The Associated Press
NEW BEDFORD, Mass. — Investigators are still trying to figure out what caused the toxic fumes at a New Bedford trash disposal facility that sent more than 100 people to the hospital.
Officials say 119 people were sent to hospitals in New Bedford and Fall River after the unknown vapors overcame workers as well as police and EMTs at ABC Disposal Service Inc. just after 10 a.m. Monday.
Five people were admitted, two of them in critical condition. Symptoms included nausea, respiratory distress and dizziness.
Local, state and federal investigators were expected back on the scene Tuesday. Officials say the fumes were caused by trash that was being manually sorted.
Chief Ron Teachman says police will treat the incident as a criminal investigation until they can determine it was an accident.
Firefighters responded to ABC Disposal Service Inc. in New Bedford just after 10 a.m. after a report that something brought to the facility was making people sick, fire Chief Paul Leger said.
As many as 10 people lost consciousness after breathing in the fumes, authorities said. The victims were decontaminated by a hazardous materials team on site before being taken to hospitals.
St. Luke’s Hospital in New Bedford said it had received 66 patients, two of whom were listed in critical condition and two others in fair condition.
The patients were employees of the company and first responders, including police, firefighters and paramedics, the hospital said. Their symptoms included nausea, respiratory distress and dizziness.
The fumes were caused by trash that was brought in and was being manually sorted, said Ed Coletta, a spokesman for the state Department of Environmental Protection. Authorities said the chemicals were contained at the facility.
Investigators are still trying to determine what type of chemical was leaked and its source, Leger said.
Police will continue to treat the chemical leak as a criminal investigation until they can determine it was an accident, New Bedford police Chief Ron Teachman said.
ABC Disposal is a 40-year-old business that collects, transports and disposes of more than 200,000 tons of nonhazardous waste per year, according to the company’s Web site. The company disposes residential, commercial and industrial waste.
The facility is located in an industrial area of the coastal city about 55 miles south of Boston, and city residents were not considered to be in danger, Leger said.
At least two emergency responders were among those treated for exposure to the fumes, and several police officers also complained of symptoms, said New Bedford police Lt. Jeffrey Silva.
Ted Fitzgerald, a spokesman for the federal Occupational Safety and Health Administration, said the agency had sent a safety inspector and an industrial hygienist to the site to investigate.