By Marshall Helmberger
Ely (MN) Timberjay
July 2, 2007
http://www.timberjay.com/current.php?article=3435
Minnesota Health Commissioner Diane Mandernach apologized on Wednesday
for her department’s failure to release cancer data that suggests a spike in
asbestos related cancers on the Iron Range, but Gov. Tim Pawlenty is
rebuffing a call from Iron Range legislators for her ouster.
In a June 20 letter, the entire Iron Range delegation, plus Sen. John
Marty, DFL- Roseville, called on Pawlenty to fire Mandernach over the
incident, which was first revealed in a Minneapolis Star Tribune
investigation published last Sunday.
The paper reported that the department learned in March 2006, that at
least another 35 Iron Range miners had died of mesothelioma, a cancer
typically associated with exposure to asbestos. That more than doubled the
17 miners originally identified as having died of the disease in a 2003
report. And state Health Department officials acknowledged on Wednesday that
they had found an additional six cases, bringing the total number of miners
affected to 58.
Iron Range legislators say the delay in the release of the cancer data
was unacceptable. "We can think of no greater breach of the public trust,
than for the Commissioner of Health to subvert, conceal, and fail to warn
workers of grave health dangers," stated legislators in their letter to
Pawlenty. Tom Rukavina, DFL-Pike, said more timely release of the
information might have encouraged more local miners to seek medical
attention over the 15 month period when the data was known by the Health
Department but not released to the public. "How does that not justify
termination?" he asked. Rukavina said the discovery of so many more cases in
just the past three years suggests the Iron Range could see many more
mesothelioma cases in the future.
Legislators aren’t the only ones upset by the delay. A press release
issued by the United Steelworkers, District 11, this week suggested the
union may seek civil damages as a result of the department’s action and
suggested a criminal investigation into the matter was warranted.
Gov. Pawlenty responded to the criticism and acknowledged that his
commissioner made a mistake. "I share your disappointment in the
department," stated Pawlenty in a written response to the letter from
legislators. "The issue was not well-handled. Data should have been made
available sooner." But Pawlenty said he did not believe the failure
warranted the commissioner’s termination. "Be assured we will work with the
department to take corrective action," Pawlenty stated.
Concerns about the incidence of mesothelioma on the Iron Range have
existed for years. In the 1980s, the Iron Range Resources and Rehabilitation
Board alloted nearly half a million dollars to study the issue, but results
were inconclusive. A five-year study begun in 1998 found 17 cases of the
deadly cancer out of about 70,000 current and former miners included in the
study.
The latest information from the Department of Health suggests the cancer
link may be even more significant than earlier studies had revealed. The
Department of Health, in a press statement issued Wednesday, said a new
study is being developed that will look beyond some of the causal factors
examined in the 1998-2003 study. "First, it will look at possible past
exposure of workers to taconite dust, as well as potential exposure to
commercial asbestos. Second, it will use a "case-control" strategy to
compare workers who developed mesothelioma with those who did not, in an
effort to determine what aspect of their jobs might have placed them at
risk."