A toxic trek through NOLA hazardous waste sites: Thompson Hayward

Editor’s note: Tulane environmental studies and public health major Gabriella Burns recently visited three New Orleans hazardous waste sites with Wilma Subra, owner of environmental consulting company Subra Inc. and a MacArthur Genius Award winner for her work in environmental justice issues along Cancer Alley. This is the second of a three-part series on what she found.

What are we to do when a playground in New Orleans is built on an old Agent Orange factory site? (Photo: Wiki Commons)

For 50 years, chemical manufacturing plant Thompson Hayward in New Orleans made DDT, Agent Orange, and other pesticides. It shut down in the 1986, but pollution from the plant impacted nearby communities long after its demise. You wouldn’t guess that dark past from a visit to the playground, with its cheery equipment and bright green grass, that now stands in its place.

“This is one of the worst contaminated sites over New Orleans, and it’s just this one-block piece of property,” says environmental expert Wilma Subra, shaking her head as she watches boys play on the basketball court. “It was cleaned up to industrial standards; it wasn’t cleaned up to residential or recreational standards.”

That’s because, when the site was originally remediated, there was no way to remove the toxic soil.

“They didn’t know how to get rid of the contaminated soil. There was no place in the United States for it to be sent to if they excavated. So after they did the initial tearing down of all the buildings, except the warehouse, they put a foot of good soil and then an asphalt top just like a parking lot.”

According to records of the class action lawsuit brought against the Thompson Hayward corporation, plaintiffs suffered multiple health issues that likely stemmed from their exposure to the chemicals around the site, even after it closed in 1986. These included cancer, kidney problems, birth defects, and miscarriages. The picture Subra paints of the repercussions of lingering contamination is extremely grim. These women who suffered had no idea that they lived near such a toxic site. “They weren’t aware as they lived there for generations. As it was operating. They had no idea what was going on; they knew it smelled bad.”

Subra also has reservations about the documentation of the clean-up by the Louisiana Department of Environmental Quality because, as she says, “in the old days, everything was paper. So you had to go to the DEQ and ask for a file on the site. I would find some things I really wanted. So I’d mark it, come back in a week, and it was gone. They didn’t have a master to recreate. So the paper file was open to anyone who wants [to see it], and all you had to do is have your bag down there. If the industry wanted to get rid of it, just slip it in your bag. Yeah, they had nobody watching you what we’re doing…So, some of the records for the site may be missing. We can only speculate on the impact that could have had on the plans for the playground that is there today, or on the remediation that occured at the site.”

Topsoil was replaced, but Subra does not think this was sufficient, especially in flood-prone New Orleans.

“Yeah, if we have another flood it’ll be leaching right up. And then you’ll be able to come in and you’ll be able to see spots where the groundwater is so high.”

Meanwhile, children continue to shout with laughter in a playground built atop a former Agent Orange factory.

Gabriella Burns’ articles are derived from a service learning project in Dr. Christopher Oliver’s course EVST 4410 Senior Seminar in Environmental Studies at Tulane University. This work is also part of a long-term project facilitated by the Critical Visualization Media Lab (CVML), led by Dr. Oliver. Dr. Oliver is Professor of Practice in the Department of Sociology and Environmental Studies Program. He is also Jill H. and Avram A. Glazer Professor of Social Entrepreneurship through the Phillis M. Taylor Center for Social Innovation and Design Thinking and a faculty fellow in the Mellon Graduate Program in Community Engaged Scholarship.

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3/2/24
03:48

My father worked at this facility. I can still remember the chemical smell on his clothes. He died 47 years old. Bladder cancer. Suffered tremendously. Exposed to chemicals DDT and agent orange

William North