Grassroots Coalition believes in open government
and full disclosure of health and safety issues
Interviewed on air, Loretta Lynch, Former President of the California
Public Utilities Commission (CPUC), implied that despite warnings from
environmentalists about gas explosion hazards beneath the development, big
money behind Playa Vista was determined to make it happen. "It was made
clear to me that this development (Playa Vista) was going to happen and
that no state agency should stand in the way," Lynch said. There was, "an
atmosphere of, we don't want to Grassroots Coalition President, Patricia
McPherson, discovered early reports commissioned by the developers that
revealed oilfield chemicals in the soil beneath the development, including
high levels of Hydrogen Sulfide (H2S), a neurotoxin that can cause
immediate death at high levels and permanent brain damage at chronic low
levels.
Florence Gharibian, EPA's Branch Chief of The Department of Toxic
Substances Control (DTSC), emphasized on-air that, "Some of the oilfield
chemicals are known human carcinogens." Gharibian also characterized the
City's own safety study of Playa Vista as
"incomplete" and emphasized that important information was omitted. She
faults engineers for running gas tests in clean soils, trucked in to cover
the contamination. "That," she said, "would obviously not result in
accurate readings."
Walt Merschat, a soil gas consultant who worked for the City,
confirmed Gharibian's observations and stated that, "I don't think we were
getting correct answers."
Bernard Endres, PhD, an oil & gas expert working with McPherson, told
NBC that, "under earthquake conditions, the soil could turn to quicksand
creating chimneys of migrating gas coming up directly under the
buildings." Endres helped win the lawsuit on behalf of those
injured in the explosion and oilfield gas fires of the 1985 Ross Dress For
Less catastrophe.
Endres has asserted for the past fifteen years that the Playa Vista
site is unique, unlike any site in the area: "the danger of explosion from
oil field gas migrating up some 300 abandoned and operating oil wells
combined with liquefiable soils, high water tables, seismic activity and
Playa Vista's close proximity to the Southern California Gas Company's
oilfield gas storage operations creates a recipe for disaster."
When approached by NBC the City declined comment. Sempra Energy's
Southern California Gas Company and Playa Capital LLC, after initially
agreeing to do on-camera interviews, gave written responses. Playa Capital
LLC responded with a personal attack against McPherson and gave a general
statement that the City's safety study was accurate. Southern California
Gas Company remarked that none of their storage gas was leaking onto Playa
Vista and that, "the storage field remains safe and secure."
Contrary to Southern California Gas Company's and Playa Capital's
written response to NBC, Moyer disclosed a recent California Public
Utilities Commission (CPUC) Report obtained by Grassroots that
characterized the gas situation at Playa Vista as "a major concern."
Most importantly, the report discusses the high probability that storage
gas is surfacing in other neighborhoods overlying the Southern California
Gas Company storage reservoir area and recommends that the CPUC Safety
Branch do a comprehensive study of the reservoir to assess
public safety.
Revealing serious malfunctions of safety measures, McPherson and
Endres took the NBC crew into an underground parking garage at Playa Vista
to document combustible gas moving up through pores in the concrete floor.
According to Endres, observing combustible gas bubbling up through water
on the garage floor indicates that, "the membrane system that was designed
to keep the gas from moving upward, has totally failed." In other words,
people living above this parking structure may not be safe.
McPherson and Endres then took the NBC crew to new gas leaks alongside
Playa Vista buildings and to an extremely high volume, high pressure gas
leak bubbling up through 8 feet of water in the marsh area across Lincoln
Blvd. To underscore the highly unpredictable
nature of the Playa Vista site, McPherson ignited a gas sample taken in a
plastic bag, which flared like a blowtorch.
The City's own experts state on-air that key safety measures don't
work. Regarding experimental 50' vent wells, created to outgas the
underlying aquifer, the Building & Safety Department's representative
states, "the series of 50' vent wells will not work properly in a high
water table or in clayey soils or sands which will clog the vent wells."
"Investigation and public hearings should be undertaken immediately to
end the controversy over what lies under Playa Vista and to determine what
safety measures have and haven't been put into place and what does and
doesn't work," says McPherson.
Developers (Playa Capital LLC) of Playa Vista, one of the most
ambitious, high-density real estate developments in the country,
effectively lobbied the City of Los Angeles and State Legislators for
millions of dollars of Mello-Roos and CDLAC tax free bonds to build on
top of one of the largest oilfield gas seeps in the world. "It may turn
out that millions of dollars of Mello-Roos bonds and CDLAC bonds were
improperly issued," stated Jeanette Vosburg, Grassroots Coalition Director
of Outreach.
Grassroots is currently engaged in an Appeal for a Subsequent
Environmental Impact Review (SEIR) for Phase 1 of Playa Vista and is
engaged in evidentiary hearings at the CPUC.
CONTACT: Grassroots Coalition
Patricia McPherson or Jeanette Vosburg, 310-721-3512