned by the Barbara Schebler family.

Since May the family had been experiencing rashes and severe diarrhea. Unable to determine the cause of these problems and concerned that there may be environmental factors adding to the equation, the Scheblers sent water samples from their backyard pool to be tested by Analytical Chemical Testing Laboratory, Inc. in Mobile, Ala., which also tested and detected Corexit in water samples collected from the home of Cotton Bayou, Ala., resident Margaret Long. The test results from the Schebler family’s pool, which can be viewed here, revealed the samples to contain 50.3 ppm of Corexit’s 2-butoxyethanol.

From FloridaOilSpillLaw.com:

The question remains, how did this chemical find its way into the Schebler’s pool in such a high concentration?

"At night we would hear very low aircraft, including helicopters. We figured they were just heading to help out in the Gulf,” and Mrs. Schebler added that she was told, “The prevailing winds from the Gulf are easterly — and when they spray, it is airborne — and that we are right in the path of those winds.” It was also noted that, “We had alot of rain here before my husband got sick, and wondered what was going on…We had been having daily downpours in July.”

There is no way to be sure at this point. Though she stated, “Friends a few miles away… are having [a] similar situation. They are now thinking of getting their water tested.”

As for the family’s current physical well being, “We both still have rashes that will not go away if we stop the cream we were given by our doctor. Warren still gets diarrhea on and off – this never happened with this frequency before.”


The full article at FloridaOilSpillLaw.com can be read here.



Comments (4)add
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written by Primo , September 02, 2010 - 09:55 pm
The oncologist are going to make a killing on this one. Do yourself a favor people, wait until scientific (non-smell test) data comes in on the food you eat!
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written by Northdidian Shotgun . , September 03, 2010 - 01:39 am
This information was posted in The Independent Weekly shortly after the BP blowout, the cancererous corexit is in the sealife, the oysters, shrimp, crabs & fish, all are contaminated, BP and OBAMA WILL DENY THIS 3-5 YEARS FROM TODAY, WHEN THE NUMBER OF CANCER VICTIMS IN OUR LOWLYING AREAS ARE FOUND WITH THIS AWFUL DISEASE........
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written by Smever , September 07, 2010 - 03:50 pm
2-Butoxyethanol is frequently found in popular cleaning products.[1][2] It provides cleaning power and the characteristic odor of Windex and other glass cleaners. It is the main ingredient of many home, commercial and industrial cleaning solutions, such as Simple Green All-Purpose Cleaner.- Wikipedia


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written by Adding2Smever , September 18, 2010 - 02:37 am
Here is the paragraph just above smever's quoted one from Wikipedia:

2-Butoxyethanol is a solvent in paints and surface coatings, as well as cleaning products and inks. Other products that contain 2-butoxyethanol include acrylic resin formulations, asphalt release agents, firefighting foam, leather protectors, oil spill dispersants, bowling pin and lane degreaser, and photographic strip solutions. Other products containing 2-butoxyethanol as a primary ingredient include some whiteboard cleaners, liquid soaps, cosmetics, dry cleaning solutions, lacquers, varnishes, herbicides, and latex paints.
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