April 20, 2009
Bayer worried meeting would bring bad press, focus on MIC
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CHARLESTON, W.Va. -- Concerns about terrorism and plant security weren't the only reasons Bayer CropScience officials objected to a federal agency's plans for a public meeting about the August explosion and fire that killed two workers at Bayer's Institute plant.

Bayer lawyers also complained to the federal Chemical Safety Board that the meeting would create negative publicity for Bayer and give plant neighbors a forum to object to the continued storage of large amounts of deadly methyl isocyanate at the facility.

Company officials went so far as to initially state that they would not attend the meeting if members of the local group People Concerned About MIC were allowed to take part.

Chemical Safety Board staffers outlined these Bayer objections in notes taken during a February meeting with Bayer and released late last week to The Charleston Gazette in response to a Freedom of Information Act request.

One set of board staff notes said Bayer was concerned "there will be questions from the public about MIC" and that company officials said, "Bayer has had problems with the media and community concerning MIC; pressure from community to remove all MIC from the facility."

Another set of board notes said Bayer lawyer Robert Gombar told agency officials "there are 'external pressures' from the community in the Kanawha Valley." Bayer officials were "not enthusiastic about participating in the public meeting panel -- depends on who is on the panel -- if People Concerned About MIC is in the panel, Bayer won't participate," the notes said.

Bayer CropScience CEO William Buckner and plant manager Nick Crosby have been invited to testify at a congressional hearing today on the August explosion, and Crosby is listed among those scheduled to take part in Thursday night's meeting in Institute.

Tom Dover, a Bayer plant spokesman, said the company "never objected to a meeting with the U.S. Chemical Safety Board."

"We look forward to Thursday's meeting and our participation as a panel member," Dover said in a prepared statement. "Open dialogue with our neighbors and the community is part of how the site conducts its operations."

But, just a week after the Aug. 28, 2008, explosion, Bayer refused to take part in a community meeting organized by People Concerned About MIC.

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Posted By: funfundvierzig (8:49pm 04-27-2009)
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Why in the world would you trust the "information" coming from the mouths of the evasive and hyper-secretive management of Bayer or their coldly calculating PR flacks at these "managed" CIC events? Their mission to date has been serial suppressing of critical knowledge, the families of this lethally exposed valley have every right to possess!

At Bayer, it's IMAGE über alles! Ja? Ja?

...funfun..

Posted By: CAPTAINJOE (6:27pm 04-23-2009)
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I think the entire area aound the plant needs to be tested, including the river to see what else they let slide.

Posted By: WVWriter1 (9:46am 04-22-2009)
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To all the critics who say that Bayer didn't "communicate" with the community, there has been a Community Interest Committee (CIC) in Institute for nearly 18 years. Concerned community members/leaders, area responders, plant managers and DEP representatives have come together once a month for years to have an honest, open airing of issues and to communicate candidly with the community regarding Plant operations. It's facilitated by a third party to allow for neutrality. Bayer has been an active participant in this group--and when the incident occured in August, this was the same group who hosted an open public forum at WV State in Institute to communicate with concerned community members. People Against MIC were in attendance--it's not that fielding questions from these people is a "nightmare", but the point of any open forum is to give everyone an opportunity to have their concerns addressed, and not to allow one group to dominate the discussion.

Posted By: WVWriter1 (9:39am 04-22-2009)
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To all the critics who say that Bayer didn't "communicate" with the community, there has been a Community Interest Committee (CIC) in Institute for nearly 18 years. Concerned community members/leaders, area responders, plant managers and DEP representatives have come together once a month for years to have an honest, open airing of issues and to communicate candidly with the community regarding Plant operations. It's facilitated by a third party to allow for neutrality. Bayer has been an active participant in this group--and when the incident occured in August, this was the same group who hosted an open public forum at WV State in Institute to communicate with concerned community members. People Against MIC were in attendance--it's not that fielding questions from these people is a "nightmare", but the point of any open forum is to give everyone an opportunity to have their concerns addressed, and not to allow one group to dominate the discussion.

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