Report Issued on Dalton Chemical Release

Dalton, GA, November 18—-MFG Chemical Company’s inability to control a chemical reaction and an erroneous accident emergency plan led to injuries of 17 police and ambulance personnel and the evacuation of more than 100 families and businesses in Dalton, according to the Chemical Safety & Hazard Investigation Board. In a report released by the board, stated that MFG, which produces chemicals for the carpet and textile industry, released a cloud of toxic allyl alcohol and possibly hydrogen chloride earlier this week, when a 2,000-gallon chemical reactor burst while processing the company’s first production-scale batch of triallyl cyanurate. Board investigators say the company’s inability to control heat was the cause of the runaway reaction, which occurred in April. However, the board also says the company’s emergency plan had only focused on allyl alcohol’s flammability and not its toxicity, which includes eye and respiratory irritation and lung, liver, and kidney damage. Consequently, the company was not equipped to handle such a toxic release, nor did it communicate the release’s toxicity to emergency responders or the community. Emergency responders, the report says, lacked protective personal equipment to handle the release’s toxicity and had no monitoring devices to detect airborne releases. They were forced to withdraw from the area when attempting evacuations. Also, ambulance crews were unaware they were entering a toxic hazard zone and were sickened and unable to treat or remove victims. Still, no one was killed or made permanently ill, the report continues. The board, which is charged with seeking the root cause of chemical accidents, notes that this accident is but the latest in a string of incidents caused by uncontrolled chemical reactions. It is currently investigating seven similar reactive accidents. A final report on the MFG incident is expected in the spring.