Michelle Darling's home at in the 1600 block of Yakona Road between Towson and Parkville is not contaminated with gasoline, as far as she knows, but then again, she's not sure.
The home is on the same street as 16 others that Hess will demolish as part of a confidential settlement with some of Darling's neighbors—something the county employee learned about from a Patch story. The oil company plans on turning the yards into open space and turning it over to a non-profit, possibly NeighborSpace of Baltimore County.
Darling house—which has been in the family since the 1970s—will remain standing.
Her grandmother, a gardener by trade, died of leukemia a few years after MDE reported that petroleum contamination was detected in the area. Everything in the yard in front of her grandmother's house died.
"Obviously, I have no way of knowing if they were connected," Darling said.
But the smell remains— a heavy chemical odor that seems to emanate from storm drains. After it rains, brown stains are sometimes left on the sidewalk and the street.
"It's a really horrible, sour odor," Darling said. "You'd walk past it and it turns your stomach. I walk my dog on the other side of the street just to avoid it."
For Darling and her husband, who were considering selling their home possibly next year, the worries remain.
"My biggest concerns are my current and long-term health and my property values," Darling said.
The Baynesville resident plans on attending a Tuesday morning community meeting with County Executive Kevin Kamenetz at Johnny Dee's Restaurant near her home. The county executive is not coming specifically to discuss the contamination in the neighborhood but Darling has other ideas.
"Who's looking out for the community?" said Darling.
William Thomas Capps Jr.
9:49 am on Tuesday, December 4, 2012
The EPA gets beat up alot from lobbyist and elected officials, but this is an area that the epa should be involved in.
Joe
10:35 am on Tuesday, December 4, 2012
Blame the EPA for forcing the use of MTBE in our gasoline! Apologies to the site bully vulture.
Frank says "I only post when I can point out others errors that make me feel superior to others since I have such low self esteem."
Joe
2:53 pm on Tuesday, December 4, 2012
Frank removed his snide comment to me which I replied to. I only make such comments in reply to the same.
Steve
10:43 am on Tuesday, December 4, 2012
"Open Space" sounds all well and good but in reality it will become a magnet for homeless people and Crackheads.
number9dream
12:38 pm on Tuesday, December 4, 2012
My opinion? BAIL OUT!
The property isn't worth decaying health, the money you think you'd get for it (you'd likely end up with a goose egg or worse), or the overall aggravation. You'd be dead or worse before you see the results of a class-action lawsuit.
In the end, who's going to come out on top, Hess or the great unwashed masses?
CerahAnd
3:18 pm on Tuesday, December 4, 2012
If she pressures Hess enough, they'll buy her out too. And probably at a higher price than she could get through a conventional home sale since she how has a negatively stigmatized property. If they're purchasing homes to demolish them, the effects had to be significant.
Needaname
6:02 pm on Tuesday, December 4, 2012
This is just awful. My heart goes out to these people. There are several others affected by this leak.
Ben Fischler
8:30 pm on Sunday, January 6, 2013
To see what information the state is willing to give us go to http://www.mde.state.md.us/programs/Land/OilControl/RemediationSites/Pages/Programs/LandPrograms/Oil_Control/RemediationSites/index.aspx
scroll down the page to "Baltimore County"
and then scroll down the page further to "Towson Hess/Yakona"
Click on "Site Fact Sheet" which will open as a pdf file
I lived in one of these houses from 2005 to 2011. I am not happy.