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By Richard Verrier
In 34 years as a Hollywood prop maker, John Izumi rarely missed a day of work. Now he can barely pull himself out of bed.
His medical records describe a daunting array of ailments: chest pains,
headaches, dizziness, memory loss, red blotches and pimple-like bumps.
He says he has trouble breathing at night and wakes up with tremors.
Izumi traces these symptoms to the three months he spent at Downey
Studios in 2004 and 2005 building sets for the science-fiction movie
"The Island."
"It's like my body is breaking down," said the 55-year-old Burbank
resident. "My life has changed ever since I worked out there."
Dozens of film production workers have similar complaints about
Downey Studios, which occupies the site of a former NASA plant
southeast of Los Angeles that produced spacecraft for the Apollo moon
missions.
Part of the property was turned into a film production center early in
this decade, after a cleanup intended to protect workers and the public
from the toxic residue of years of aerospace research and
manufacturing. The transformation was celebrated as an example of how
old industrial sites, often a burden on communities, can be reclaimed
for productive uses.
But carpenters, welders, electricians and other film production
workers say they developed severe respiratory and other problems while
working there and have never recovered.
Film workers have given the name "Downey flu" to one particular
cluster of symptoms -- chronic congestion, headaches and rashes. Some
have even refused to work there, a rare phenomenon in the tough,
blue-collar world of set construction.
At least 34 people have filed workers' compensation claims over
illnesses they trace to the studio complex. The Times obtained detailed
records on 18 of the cases. In 11 -- including Izumi's -- independent
physicians found that some or all of the symptoms were caused or
aggravated by working at Downey Studios.
In three other cases, independent physicians -- specialists
certified by the state to offer neutral opinions in workers'
compensation cases -- said the ailments appeared to be work-related but
further tests were needed to make a determination. The tests were never
performed because insurance companies contested the doctors' findings
and refused to pay for the tests.
In the four remaining cases, independent physicians said workers' symptoms were not work-related.
The source of the health problems is a mystery. Independent physicians
generally do not try to pinpoint the precise cause of an illness. In
their workers' compensation claims, in injury complaints reported to
Cal/OSHA and in a civil lawsuit, film-production workers cited a
variety of potential causes, including mold, dust churned up during
renovations at Downey Studios and toxic chemicals detected in the soil.
Stuart Lichter, whose Industrial Realty Group operates Downey
Studios, rejected the idea that conditions at the site made anyone sick.
"We've done an amazing amount to transform this property, and
everything we've done has been totally responsible," said Lichter,
founder and president of IRG.
David White, a lawyer for the company, said there was no evidence
linking the workers' health problems to Downey. "A lot of these guys
work with fairly toxic materials in their line of work," he said.
"They've done all kinds of heavy, industrial work."
Gerald Caton, Downey city manager, vigorously defended the cleanup of
the former NASA plant: "There's probably not a site in America that has
been more thoroughly evaluated from an environmental point of view."
Film production workers typically are independent contractors hired
through Hollywood craft unions. While working on a movie, they are
employed by payroll services companies, which purchase insurance to
cover work-related injuries and illnesses.
Those insurers rejected all the claims related to Downey Studios,
saying the workers' problems stem from preexisting conditions or
previous employment. Workers appealed within the state workers'
compensation system, and insurance carriers have since settled about a
third of the cases. In a few others, claimants tired of the battle and
walked away with nothing.
At least 16 workers are still fighting for workers' compensation
benefits. Ultimately, disputed cases are resolved through a trial
before an administrative law judge, often several years after the claim
was filed.
Most of the workers who blame their medical problems on Downey
have continued to work on movie productions across Los Angeles, but
some have stopped, saying they are too sick.
American International Group Inc., the workers' compensation insurer in most of the Downey Studios cases, declined to comment.
"What is clear is that there is a large number of people who have
reported similar symptoms from working at the same location," said Saro
K. Kerkonian, a Glendale lawyer representing eight of the workers.
"That can't be brushed off as just coincidence."
Aerospace history
Downey Studios is one of the largest film production spaces in North
America. Its converted hangars have 360,000 square feet of production
space and an artificial lake the size of a football field.
Before the controversy over the health complaints and a broad downturn
in film production, Downey Studios was one of the region's busiest film
sites, hosting such productions as "Spider-Man," "The Italian Job,"
"Terminator 3: Rise of the Machines" and "Catch Me If You Can." More
recently, "G.I. Joe: The Rise of Cobra," which opens next weekend, was
filmed there.
The property, between Lakewood and Bellflower boulevards north of
Imperial Highway, was a cradle of the nation's aircraft and aerospace
industries. During World War II, Vultee Aircraft made heavy bombers
there. After the war, North American Aviation conducted research on
nuclear power and rocket propulsion.
In the 1960s, North American (later part of Rockwell
International) landed a NASA contract to build a booster rocket and the
command and service modules for the Apollo lunar program. Later,
workers at Downey made and assembled components for six space shuttles.
Boeing Co. acquired Rockwell's aerospace and defense divisions in 1996 and shut the plant three years later.
The city of Downey drafted plans for a shopping center, hospital
and movie studio on the 160-acre site and bought an initial 66 acres
from the federal government in 1999.
Environmental surveys documented extensive contamination.
Trichloroethylene was found in high concentrations in soil and
groundwater. Exposure to elevated levels of the industrial solvent can
cause nerve and organ damage, respiratory problems and impaired
immunity.
Hexavalent chromium, used to plate metal and rust-proof aircraft
engine parts, was also found in high concentrations in the soil in
places. Exposure to hexavalent chromium can cause cold-like symptoms
and damage to the nose, throat and lungs. Direct contact with the skin
can cause rashes and sores.
In all, the U.S. Department of Labor has identified 259 toxic substances used at the former NASA facility.
After extensive studies, state and federal regulators determined
that the contamination could be mitigated to the point that it would
not pose a significant risk to workers or the public. A 2001 study,
however, cautioned that employees working outdoors for long periods or
involved in excavation could be at risk from exposure to volatile
organic compounds such as trichloroethylene in the soil.
To bring in revenue, the city began leasing the site for film
production as it moved to acquire the remainder of the property from
NASA and redevelop it on a fast track.
Officials took advantage of an amendment to the federal Superfund
law that allows certain government properties to be sold before they
have been cleaned up or while cleanups are still in progress. Such
"early transfers" must be approved by the governor of the state.
Then-Gov. Gray Davis granted approval for the Downey property in 2003,
and Winston Hickox, then California's secretary of environmental
protection, lauded the move as "great for the environment and for the
Southland's economy."
The city awarded a $20.5-million contract to International Risk
Assumption, a Denver firm, to conduct a long-term cleanup overseen by
the state water board. Work crews extracted trichloroethylene and other
contaminants from soil, treated polluted groundwater and removed
hundreds of tons of arsenic-laced dirt, among other steps.
Lichter's Industrial Realty Group, which specializes in redeveloping
old industrial sites, was selected to convert the aerospace plant into
a film production hub. The company took over management of the property
in early 2003 and in November of that year bought about 60 acres and
leased an additional 20 from the city.
Early on, the makeover ran into difficulty.
Problems arise
In August 2003, a city inspector came upon a pile of dirt excavated
from beneath the main studio building, called Building 1, to create an
artificial lake for "Lemony Snicket's A Series of Unfortunate Events."
(The reservoir served as Lake Lachrymose in the film.) The inspector
noticed patches of yellow-green soil in the pile, a possible sign of
chromium contamination, according to records of the Los Angeles
Regional Water Quality Control Board.
The city halted all work at the site and had the soil tested. In
some samples, measurements of total chromium -- a combination of
hexavalent chromium and trivalent chromium -- were far above the
federal safety standard, water board records show. The records say the
chromium may have been discharged during the 1950s when a section of
the building was used as a plating room.
International Risk Assumption developed a remediation plan in
consultation with state regulators. From November 2003 to January 2004,
cleanup crews separated the contaminated soil from clean soil and
deposited it in a pile to be disposed of later off-site. During this
process, an industrial hygienist monitored chromium levels in the air
and found that they were safe, according to water board records.
The pile of contaminated soil eventually grew to nearly 7,000 tons.
At the time, the Queen Latifah comedy "Taxi" was being filmed at
Downey, including outdoor shooting, and crews for "Lemony Snicket" were
creating sets in Building 1.
In February 2004, another film crew arrived to work on "Christmas With
the Kranks." The workers noticed the pile of contaminated dirt, which
was near a back lot where they would build a replica of a suburban
Chicago street.
Ruben Lahn, a laborer on the crew, said supervisors asked him to put a
plastic covering over the pile. "They told us there was chromium in the
dirt, but it's only bad if it's blowing in the air and we breathe it
in," said Lahn, 38. "We joked about it."
David Elliott, construction coordinator for "Christmas With the
Kranks," said he met with workers and shared with them test results
indicating that the soil was not a health threat.
Though initial tests had detected elevated chromium levels in some
samples, later testing by Leymaster Environmental Consulting of Long
Beach found concentrations within the federal safety standard,
according to Leymaster's report filed with the water board.
The report does not explicitly address why the tests results differed.
It does say that as the excavated dirt was sorted and the contaminated
soil moved into a separate pile, tainted soil was mixed with clean
soil. A water board official said that could explain the lower chromium
levels in the later tests.
Still, the remediation plan approved by state officials called for
the dirt to be hauled to a landfill in Lancaster. This was done from
Feb. 2 to Feb. 10, 2004, according to water board records.
Thomas Messmer, IRG's vice president for construction and project
management, initially told The Times that no film production was done
at Downey while the chromium-laced pile was there. "There were no
production people on the site until after the soil had been removed,"
he said.
Elliott, however, said his production log showed that the "Christmas
With the Kranks" crew started work Feb. 2, 2004, eight days before the
cleanup was finished. Production crews for "Taxi" and "Lemony Snicket"
had been there earlier.
Asked about this in a subsequent interview, Messmer acknowledged
that film workers had been at the site while the contaminated dirt was
present. He said he was "working off memory" in the earlier interview
and was confused by a reporter's question.
Even so, he said, the soil posed no threat to workers on any of the film productions.
Jeff Hill, a lighting technician on "Taxi," argues otherwise. He was at Downey Studios for several weeks in late 2003.
"No one told us anything," said Hill, 43. "If I had known about
the contaminated soil, I never would have stepped foot on that
property."
Hill developed lesions on his arms and a growth on his thyroid
that was surgically removed, according to his medical records. He was
later diagnosed with testicular cancer.
His workers' compensation lawyer referred him to Dr. Marvin
Pietruszka, a board-certified specialist in occupational medicine. In a
2008 report included in state files on Hill's case, Pietruszka
attributed his cancer and other ailments to exposure to hexavalent
chromium, trichloroethylene and other hazardous substances at Downey.
The report noted that chromium had been found in the soil and said that
Hill was regularly in contact with soil as he laid cable for outdoor
shoots.
"It is interesting to note that only two months prior to working
at Downey Studios, Mr. Hill had a comprehensive examination . . . and
was given a clean bill of health," Pietruszka wrote.
An independent physician, however, found that Hill's illnesses were not
work-related. An insurer denied his workers' compensation claim. Hill
appealed, and the two sides have reached a tentative settlement.
Mold, dust cited
By late 2004, film crews were at work inside Building 1, creating
futuristic sets for "The Island." The former aerospace hangar was still
being renovated, and water leaked through the roof during that winter's
torrential rains. Standing water accumulated, and mold was visible on
the walls, workers recalled.
"In one of the rooms where we were shooting, there was this
disgusting, moldy smell," recalled filmmaker Michael Bay, director of
"The Island." "I could just tell there was something in the air."
Dust was also a nuisance. Just outside the building, crews were
digging trenches for electrical cables. Elsewhere on the site, grading
was underway for a shopping center and a hospital. Clouds of dust blew
into the studio building, film workers said.
Steve Basile, a 53-year-old prop maker from Castaic who spent two
months working on "The Island," said he has suffered from shortness of
breath, peeling skin and other ailments ever since.
"Sometimes I wake up choking in the middle of the night," he said.
Dr. Richard Hyman, a board-certified internist and cardiologist, served
as an independent physician in Basile's workers' compensation case.
After examining Basile and reviewing his medical records, Hyman
concluded in 2008 that working at Downey had aggravated his preexisting
ear, nose and throat problems.
Despite the finding, the insurer AIG denied Basile's workers' compensation claim. He is appealing.
In response to workers' complaints, DreamWorks SKG, producer of
"The Island," brought in an environmental consulting firm, Mintie
Corp., to assess the air quality in Building 1. In a memo to workers,
DreamWorks said the tests found mold but at levels that would not
affect healthy individuals. (DreamWorks executives declined to comment.)
That was small comfort to Daniel Mustoe, a welder who built sets for
"The Island." He complained of flu symptoms that wouldn't go away and
of difficulty breathing.
Dr. Bruce Gillis, a medical toxicologist serving as an independent
physician in his workers' compensation case, found that Mustoe had been
permanently disabled by a fungal infection from mold at Downey.
Gillis said blood tests showed that Mustoe was exposed to the same mold identified by Mintie Corp. in its air-quality tests.
"There is substantial medical evidence that 100% of this permanent disability was caused by" working at Downey, Gillis wrote.
AIG refused to authorize treatment, citing the opinion of another
doctor who questioned the validity of the blood tests. Mustoe is
appealing.
IRG has responded vigorously to adverse publicity over the
workers' claims. In 2005, it filed a libel suit against the
International Alliance of Theatrical Stage Employees, contending that
the union scared away business by falsely claiming in its newsletter
that Downey Studios was unsafe.
The union and its insurer paid $775,000 to settle the case. As a
condition of the settlement, the union acknowledged that air-quality
tests for mold and asbestos found that Building 1 was a "clean and
safe" environment.
Last August, Lichter filed another libel suit, this one against
some of the injured workers and activist Vickie Travis, who has
publicized their complaints on a website. Travis said the lawsuit,
which is awaiting trial, was "an attempt to intimidate me and to
suppress our freedom of speech."
Film production continues at Downey Studios, but at a slower pace than before.
IRG executives have said they intend to scale back their film business
and have proposed an $800-million development of shops, offices,
restaurants and residential units on the site.
Some of the film workers, meanwhile, remain in limbo, uncertain whether they will ever get disability benefits.
Derek Norrbom, a welder who worked on "The Island," still suffers
shortness of breath, headaches, a cough and persistent fatigue.
An independent physician found that Norrbom, 24, "experienced an
occupational upper respiratory injury" as a "direct result" of working
at Downey.
Two insurers recently paid $35,000 to settle the case, Norrbom's family said.
Norrbom's father, Bruce, 58, a film production foreman, takes five
medications a day for nerve damage, joint pain, itching and rashes.
Doctors disagreed on whether his symptoms were linked to Downey, and
AIG rejected his workers' compensation claim. He has appealed.
Bruce's wife, Tammy, said her once-hard-driving husband, who supervised
crews of 30 people on such productions as "Independence Day" and "Alien
Resurrection," can barely muster the energy to leave their home in
Castaic.
"I just want my family back the way it was before," she said.
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