Truck Driver Exposed to Frack Flow-Back Water, Sues Range Resources
Truck driver sues Range Resources over injury claims from flow-back water
From an Article by Emily Petsko, Washington PA Observer-Reporter, May 8, 2015
A West Virginia truck driver is suing Range Resources over claims that company employees ordered him to keep working in wet clothes for hours after he was splashed with flow-back water at a Buffalo Township well site in Washington County, PA.
Russell Evans of Triadelphia (near Wheeling, WV) claimed he suffered chemical burns, blisters and rashes from the alleged incident May 21, 2013, at which time he was working for Equipment Transport LLC. The complaint was filed Wednesday in Allegheny County Court, in Pennsylvania.
Evans was transporting reused water a distance of about five miles to a well site in Buffalo Township, according to the complaint. During his second trip to the well site that morning, he backed his truck up to a sloppy pond used to store reused frack water and noticed that water was leaking from the back hatch of his tanker truck.
He claimed he was doused with water when he attempted to stop the leak and was told by a Range employee the water would not harm him. He claimed he was ordered to stay on site until he was cleared to leave, which was about two hours later.
Range employees roped off and swept the area where the spill occurred and made no attempt to examine Evans or arrange for him to take a chemical bath, he alleged. He claimed an employee told him to wash the water off at a nearby McDonalds.
Due to the fact that Mr. Evans was told the reused water was harmless, he remained in his wet clothes for several hours while he drove back to Equipment Transport LLCs terminal in Dallas Pike, West Virginia, the complaint alleged. In total, Mr. Evans remained in these clothes for over four hours.
Evans said he went to MedExpress when he developed a rash and blisters and claimed that physicians told him he could not be treated without knowledge of the chemicals he may have been exposed to. The complaint alleges Range kept the chemical makeup of the fracking fluid a secret.
He claimed he also was refused medical care at an emergency room in Wheeling a week after the alleged incident because of his inability to name the constituents of the water.
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