Tag: asbestosfibers

Where History Means Knowledge. Be Informed.

140 Asbestos-Related Blog Postings Since December 2020: A Listing of Topic with Hot Links for those who are Interested.

I posted my first Asbestos-Related blog just prior to entering the Masters of History program here at the University of Colorado at Colorado Springs in January 2021. I am about to reach 20,000 views in just under three years and am honored with your interest. For those who were not with me at the start…
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EPA Model Training Manual from the 1990s: I Didn’t Know That.

As my weekly blogs focus on history, don’t take all of the documents which I cite or use as being current. Rather, please see them as the historical learning experience that they are meant to be. Today, we take a look at the EPA suggested training during the 1990s as embodied in its EPA Model…
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What Happens to Asbestos Fibers Released During Manufacturing to the Environment: Land, Water, and Air.

So, the manufacturing is done for the day, the laborers pack it all up, sweep the floor, take a hit on the water jug, and either head home or stop in at the local drinking establishment. In 1982, the Environmental Protection Agency in the United States decided to extensively research and issue a 265 page…
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Electric Codes and the Use of Asbestos Wiring: Canadian Code from 1966.

Last week, we discussed what Engineers knew about asbestos prior to 1920. Today, let’s discuss how those involved in the electrical trades might find asbestos in their renovation jobs. We will use the Canadian code from 1966 merely as an example. From the following pages taken from the book, clearly asbestos wiring insulation had its…
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What Engineers Knew About Asbestos: Pre-1920

I love a good stroll through the archives. Today, please join me on this trip as Electrical Engineers might have been making over 100 years ago. Asbestos intersected with engineering designs long before the health related hazards became obvious. To see examples of their use of asbestos, I have chosen the 1917 Standard Handbook for…
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ADAO 18th Annual Asbestos Awareness and Prevention Conference: “Hear Asbestos. Think Prevention.”

The Asbestos Disease Awareness Organization (ADAO) held its 18th Annual Asbestos Awareness and Prevention Conference on September 9, 2023 in Washington D.C. and live streamed globally. I attended by listening and watching the conference from my home in Colorado Springs. The convention was packed with panels discussing medicine, prevention, and all things asbestos, and attendees…
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Johns-Manville: What does a 1932 Lawsuit Claiming Death from Asbestos Look Like (Paul Stepka, RIP).

The asbestos wrongful death claim by the Estate of Paul Stepka filed in January 1932 against Johns-Manville in the New Jersey Supreme Court was not the first such case to be filed, but it is a good representation of what JM knew at that time. I grabbed it from the Motley 1000 documents put together…
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Paul Brodeur: The Magic Mineral

And so, Paul Brodeur began his journalism career investigating asbestos-related health hazards on October 12, 1968 with his article in the New Yorker Magazine. His following 3 books on asbestos included Asbestos and Enzymes in 1972 dedicated to Irving J. Selikoff, The Asbestos Hazard in 1980, and Outrageous Misconduct in 1985. After a long and…
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Emily Reinstein and I Share a Bond: And, I am Honored to Receive the Alan Reinstein Award for 2023.

Emily Reinstein and I share a terrible bond; that is, the death of our respective fathers to a terrible disease named Mesothelioma. Emily and her mom Linda, through the Asbestos Disease Awareness Organization (ADAO), honors Alan’s memory each year by granting the Alan Reinstein Award. For 2023, I am honored to share this award with…
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The U.S. Legal System and Places Like Libby, Montana: A Complete Fail.

Asbestos was mined extensively in many locations within the United States, including from the vermiculite mine in Libby, Montana. This mine opened in 1923 and was operated by W.R. Grace until it was closed in 1990, but only after exposing the residents and the environment to extensive asbestos pollution and causing significant illnesses. Even to…
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