By HOLBROOK MOHR
Associated Press
DOYLINE, LA (AP) - The explosives recycling
company that caused the evacuation of a Louisiana town has come under
scrutiny for explosions and its handling of dangerous materials before,
and it was so far behind on its rent that the Louisiana National Guard
refused to lease it more space.
Explo Systems Inc. was cited for safety violations
by the federal government in 2007 for its use of old Army explosives in
mining operations in West Virginia, where a blast with "outdated
deteriorated military ordnance" injured one worker and exposed others to
toxins. And the company had fallen hundreds of thousands of dollars
behind on its rent at a Louisiana National Guard base even as it
processed an Army contract to demilitarize hundreds of thousands of
propelling charges used for artillery.
The company's most recent problems began with an
explosion in October at that northern Louisiana facility. Authorities
investigating the blast found an estimated 6 million pounds of a
propellant called M6 - used for artillery rounds - haphazardly stored.
Some boxes were stacked in buildings, some were packed into long
corridors that connect the buildings and still more were found stashed
outside. Some of the containers were spilling open.
Authorities feared that ignition of any of the
propellant could set off a massive chain reaction that would race
through the corridors and blow up multiple buildings, threatening the
town of Doyline. Its 800 residents were put under a voluntary evacuation
order for several days ending late last week, with kids out of school
and some people living at camp sites in a nearby state park. The company
is now under a criminal investigation for its storage of the materials,
which have are being secured.
Lt. Col. Michael Kazmierzak, a Louisiana National
Guard spokesman, said Explo officials asked earlier this year to lease
more space at the base but that the request was turned down because the
company was roughly $400,000 behind on rent. He said the company never
again brought up the need for more space, but the Guard eventually
worked out a payment plan for the rent that was owed. He said Explo has
made at least one payment under that plan.
State Police spokeswoman Julie Lewis has said the
materials found outside appeared to have been "hidden" among trees. It's
not clear if they were put there after the National Guard refused to
give the company more space.
Explo Systems has not responded to numerous
messages. An attorney who has represented the company declined to
comment when a reporter visited his office last week in Shreveport, La.
The October explosion wasn't the first at the Explo
facility. A series of at least 10 explosions there in 2006 caused an
evacuation of Doyline, shut down Interstate 20 and forced officials to
move students to schools in a nearby town, Webster Parish Sheriff Gary
Sexton has said.
The company also came under scrutiny in West
Virginia where it was using an old military explosive called tetryl in
mountaintop removal mining for Catenary Coal Co. in 2006 and 2007,
according to documents reviewed by The Associated Press. A February 2007
blast injured one worker and exposed others to toxins. Some of the
tetryl dated back to 1940.
Among the allegations in the reports, federal
regulators said Explo used a Chevy pickup truck to haul 350,000 pounds
of the explosives around the mine site, but the vehicle did not have
"suitable sides to confine" the loads. On one trip, about eight wooden
boxes fell out of the truck, broke open and spilled explosives on the
ground. The company also failed to properly separate explosives and
detonators while hauling the material, the report said.
Explo Systems "displayed a reckless disregard for
the health and safety of miners and by giving no consideration to the
mining laws applicable to these activities," the Mine Safety and Health
Administration said in report dated April 3, 2007.
The report said Explo was working as a contractor at the mine.
The company paid fines of $2,000 for each of at
least three violations related to the handling and transporting of
explosives, according to federal records.
West Virginia mine safety officials also said Explo
violated state regulations, but it wasn't immediately clear what
penalties the state may have imposed.
Some workers filed lawsuits claiming the exposure
to tetryl made them sick. The substance can cause symptoms including
nosebleeds, yellowing of the skin, headaches and, in prolonged exposure,
liver damage, according the Occupational Safety and Health
Administration.
Explo Systems had planned to use more than a
million pounds of tetryl for mining, according to the federal report.
That would have enabled the company to dispose of outdated explosives
for the Department of Defense while also making money from the mining
industry.
Explo Systems, which was registered in Louisiana in
2001, has made millions from contracts with the military. Last year,
the company listed its annual revenue as $3 million with 70 employees,
according to the Federal Procurement Data System.
The Army awarded Explo Systems a contract in 2010
to demilitarize hundreds of thousands of propelling charges for
artillery rounds. The contract was for $2.9 million with options for
renewal for four years. The contract called for the demilitarization of
as many as 450,000 propelling charges per year. Demilitarizing
explosives generally entails changing a device or chemical in a way that
it can't be used for battle.
Stephen Abney, a spokesman for the Army's Joint
Munitions Command, said it's possible the M6 at the site came from the
Army propellant charges, but he couldn't be sure.
Abney said Explo requested on Nov. 27 that the
government hold all shipments because Louisiana authorities would not
allow them to receive it until inspections and investigations have been
completed.
Abney said the Army is gathering information about the events in Louisiana to help it decide whether to continue the contract.
The contract also raises questions about what Explo
told the Army when bidding on the job and in subsequent reports. The
solicitation for the contract required the company to provide "a
detailed description of storage capacity."
A July 2011 report from the Government
Accountability Office related to a dispute between Explo Systems and
General Dynamics Ordnance and Tactical Systems Inc., over a military
contract said the military rated Explo Systems' safety approach as
"good." It was rated "satisfactory" in areas like its program management
plan and "exceptional" for past performance. It wasn't clear from the
report if the 2006 explosion in Louisiana or the problems in West
Virginia were taken into account as part of that assessment.
The Explo facility is located on Camp Minden, a
Louisiana National Guard base. The U.S. government had acquired the land
in 1941 to build the Louisiana Army Ammunition Plant. It was handed
over the state of Louisiana in 2005. Because it was set up as a
munitions factory, the site was suitable for private companies in the
explosives business.
Kazmierzak, the Guard spokesman, said Explo is responsible for cleaning up its mess.
"As a commercial tenant, they are responsible for
all their operations and abiding by the laws and regulations, both state
and federal. It's upsetting that they would allow this to occur," he
said.
Authorities had said it's not clear exactly what
Explo was planning to do with the estimated 6 million pounds of
propellant that prompted the evacuation, though some experts say it can
be used in the manufacturing of explosives in the mining industry.
Authorities say the explosions at the Louisiana facility in October and in 2006 were caused by a different kind of material.
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