Current:Home > ContactA Hawaii military family avoids tap water at home. They’re among those suing over 2021 jet fuel leak -AssetPath
A Hawaii military family avoids tap water at home. They’re among those suing over 2021 jet fuel leak
View
Date:2025-04-17 07:07:41
JOINT BASE PEARL HARBOR-HICKAM, Hawaii (AP) — Richelle Dietz, a mother of two and wife of a U.S. Navy officer, often thinks about water.
The family, stationed in Honolulu, spends more than $120 a month on jugs of bottled water for drinking, cooking and cleaning, as well as showerhead and sink filters. Each night the children, ages 13 and 5, carry cups of bottled water upstairs to their bathrooms to brush their teeth.
“I hope that one day I can not think about water all the time,” Dietz said. “But right now it’s a constant.”
That vigilance is to avoid more vomiting, diarrhea, rashes and other ailments, which they said they started experiencing 2021, when jet fuel leaked into the Navy water system serving 93,000 people on and around the Pearl Harbor base. It sickened thousands in military housing, including, Dietz says, her own family.
She’s one of 17 relatives of U.S. military members suing the United States over the leak from the World War II-era storage tanks. She said her entire family — including dog Rocket — continues to suffer from health problems they link to the tainted water. Her husband, a chief petty officer, declined to be interviewed by The Associated Press because he fears retaliation from the Navy.
The 17 are considered “bellwether” plaintiffs representing more than 7,500 other military family members, civilians and service members in three federal lawsuits. The outcome of their trial, which starts Monday, will help determine the success of the other cases and the damages that could be awarded.
Kristina Baehr, one of their attorneys, said she already considers it a success because the U.S. government has admitted liability.
U.S. Department of Justice attorneys wrote in court documents that the government admits the Nov. 20, 2021, spill at the Red Hill Bulk Fuel Storage Facility “caused a nuisance” for the plaintiffs, that the United States “breached its duty of care” and that the plaintiffs suffered compensable injuries.
But they dispute the plaintiffs were exposed to jet fuel at levels high enough to cause their alleged health problems. Lingering issues plaintiffs say they are battling include seizures, memory loss, anxiety, eczema and asthma.
When the Dietz family arrived in Hawaii in February 2021, “we thought we were moving to heaven on earth,” Dietz wrote in a declaration filed in the case.
But around Thanksgiving — soon after the leak — they couldn’t figure out their stomach pain, vomiting and diarrhea. Other families in the neighborhood were also sick. Then they developed rashes.
“My throat is burning. I feel like I just drank gasoline,” Dietz remembers telling her husband on Nov. 27.
The next night, her Facebook timeline was filled with neighbors complaining about the smell of fuel in their water. The Dietzes ran to their faucets and smelled fuel, too. They noticed the tap water also had an oily sheen.
Attorneys representing the families say the trial will show Navy officers failed to warn residents after learning about fuel in the water, and even maintained that staff members were drinking the water.
Navy representatives and government attorneys didn’t respond to an email seeking comment on the lawsuit.
The fuel storage tanks have long been a flashpoint in Hawaii, with Native Hawaiians and other residents raising concerns over the past decade about leaks that threatened the broader water supply. The tanks sit above an aquifer that delivers water to 400,000 people in urban Honolulu.
At first, the Navy said it hadn’t determined how petroleum got into the water, but its own investigation eventually pinned the cause to a cascading series of mistakes.
On May 6, 2021, a pipe ruptured due to an operator error and caused 21,000 gallons (80,000 liters) of fuel that was being transferred between tanks to spill. Most of the fuel, however, entered a fire suppression line and remained there until six months later, when a cart rammed into the line and released 20,000 gallons (75,700 liters) that eventually got into the water system.
Red Hill workers noticed that one of the tanks was short that amount, but didn’t report the discrepancy to senior leadership.
Dietz didn’t want to risk her husband’s career by asking to leave Hawaii. So they stayed and were committed to avoiding tap water while they figured out their next steps.
“They’re just going to put another family in this house,” she said. “So we need to stay here and we need to try to fight to get this fixed.”
In doing so, Dietz says she found unexpected allies among Native Hawaiians, who revere water as a sacred resource and already have a distrust of the U.S. military, which can be traced back to at least 1893, when a group of American businessmen, with support from U.S. Marines, overthrew the Hawaiian kingdom.
Kawenaʻulaokalā Kapahua — a Native Hawaiian political science doctoral student and one of the activists who pushed to shut down the tanks — said the water crisis forged a sense of solidarity with affected military families. It also fostered relationships within a military community of members who often cycle quickly in and out of the islands, he said.
When families felt abandoned by the military, “the people who did show up for them was the Native community,” Kapahua said.
Dietz agreed. “They gave us a seat at the table,” she said through tears.
Eventually, under orders from state officials, pressure from the outcry and ongoing protests, the military drained the tanks.
Dietz’s husband later got new orders and the family is relocating to Jacksonville, Florida, this summer. They don’t plan to live in military housing there.
As she prepares to move out of a house where the ice maker has remained off since 2021, Dietz hopes the trial will renew awareness about what happened to the water.
“Somebody’s going to move in,” she said, “and I’m worried they’re going to turn on the ice machine.”
veryGood! (619)
Related
- Highlights from Trump’s interview with Time magazine
- Supreme Court will consider when doctors can provide emergency abortions in states with bans
- US banning TikTok? Your key questions answered
- Chicago Bears will make the No. 1 pick in the NFL draft for just the third time ever
- A Mississippi company is sentenced for mislabeling cheap seafood as premium local fish
- Former Wisconsin college chancellor fired over porn career is fighting to keep his faculty post
- Primary voters take down at least 2 incumbents in Pennsylvania House
- Family of man killed when Chicago police fired 96 times during traffic stop file wrongful death suit
- Could your smelly farts help science?
- The Recovering America’s Wildlife Act Is Still a Bipartisan Unicorn
Ranking
- North Carolina justices rule for restaurants in COVID
- Apple announces 'Let Loose' launch event
- American tourist facing possible 12-year prison sentence after ammo found in luggage in Turks and Caicos
- Untangling the Ongoing Feud Between Chris Brown and Quavo
- Tom Holland's New Venture Revealed
- Video shows Florida authorities wrangling huge alligator at Air Force base
- Review: Rachel McAdams makes a staggering Broadway debut in 'Mary Jane'
- Jason Kelce Clarifies Rumors His Missing Super Bowl Ring Was Stolen
Recommendation
'Squid Game' without subtitles? Duolingo, Netflix encourage fans to learn Korean
When can doctors provide emergency abortions in states with strict bans? Supreme Court to weigh in
Courteney Cox Reveals Johnny McDaid Once Broke Up With Her One Minute Into Therapy
'Extraordinary': George Washington's 250-year-old cherries found buried at Mount Vernon
NHL in ASL returns, delivering American Sign Language analysis for Deaf community at Winter Classic
The unfortunate truth about maxing out your 401(k)
How Trump's immunity case got to the Supreme Court: A full timeline
Person fishing with a magnet pulls up rifle, other new evidence in 2015 killing of Georgia couple, investigators say