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Flintkote - New Orleans, LA
Flintkote Company maintained operations in New Orleans, Louisiana that supported its roofing and building-materials business, and the New Orleans, LA site is associated with periods when the company marketed asbestos-containing products. Historically, Flintkote's product lines included roofing felts, shingles, siding, mastics, cements, and certain flooring and joint compounds, many of which contained asbestos prior to industry phase-outs in the late 1970s and early 1980s; activities at this location likely included manufacturing, warehousing, and/or distribution of such materials. Potential asbestos exposure pathways at the Flintkote New Orleans facility would have included handling raw or formulated materials, mixing, cutting, drying, packaging, equipment maintenance, and loading or unloading shipments, with added risks for maintenance workers, contractors, and nearby employees from dust released during repairs or cleanup; legacy exposure may persist during renovation or demolition of older on-site structures or remaining stock. While detailed, site-specific records are limited, the operations align with Flintkote's core business during the relevant era, and the location is recognized among sites where occupational asbestos exposure could have occurred.
Flintkote Co. - New Orleans, LA
The Flintkote Company operated a facility in New Orleans, Louisiana that supported its building-materials business, including the manufacture and/or distribution of roofing, asphalt-based products, and asbestos-cement materials during the mid-20th century. At the New Orleans, LA site, potential asbestos exposure could have occurred during handling of bagged asbestos fiber, mixing it into cements and compounds, cutting or finishing asbestos-containing materials, equipment maintenance, housekeeping, and warehousing and shipping activities that generated dust. As a major national producer, Flintkote used asbestos in various construction products until use declined in the late 1970s, but residual materials and maintenance on older equipment and building components at Flintkote Co. facilities could have continued to pose exposure risks afterward.
Flintkote Company - New Orleans, LA
The Flintkote Company in New Orleans, LA operated as part of the company's nationwide roofing and building materials business, with activities that included manufacturing and distribution of asphalt roofing products, felts, mastics, cements, and other construction goods during the mid-20th century. Flintkote historically incorporated asbestos - primarily chrysotile - as a reinforcing fiber and filler in numerous product lines until regulations tightened in the late 1970s. As a result, workers and contractors at the New Orleans, Louisiana facility could have been exposed to asbestos during handling of raw materials, mixing and curing operations, cutting and finishing of products, equipment maintenance, and cleanup of dust, with possible bystander and take-home exposures.
Flormerca Line - New Orleans, LA
There is no additional information available on this site, but it is on the list of sites where asbestos exposure may have occurred. This notice pertains to Flormerca Line in New Orleans, LA.
Fluid Handling Systems - Baton Rouge, LA
There is no additional information available on this site, but it is on the list of sites where asbestos exposure may have occurred.
Fluor Corp. - Norco, LA
Fluor Corp. - Norco, LA refers to Fluor Corporation's contracting presence in Norco, Louisiana, a long-standing Gulf Coast hub for refining and petrochemical operations where large industrial facilities require engineering, construction, maintenance, and turnaround services. As a global engineering, procurement, and construction contractor, Fluor has commonly performed work involving process units, piping systems, boilers, heat exchangers, and related infrastructure typical of refinery and chemical plant environments in and around Norco, LA. During the mid-20th century and into the late 1970s, asbestos-containing materials were widely used in such settings for high-temperature insulation, gaskets, packing, fireproofing, and certain protective gear, creating potential exposure risks for trades including pipefitters, insulators, welders, boilermakers, and laborers during installation, repairs, and demolition. While later regulations and controls reduced exposure, legacy asbestos materials could still present hazards during maintenance or renovation activities. Accordingly, work associated with Fluor's typical industrial roles in Norco, Louisiana may have involved potential asbestos exposure consistent with industry practices of the era.
Fluor Corporation - Berwick, LA
Fluor Corporation - Berwick, Louisiana is listed among potential asbestos exposure sites in the Gulf Coast industrial corridor, but detailed information about the facility's specific operations, project types, and active years is not publicly available. Fluor Corporation is a global engineering, procurement, construction, and maintenance contractor that has long supported energy and industrial clients, including activities typical of the Berwick area's oil and gas and marine-support economy. Because mid-20th-century industrial construction and maintenance frequently used asbestos-containing insulation, gaskets, packing, refractory products, and protective materials, workers and contractors at the Berwick, Louisiana site could have encountered asbestos, particularly before stronger controls and regulations in the late 1970s and 1980s. No additional site-specific operational details have been located for Fluor Corporation - Berwick, LA.
Fong Yang - New Orleans, LA
Fong Yang in New Orleans, LA is identified as a potential asbestos exposure site. There is no additional information available on this site, but it is on the list of sites where asbestos exposure may have occurred.
Food First - New Orleans, LA
At Food First in New Orleans, Louisiana, there is no additional information available on this site, but it is on the list of sites where asbestos exposure may have occurred.
Foos And Barnett / James A. Barnett - Centerville, LA
There is no additional information available on this site, but it is on the list of sites where asbestos exposure may have occurred.
Ford Bacon & Davis Company - Sterling, LA
The site known as Ford Bacon & Davis Company - Sterling, LA refers to project operations by Ford, Bacon & Davis, an engineering, procurement, and construction contractor that supported industrial clients across Louisiana. In Sterling, Louisiana, the company's work typically involved engineering design, construction, and maintenance activities for regional industrial facilities such as petrochemical, refining, power, and sugar-processing plants. During the mid-20th century era when asbestos-containing materials were widely used, these activities could have involved contact with or disturbance of asbestos in pipe and boiler insulation, gaskets, packing, cements, fireproofing, and thermal coverings, creating potential exposure for trades such as pipefitters, insulators, boilermakers, millwrights, mechanics, electricians, and laborers, as well as nearby workers.
Ford Motor Company - Shreveport, LA
Publicly available records do not provide specific details about the operations or dates of activity for Ford Motor Company - Shreveport, Louisiana. There is no additional information available on this site, but it is on the list of sites where asbestos exposure may have occurred.
Foster Grant Chemical Plant - Baton Rouge, LA
The Foster Grant Chemical Plant in Baton Rouge, Louisiana was associated with Foster Grant's plastics business and operated as part of the region's petrochemical corridor, using local feedstocks to produce plastic resins and related chemical intermediates that supported molding and consumer-goods manufacturing; typical operations would have included reaction and polymerization units, bulk storage, and packaging/shipping of resin products. Located in Baton Rouge, LA near major refining and chemical infrastructure, the site benefited from ready access to raw materials and transportation networks during the mid-to-late 20th century. As with many chemical plants from that era, possible asbestos exposure at the Foster Grant Chemical Plant could have occurred due to the widespread historical use of asbestos-containing insulation on boilers, piping, and process equipment, as well as in gaskets, packing, and other high-heat components, particularly during maintenance, repairs, and turnarounds before stricter controls and phase-outs were implemented.
Foster Grant Co - Baton Rouge, LA
Foster Grant Co in Baton Rouge, Louisiana: There is no additional information available on this site, but it is on the list of sites where asbestos exposure may have occurred.
Foster Grant Company - Baton Rouge, LA
Foster Grant Company in Baton Rouge, Louisiana: There is no additional information available on this site, but it is on the list of sites where asbestos exposure may have occurred.
Fourth Jefferson Drainage District - Kenner, LA
The Fourth Jefferson Drainage District in Kenner, Louisiana is a local public drainage and flood-control entity that serves the Kenner area of Jefferson Parish by operating and maintaining stormwater canals, culverts, and pump stations to reduce flooding risks in this low-lying region near Lake Pontchartrain. Its operations generally include canal dredging and debris removal, upkeep of levees and floodwalls, routine and emergency pump station operation during heavy rain events, and maintenance of related mechanical, electrical, and structural systems, often supported by equipment operators, mechanics, electricians, and field crews. Historically, drainage and public works facilities like this one commonly used asbestos-containing materials, including asbestos-cement (transite) pipe, gaskets and packing for pumps and valves, insulation on piping and equipment within pump stations, roofing materials, and brake and clutch components in maintenance shops; as a result, workers performing tasks such as cutting or repairing AC pipe, replacing gaskets or packing, removing old insulation, or servicing heavy equipment could have faced asbestos exposure at the Fourth Jefferson Drainage District in Kenner, LA, particularly before modern controls and material substitutions were widely adopted.
Francesco Parisi - New Orleans, LA
There is no additional information available on this site, but it is on the list of sites where asbestos exposure may have occurred.
Franklin Sugar Manufacturing Company - Franklin, LA
There is no additional information available on this site, but it is on the list of sites where asbestos exposure may have occurred.
Freeport / Mcmoran - Grand Isle, LA
The site known as Freeport / Mcmoran - Grand Isle, LA refers to offshore oil and gas operations associated with McMoRan Exploration and, after their 2013 combination, Freeport-McMoRan Oil & Gas, in the Grand Isle area of the Gulf of Mexico, with support and logistics commonly routed through Grand Isle, Louisiana and nearby coastal bases. Activities in and around Grand Isle, LA historically included exploration and development drilling, day-to-day production operations on fixed platforms, flowline and pipeline gathering to onshore facilities, routine maintenance and repairs, and eventual decommissioning work, with these operations spanning the late 20th century into the mid - 2010s before Freeport-McMoRan exited the oil and gas business. As with many offshore platforms and related facilities built or maintained during earlier decades, asbestos-containing materials were commonly used for high-temperature insulation on piping and equipment, as well as in gaskets, valve packing, and fireproofing; therefore, workers performing insulation removal or repair, gasket and packing replacement, or other maintenance in enclosed spaces could have experienced possible asbestos exposure, particularly before modern controls and substitutions became widespread.
Freeport / Mcmoran - Port Sulphur, LA
Freeport / Mcmoran - Port Sulphur, LA was a major sulfur extraction, processing, storage, and shipping complex established by the Freeport Sulphur Company (later Freeport-McMoRan) in the company town of Port Sulphur, Louisiana, operating from the 1930s through much of the twentieth century to handle production from nearby Gulf Coast salt domes such as Grand Ecaille via the Frasch process, which used superheated water to melt and lift elemental sulfur to the surface; the site included well fields, on-site steam and power generation, purification and degassing units, block casting and stockpiling yards, rail connections, and barge/ship loading on the Mississippi River, serving as a regional employment base and logistics hub for U.S. sulfur markets. As with many facilities of that era, asbestos-containing materials were commonly used for thermal insulation on steam and process piping, boilers, turbines, pumps, and valves, and in gaskets, packing, and some building materials, creating potential asbestos exposure risks for insulators, pipefitters, maintenance and repair crews, and other workers and contractors during installation, upkeep, or demolition activities.
Freeport And Tampico Fuel Oil Corporation - Meraux, LA
There is no additional information available on this site, but it is on the list of sites where asbestos exposure may have occurred. This entry refers to Freeport And Tampico Fuel Oil Corporation in Meraux, Louisiana.
Freeport Chemical Co. - Uncle Sam, Louisiana
There is no additional information available on Freeport Chemical Co. in Uncle Sam, Louisiana, but it is on the list of sites where asbestos exposure may have occurred.
Freeport Chemical Company - Convent, LA
The Freeport Chemical Company facility in Convent, Louisiana was part of the Mississippi River industrial corridor and operated as a large-scale chemical manufacturing and bulk-handling site with process units, storage tanks, utility systems, and river, rail, and highway logistics to support production, maintenance, and shipping typical of Gulf Coast chemical plants; while detailed, public documentation of specific product lines and operating years is limited, the Convent, LA location fits the profile of mid- to late-20th-century chemical operations where asbestos-containing materials were commonly used in insulation on steam lines, boilers, heat exchangers, and turbines, as well as in gaskets and packing for pumps and valves, creating potential asbestos exposure risks for workers and contractors during daily operations, maintenance, and turnaround activities.
Freeport Chemical Company - St. James, LA
Freeport Chemical Company operated a chemical manufacturing facility in St. James, Louisiana, within the Mississippi River industrial corridor of St. James Parish. The site was part of Freeport's Gulf Coast chemicals and fertilizer business and handled production and handling of basic and intermediate industrial chemicals used in agriculture and other industries; typical operations involved acid and related process units, boilers and heat exchangers, pumps and compressors, extensive piping, storage, and shipping, with ownership and operational configurations evolving over time in step with regional consolidation of chemical and fertilizer assets. As at many mid-20th-century Gulf Coast chemical plants, workers at the St. James, LA facility - particularly maintenance personnel, pipefitters, insulators, and contractors - may have encountered asbestos-containing materials historically used for thermal insulation on pipes and equipment, boiler insulation, gaskets and packing in pumps and valves, and other heat-resistant components; in some facilities of this type, asbestos diaphragms were also used in chlor-alkali processes, creating additional potential for exposure before widespread phase-outs and modern controls took effect.
Freeport Mexican Fuel Oil Corporation - Meraux, LA
There is no additional information available on this site, but it is on the list of sites where asbestos exposure may have occurred.
Freeport Minerals Co. - New Orleans, LA
Freeport Minerals Co. in New Orleans, Louisiana functioned as a major corporate and regional support center for the company (a predecessor to Freeport - McMoRan), coordinating Gulf Coast activities tied to its sulfur, phosphate/fertilizer, and oil and gas businesses and utilizing the Port of New Orleans for shipping and logistics; core functions at the New Orleans, LA location included administration, engineering, procurement, and operations support for materials and project management across the lower Mississippi River corridor. As with many industrial and marine operations from the mid - 20th century through the 1970s, workplaces connected to this site - such as terminals, warehouses, mechanical rooms, maintenance shops, and vessels - commonly employed asbestos - containing insulation, gaskets, valve packing, fireproofing, and pipe/boiler lagging, creating potential exposure risks particularly for maintenance and repair personnel, insulators, pipefitters, electricians, and ship/port workers; office staff generally faced lower risk except during renovations or disturbance of building materials that historically could include asbestos.
Freeport Seam - New Orleans, LA
The site is identified as Freeport Seam in New Orleans, LA. There is no additional information available on this site, but it is on the list of sites where asbestos exposure may have occurred.
Freeport Sulfur Co. - Brule, LA
Freeport Sulfur Co. operated major Frasch-process sulfur mining and processing facilities across coastal Louisiana during the 20th century, and the Brule, Louisiana location is cited among the company's Louisiana sites, though public, site-specific details are limited; typical operations at Freeport Sulfur facilities included drilling and producing sulfur from salt domes, melting and degassing, filtration, either solidification into blocks or prills or loading as molten sulfur, storage, and shipment by rail and barge to chemical, fertilizer, and refining customers. At sulfur plants of this era, workers and contractors could encounter asbestos-containing materials used for high-temperature service - such as insulation on steam and process lines, boilers, heaters, evaporators, and dryers, as well as asbestos gaskets, packing, and protective textiles - so maintenance and repair activities at Freeport Sulfur Co. sites in Louisiana, including the Brule, LA location, presented potential asbestos exposure risks. Because detailed records specific to Freeport Sulfur Co. - Brule, LA are scarce in public sources, the site is generally treated as a potential exposure location rather than one with a published operational history.
Freeport Sulfur Co. - Chacahoula, LA
Freeport Sulfur Co. - Chacahoula, LA is listed as a Freeport Sulphur Company site, but publicly available details about the specific operations conducted at the Chacahoula, Louisiana location are limited; generally, Freeport Sulphur was a major 20th - century producer that mined and processed elemental sulfur in Louisiana and maintained associated handling, storage, and support facilities. Industrial sulfur operations from that era commonly incorporated asbestos-containing materials for high-heat insulation on boilers and steam lines, in dryers and other process equipment, and in components such as pumps, valves, gaskets, packing, and refractory, so potential asbestos exposure could have affected workers and contractors during installation, maintenance, and removal activities. The site appears on lists of locations where asbestos exposure may have occurred, but specific information on the facility's operating timeline and processes has not been documented in accessible public sources.
Freeport Sulfur Company - Garden Island Bay Plant - Garden Island, LA
The Freeport Sulfur Company - Garden Island Bay Plant in Garden Island, Louisiana was part of Freeport's coastal sulfur operations in Plaquemines Parish, supporting extraction and initial processing of sulfur produced by the Frasch process, in which superheated water and air were injected into wells to liquefy underground sulfur and bring it to the surface for degassing, filtering, storage, and barge shipment within the company's Gulf Coast network (including connections to Port Sulphur). The remote delta location meant the Garden Island Bay facility relied heavily on boats, barges, high-pressure boilers, steam lines, pumps, and marine loading equipment to move molten product and supplies. Like many mid-20th-century industrial sites handling high-temperature steam and corrosive service, the plant likely incorporated asbestos-containing insulation, gaskets, valve and pump packing, and refractory materials on boilers, turbines, piping, and vessels. Consequently, workers such as pipefitters, insulators, maintenance crews, operators, and barge personnel at the Garden Island, LA site may have experienced asbestos exposure during installation, repair, or removal of insulated equipment or when aging materials were disturbed. The Garden Island Bay Plant's role was significant in Freeport's broader sulfur supply chain until Frasch-based mining waned as sulfur recovered from oil and gas refining became the dominant source.
Freeport Sulphor Job � Switch Door 5 - New Orleans, LA
The location known as Freeport Sulphor Job � Switch Door 5 in New Orleans, LA is referenced as a potential asbestos exposure site, but there are no publicly available details describing its operations or background. There is no additional information available on this site, but it is on the list of sites where asbestos exposure may have occurred.
Freeport Sulphur - Braithwaite, LA
Freeport Sulphur in Braithwaite, Louisiana: There is no additional information available on this site, but it is on the list of sites where asbestos exposure may have occurred.
Freeport Sulphur - Grand Ecaille, LA
Freeport Sulphur - Grand Ecaille, LA refers to Freeport Sulphur Company's sulfur mining and processing complex at the Grand Ecaille salt dome in Plaquemines Parish, a field served for decades by company facilities and workers based around Port Sulphur, Louisiana. Operations centered on Frasch-process sulfur production, which involved drilling wells into the dome, injecting superheated water to liquefy sulfur, and bringing it to the surface for degassing, purification, storage, and shipment via pipelines and marine terminals on nearby waterways. The site supported drilling, plant operations, maintenance, and transport functions and was a major Gulf Coast sulfur source through much of the 20th century before production declined. As with many high-temperature industrial plants of that era, asbestos-containing materials were commonly used for thermal insulation on steam lines, boilers, evaporators, pumps, and turbines, as well as in gaskets, valve packing, pipe covering, and building materials; accordingly, workers such as pipefitters, insulators, mechanics, and operators - especially before modern controls were adopted - could have experienced asbestos exposure during routine operations, maintenance, and repairs at Grand Ecaille, LA.
Freeport Sulphur - New Orleans, LA
Freeport Sulphur's New Orleans, Louisiana location served as a key corporate and port terminal hub for the company's Gulf Coast sulfur business, receiving sulfur from Frasch-process fields by rail and barge, storing and conditioning it (such as cooling, crushing/granulating, and bagging), and loading outbound shipments to oceangoing vessels and river barges at the Port of New Orleans; the site also housed administrative functions and maintenance shops supporting these operations. As with many mid - 20th - century industrial and maritime facilities, the terminal likely relied on extensive steam and utility systems, and asbestos - containing insulation, gaskets, packing, and fireproofing were commonly used on pipes, boilers, pumps, compressors, and shipboard equipment during that era. Consequently, workers such as insulators, pipefitters, maintenance mechanics, boiler operators, and longshoremen could have experienced possible asbestos exposure during installation, repair, or removal of thermal insulation and sealing materials, particularly before modern controls and abatement practices became standard in the late 1970s and 1980s.
Freeport Sulphur - Port Sulphur, LA
The Freeport Sulphur facility in Port Sulphur, Louisiana operated as a major riverfront terminal and processing center for elemental sulfur produced via the Frasch process from nearby coastal deposits (such as Grand Ecaille), with molten sulfur moved by pipeline to the site for purification, storage in tanks or blocks, and shipment by barge, rail, and ocean-going vessels; the community of Port Sulphur itself developed as a company town supporting these operations, which were run by Freeport Sulphur Company (later Freeport Minerals/Freeport-McMoRan) from the mid-20th century into the industry's decline. Typical plant activities included power and steam generation, sulfur melting and handling, laboratory quality control, equipment maintenance, and marine/terminal work. As with many industrial facilities of that era, asbestos-containing materials were commonly used for high-temperature insulation on boilers and steam lines, on pumps, valves, and turbines, in gaskets and packing, and in some building materials, creating potential asbestos exposure for operators, maintenance and repair crews, contractors, and ship/rail workers - especially before stronger controls were adopted in the late 1970s-1980s; secondary exposure could also have occurred from contaminated work clothing or disturbance of older materials during renovations or storm damage.
Freeport Sulphur Co - Brule, LA
There is no additional information available on this site, but it is on the list of sites where asbestos exposure may have occurred.
Freeport Sulphur Co - Chachonla, LA
There is no additional information available on this site, but it is on the list of sites where asbestos exposure may have occurred.
Freeport Sulphur Co - Harvey, LA
Freeport Sulphur Company maintained an industrial facility in Harvey, Louisiana that supported the handling, storage, and shipment of sulfur from the company's Gulf Coast production, reflecting its role as a leading U.S. sulfur producer for much of the twentieth century. Operations at the Harvey site would have relied on high-temperature steam and process systems, piping, boilers, heaters, pumps, and valves typical of sulfur handling and related chemical work. In line with industry practice before the late 1970s, many of these components and associated gaskets, packing, insulation, and cement commonly contained asbestos, presenting potential exposure risks to plant workers, pipefitters, insulators, and contractors during routine maintenance, repairs, and insulation removal or replacement. Because of this industrial profile, individuals who worked at the Freeport Sulphur Co - Harvey, LA location may have been exposed to airborne asbestos fibers, particularly during outages and retrofit projects prior to modern controls.
Freeport Sulphur Co � Harvey Terminal - Harvey, LA
The Freeport Sulphur Co � Harvey Terminal in Harvey, Louisiana operated as a Gulf Coast marine and industrial terminal for Freeport Sulphur Company, supporting the storage, handling, and transfer of sulfur and related products moving by barge, ship, and rail for regional distribution; as a logistics hub on the Harvey Canal/Mississippi River corridor, the terminal's work typically involved bulk material storage, loading and unloading operations, and maintenance of pipelines, pumps, and conveying equipment. Like many mid - 20th - century industrial and maritime facilities, the Harvey, LA terminal likely utilized asbestos-containing insulation, gaskets, packing, and cements on steam or process lines and associated equipment before modern regulations, creating potential asbestos exposure risks for insulators, pipefitters, mechanics, and other workers during routine operations and maintenance.
Freeport Sulphur Co - Harvey Terminal - Destrehan Avenue - Harvey, LA
The Freeport Sulphur Co Harvey Terminal at Destrehan Avenue in Harvey, LA operated as a bulk-sulfur storage and transfer facility supporting Freeport Sulphur Company's Louisiana production and distribution, receiving sulfur by barge and rail and moving it onward to barges, oceangoing vessels, railcars, and trucks, with on-site storage, steam-heated handling lines, pumps, and loading equipment staffed by longshore, terminal, and maintenance crews; as part of Freeport Sulphur's mid-20th-century Gulf Coast network (later Freeport Minerals/Freeport-McMoRan), the Harvey, Louisiana location functioned as a logistics hub rather than a chemical manufacturing plant. Asbestos-containing materials were commonly used in similar facilities during that era, so potential exposure at the Destrehan Avenue site could have occurred during installation, repair, or removal of thermal insulation on steam-traced sulfur pipelines, tank heating coils, boilers, and pumps, as well as from asbestos gaskets, valve packing, and brake linings on rail and material-handling equipment, with maintenance and mechanical trades facing the greatest risk before modern controls were in place.
Freeport Sulphur Co. - New Orleans, LA
At the Freeport Sulphur Co. facility in New Orleans, Louisiana, operations supported the company's Gulf Coast sulfur business by receiving, storing, and handling sulfur from regional Frasch-process production and coordinating bulk loading for river and export shipment, with associated maintenance shops, steam and power systems, and administrative/logistics functions; this New Orleans site was active primarily in the mid-20th century as Freeport Sulphur expanded in Louisiana and later evolved into Freeport Minerals and then Freeport - McMoRan. As with many industrial and maritime terminals of that era, asbestos-containing insulation and components were commonly used on boilers, steam lines, process piping, heat exchangers, pumps, valves, and in gaskets, packing, and certain building materials, creating potential asbestos exposure for pipefitters, insulators, boilermakers, maintenance mechanics, electricians, laborers, and longshoremen - especially during equipment installation, repair, or removal prior to stricter controls in the late 1970s and 1980s; contractors and nearby personnel could also have experienced secondary exposure from disturbed insulation and dust generated during maintenance and loading operations at the Freeport Sulphur Co. New Orleans, LA location.
Freeport Sulphur Co. - Pointe Hache, LA
The Freeport Sulphur Co. facility in Pointe Hache, Louisiana operated as part of the Plaquemines Parish sulfur industry, supporting extraction, processing, storage, and river shipment of sulfur produced from nearby Frasch-method sulfur fields along the lower Mississippi River. As a major U.S. sulfur producer throughout much of the 20th century (and a precursor to Freeport-McMoRan), Freeport's Pointe Hache, LA location likely included wells and gathering systems for molten sulfur, on-site steam and power generation, filtration/handling equipment, tankage for molten or solid sulfur, maintenance shops, and docks for barge loading, employing operators, pipefitters, mechanics, electricians, laborers, and marine crews. Possible asbestos exposure at this site could have occurred due to the widespread mid-century industrial use of asbestos-containing insulation and components on high-temperature steam lines, boilers, heaters, turbines, pumps, valves, gaskets, packing, and in building materials; maintenance, repair, and turnaround activities in particular could disturb these materials and create airborne fibers, with additional potential in powerhouses and loading areas where thermal systems were present.
Freeport Sulphur Co. - Port Sulphur, LA
Freeport Sulphur Co.'s facility in Port Sulphur, Louisiana operated for decades as a major sulfur production and shipping hub supporting extraction from nearby Gulf Coast salt domes using the Frasch process; site activities typically included generating and distributing high - temperature steam and hot water, lifting and processing elemental sulfur (degassing, filtering, forming, and stockpiling), maintaining power and pump stations, and loading bulk sulfur to river vessels and rail on the Mississippi River. The operation supported a broad workforce - plant operators, miners, mechanics, pipefitters, insulators, electricians, and dock and rail crews - serving both industrial processing and terminal functions. Because asbestos - containing materials were widely used in mid - 20th - century steam and process facilities, potential asbestos exposure at the Freeport Sulphur Co. - Port Sulphur, LA site could have occurred from insulation on boilers, turbines, evaporators, and steam lines; from gaskets and packing in pumps and valves; from refractory and insulating cements; from transite panels and roofing; and from brake linings and heat shields on mobile or cargo - handling equipment, with heightened risk during maintenance, repairs, and outages; ship crews and contractors working at the port facilities may also have encountered asbestos on vessels and terminal equipment.
Freeport Sulphur Company - Bayou Boeuf, LA
Freeport Sulphur Company - Bayou Boeuf, LA is identified as a potential asbestos exposure site, but detailed historical operations or facility background specific to Bayou Boeuf, Louisiana are not available. There is no additional information available on this site, but it is on the list of sites where asbestos exposure may have occurred.
Freeport Sulphur Company - Braithwaite, LA
There is no additional information available on this site, but it is on the list of sites where asbestos exposure may have occurred.
Freeport Sulphur Company - Brule, LA
There is no additional information available on this site, but it is on the list of sites where asbestos exposure may have occurred.
Freeport Sulphur Company - Elaine, LA
There is no additional information available on this site, but it is on the list of sites where asbestos exposure may have occurred.
Freeport Sulphur Company - Gande Ecaille, LA
The Freeport Sulphur Company - Gande Ecaille, LA site, also known historically as the Grande Ecaille sulfur dome in Plaquemines Parish, was a coastal sulfur-mining and processing operation in Gande Ecaille, Louisiana that used the Frasch process - drilling wells into the dome, injecting superheated water and air to liquefy elemental sulfur, and pumping it to the surface for handling, storage, and barge shipment; typical activities involved well-field drilling, powerhouse and boiler operations, pipeline and pump maintenance, and dock and marine logistics carried out by drill crews, pipefitters, mechanics, operators, and deckhands. As with many mid-century sulfur and petrochemical facilities, asbestos-containing insulation on steam lines, boilers, heaters, and process equipment, as well as asbestos gaskets and packing in pumps and valves, may have been present, creating potential asbestos exposure for insulators, pipefitters, maintenance workers, and other trades during installation, repair, or removal when dust could be released.
Freeport Sulphur Company - Garden Island Bay, LA
Freeport Sulphur Company operated a sulfur production site at Garden Island Bay, LA, exploiting a salt-dome deposit with the Frasch process, in which superheated water was injected through wells to melt native sulfur and pump it to the surface for storage and shipment by pipeline and barge from this remote delta location in Plaquemines Parish near the mouth of the Mississippi River. The facility's operations in Garden Island Bay, Louisiana relied on extensive high-temperature steam systems, pipelines, boilers, marine logistics, and maintenance shops typical of large mid-20th-century industrial sites. As at comparable facilities of that era, asbestos-containing materials were commonly used for insulating steam lines and equipment, in boiler lagging, and in gaskets and packing on pumps and valves, as well as in some building and marine applications, creating potential asbestos exposure risks - particularly for insulators, pipefitters, maintenance mechanics, and others who worked on repairs, tear-outs, or in confined areas. While specific incidents are not detailed here, the plant's process conditions and equipment types are historically associated with the use of asbestos materials, indicating a plausible pathway for occupational exposure at this Freeport Sulphur Company site.
Freeport Sulphur Company - Grande Ecaille, LA
Freeport Sulphur Company's operation at Grande Ecaille, Louisiana was a coastal sulfur mining site on the Lake Grande Ecaille (Grand Ecaille) salt dome in Plaquemines Parish near the Mississippi River Delta, active for much of the 20th century. The facility used the Frasch process - injecting superheated water to melt underground sulfur and pumping it to the surface - with production moved by pipeline and barge to the company's nearby Port Sulphur storage and shipping hub. Typical infrastructure included production wells, steam and power plants, pipelines, storage tanks, machine shops, and marine docks, supporting work by drillers, boiler and pump operators, pipefitters, mechanics, insulators, and maritime crews. Possible asbestos exposure at Freeport Sulphur Company - Grande Ecaille, LA could have arisen because asbestos-containing insulation, lagging, gaskets, packing, and refractory were commonly used during that era on boilers, turbines, steam and process lines, and marine equipment, especially during maintenance and repair. The mine has since been decommissioned, and only limited industrial remnants remain in the surrounding marshland.
Freeport Sulphur Company - Grande Port, LA
Freeport Sulphur Company - Grande Port, LA: There is no additional information available on this site, but it is on the list of sites where asbestos exposure may have occurred.
Freeport Sulphur Company - Harvey, LA
The Freeport Sulphur Company - Harvey, LA facility was located in Harvey, Louisiana. There is no additional information available on this site, but it is on the list of sites where asbestos exposure may have occurred.
Freeport Sulphur Company - New Orleans, LA
The Freeport Sulphur Company - New Orleans, LA facility in New Orleans, Louisiana functioned as a port-based storage, handling, and distribution hub supporting the company's large Gulf Coast sulfur operations, receiving sulfur from regional Frasch-mine and processing sites and moving it by rail, barge, and ocean vessel to domestic and international customers; as part of one of the nation's leading sulfur producers of the 20th century (later associated with Freeport-McMoRan), the New Orleans location typically included warehouses, bulk storage, conveyors, pipelines, loading racks, and maintenance and utility systems necessary for continuous terminal operations. As with many mid-century chemical and bulk-materials facilities, asbestos-containing materials were commonly used for thermal insulation and fireproofing on steam lines, boilers, heaters, turbines, pumps, and associated gaskets, packing, and cements, creating potential asbestos exposure for insulators, pipefitters, boilermakers, electricians, mechanics, dockworkers, and maintenance crews - particularly before stricter controls and abatement practices were implemented in the late 1970s and 1980s - during installation, repair, or removal of insulation and equipment.
Freeport Sulphur Company - Port Sulphur, Plaquemines Parish, Louisiana
Freeport Sulphur Company operated a major sulfur production, processing, and shipping complex in Port Sulphur, Louisiana, within Plaquemines Parish, where it served as a hub for Frasch-process sulfur mined from nearby Gulf Coast salt domes (including Grande Ecaille), heating and moving molten sulfur through pipelines to storage, rail, and deepwater loading along the Mississippi River. The operation included power and boiler houses, pump stations, tank farms, maintenance shops, and a marine terminal, and it anchored the company town that grew around the facility; activity spanned much of the mid-to-late 20th century before U.S. Frasch mining declined and operations were reduced or closed. As with many industrial plants of that era, there was potential asbestos exposure from insulation, gaskets, packing, and fireproofing on boilers, heaters, turbines, and extensive steam and process piping, as well as from maintenance materials, creating risks for operators, pipefitters, insulators, mechanics, electricians, and ship-loading crews - particularly during repair, overhaul, or demolition activities. Workers and nearby residents in Port Sulphur, Louisiana and throughout Plaquemines Parish could also have experienced bystander or take-home exposures from contaminated dust on clothing.
Freeport Sulphur Company - Port Sulphur, LA
The Freeport Sulphur Company operated a major sulphur processing and shipping complex at Port Sulphur, Louisiana, a company-built hub in Plaquemines Parish that supported nearby Gulf Coast Frasch-process sulphur mines; the Port Sulphur, LA site received molten sulphur, conducted purification and solidification or storage, and loaded product to barges and rail for domestic and export markets along the Mississippi River. Established in the early-to-mid 20th century and later folded into Freeport Minerals and then Freeport-McMoRan, the facility served for decades as a key terminal as U.S. Frasch mining expanded and later declined. As with many industrial plants of its era, asbestos-containing insulation, gaskets, packing, and fireproofing were commonly used on steam lines, boilers or heaters, pumps, and other process equipment, creating potential asbestos exposure for operators, maintenance workers, pipefitters, insulators, and contractors - particularly before stricter controls were adopted in the late 1970s.
Freeport Sulphur Company - Thibodaux, LA
There is no additional information available on this site, but it is on the list of sites where asbestos exposure may have occurred.
Freeport/Mcmoran - Port Sulphur, LA
The Freeport-McMoRan facility at Port Sulphur, Louisiana traces its roots to the Freeport Sulphur Company, which established the company town of Port Sulphur in Plaquemines Parish to handle sulfur production, storage, and export along the Mississippi River; after corporate mergers, the operation fell under Freeport-McMoRan and continued sulfur handling and terminal activities for much of the mid-to-late 20th century before declining as domestic Frasch sulfur mining waned. Typical plant functions at this location included receiving and melting sulfur, purification and forming, bulk storage, and loading to barge, rail, and ship, supported by power, steam, and maintenance shops. Because industrial facilities of this era commonly used asbestos for high-temperature insulation and fireproofing, workers at the Freeport/Mcmoran site in Port Sulphur, LA - especially those in maintenance, pipefitting, boiler and turbine work, and loading operations - may have encountered asbestos-containing pipe and equipment insulation, gaskets, packing, and cementitious building materials, with the highest potential exposure during repair, removal, or replacement tasks prior to the widespread phase-out of asbestos in the late 1970s and 1980s.
Freeport-McMoRan, Incorporated - Grand Isle, LA
The Freeport-McMoRan, Incorporated location in Grand Isle, Louisiana supported the company's Gulf of Mexico oil and gas activities, functioning as a coastal base for offshore exploration and production in the Grand Isle area and nearby fields. Freeport-McMoRan and its predecessors (including Freeport Sulphur/Freeport Minerals and, later, Freeport-McMoRan Oil & Gas) have maintained a longstanding presence in coastal Louisiana energy development, coordinating offshore platforms, pipelines, and supply logistics from sites such as Grand Isle, LA. Typical operations at this location would have included staging and servicing production equipment, warehousing parts and chemicals, crew changes, vessel and helicopter logistics, and maintenance tied to platform and pipeline infrastructure. Because asbestos-containing materials were widely used across the oil and gas industry through the mid-1980s, workers at the Grand Isle, Louisiana site and on associated offshore units may have encountered asbestos in thermal insulation on pipes and vessels, gaskets and packing in pumps and valves, brake linings and clutches, fireproofing, and equipment such as compressors, boilers, and turbines - especially during maintenance, repairs, or abatement when dust could be generated. Industry-wide substitution of non-asbestos materials and formal abatement programs have since reduced these risks, but historical potential for asbestos exposure exists for former workers and contractors linked to this Grand Isle, LA location.
French Market Ice Manufacturing Company - New Orleans, LA
French Market Ice Manufacturing Company in New Orleans, LA was an industrial facility dedicated to producing and distributing ice for the city's commercial, market, and community needs, supporting food preservation and other cold-chain uses across New Orleans, Louisiana. Operations at such ice plants typically centered on large ammonia-based refrigeration systems with compressors, condensers, evaporators, brine tanks, storage rooms, and extensive piping, along with power equipment and, in earlier decades, boilers for process heat. Like many industrial sites of this type operating before the 1980s, materials containing asbestos were commonly used to insulate steam and hot-water lines, boilers, and certain refrigeration components, as well as in gaskets and packing; consequently, workers such as maintenance personnel, pipefitters, insulators, and machine operators could have faced potential asbestos exposure during installation, repair, or removal of insulation and equipment, especially when materials were disturbed.
Frost Lumber Co - Thibodeaux, LA
For Frost Lumber Co - Thibodeaux, LA, there is no additional information available on this site, but it is on the list of sites where asbestos exposure may have occurred.
Fuller-Austin Insulation Co. - Mossville, LA
Fuller-Austin Insulation Co. in Mossville, Louisiana operated as an industrial insulation contractor and distributor serving the petrochemical and heavy industrial facilities clustered around Calcasieu Parish and the Lake Charles industrial corridor. Typical operations at the Mossville, LA location would have included storing, fabricating, and installing thermal insulation on piping, boilers, and process equipment, as well as maintenance and removal of aging insulation at client sites. During the mid-20th century - before asbestos use declined in the late 1970s - the company and its crews commonly handled asbestos-containing materials such as pipe covering, block, insulating cements, and lagging, creating potential asbestos exposure for insulators, pipefitters, boilermakers, maintenance workers, and nearby trades through airborne dust released when cutting, mixing, fitting, or removing insulation. Legacy insulation in older units meant that maintenance and repair work in the Mossville area could continue to disturb asbestos materials in later decades, posing risks both on-site and via take-home dust on clothing and equipment.
G.B. Reuso, Germania Plantation - Germania, LA
There is no additional information available on this site, but it is on the list of sites where asbestos exposure may have occurred.
G.F. Faurat, 731 St. Charles - New Orleans, LA
There is no additional information available on this site, but it is on the list of sites where asbestos exposure may have occurred. This refers to the location G.F. Faurat at 731 St. Charles in New Orleans, Louisiana.
G.S. Roofing - Shreveport, LA
The G.S. Roofing location in Shreveport, Louisiana operated as a roofing company facility supporting regional roofing installation and repair work, with typical activities including warehousing and handling of roofing materials (such as asphalt-based roll roofing, felts, mastics, and shingles), dispatching crews and equipment, loading and unloading trucks, and routine equipment and facility maintenance. Based in Shreveport, LA, the site served commercial and residential customers and employed roofers, laborers, drivers, and maintenance personnel. Because many roofing products and maintenance components used industry-wide prior to the early 1980s contained asbestos, and tear-off, cutting, mixing, and cleanup could create airborne dust, workers and contractors at this location may have experienced asbestos exposure during earlier decades; the site has been cited among locations where asbestos exposure may have occurred, with risks declining after regulatory changes and product reformulations.
G.W. Sentell And Company - Bunkie, LA
G.W. Sentell And Company in Bunkie, Louisiana is referenced as a potential asbestos exposure location. There is no additional information available on this site, but it is on the list of sites where asbestos exposure may have occurred.
Gabler Insulation - New Orleans, LA
There is no additional information available on this site, but it is on the list of sites where asbestos exposure may have occurred.
Gabler Insulation Company - New Orleans, LA
Gabler Insulation Company - New Orleans, Louisiana: There is no additional information available on this site, but it is on the list of sites where asbestos exposure may have occurred.
Gabler Insulation Inc - Baton Rouge, LA
Gabler Insulation Inc in Baton Rouge, Louisiana operated as a mechanical and thermal insulation contractor serving industrial and commercial facilities in the region, with field crews that installed, repaired, and removed insulation on piping, boilers, ducts, and process equipment at client sites and from a local shop or warehouse; while detailed site-specific records are limited, the nature of insulation contracting in Baton Rouge's petrochemical and construction markets means the company's work commonly supported plant maintenance outages, new construction, and energy-efficiency upgrades across refineries, chemical plants, and commercial buildings. Because many insulation products used in the United States before the early 1980s contained asbestos - such as pipe covering, block, insulating cement, and some fireproofing - workers employed by or working alongside Gabler Insulation Inc at the Baton Rouge, LA location could have faced asbestos exposure during cutting, fitting, mixing, or removal of older materials, and secondary exposure was possible from dust on clothing; controls, product substitutions, and abatement practices adopted in later years would have reduced this risk.
Gabler Insulation Inc - New Orleans, LA
Gabler Insulation Inc is listed in connection with New Orleans, Louisiana. There is no additional information available on this site, but it is on the list of sites where asbestos exposure may have occurred.
Gabler Insulations - New Orleans, LA
Gabler Insulations - New Orleans, LA: There is no additional information available on this site, but it is on the list of sites where asbestos exposure may have occurred.
Gardiner And Conover - Lowry, LA
There is no additional information available on this site, but it is on the list of sites where asbestos exposure may have occurred.
Gas Plant - Crowley, LA
The Gas Plant in Crowley, Louisiana is referenced as an industrial site associated with natural gas operations, though detailed public documentation about its specific history and ownership is limited. In general, gas plants perform compression, dehydration, treatment, and distribution of natural gas through equipment such as compressors, heaters, heat exchangers, and extensive piping systems, and a facility in Crowley, LA would have supported local and regional pipeline infrastructure and utility supply. Historically, many such facilities used asbestos-containing materials for high-heat insulation, gaskets, and packing on equipment and pipelines, creating potential exposure for workers, contractors, and maintenance personnel, particularly before the 1980s; however, the extent of any asbestos use or exposure at this specific Crowley, Louisiana site has not been documented.
Gas Plant - Opelousas, LA
There is no additional information available on this site, but it is on the list of sites where asbestos exposure may have occurred.
Gas Plant - Ywchoski, LA
Gas Plant - Ywchoski, LA, located in Ywchoski, Louisiana, is referenced here for identification only. There is no additional information available on this site, but it is on the list of sites where asbestos exposure may have occurred.
Gateway Hotel - Metairie, LA
Gateway Hotel - Metairie, LA is a listed location in Metairie, Louisiana. There is no additional information available on this site, but it is on the list of sites where asbestos exposure may have occurred.
GATX - Good Hope, LA
GATX - Good Hope, LA was associated with GATX's terminals business in Good Hope, Louisiana, within St. Charles Parish's Mississippi River industrial corridor, where operations centered on bulk liquid storage and transfer services that supported nearby refineries and chemical plants, including managing tank farms and moving petroleum and chemical products between pipelines, marine vessels, railcars, and tank trucks. Facilities of this type typically involved extensive piping networks, pumps, heat-traced or steam-heated systems, and regular maintenance and turnaround work. In the mid-to-late 20th century, these elements commonly incorporated asbestos-containing materials such as thermal insulation, gaskets, and valve or pump packing, which could have presented possible asbestos exposure risks to operators, maintenance personnel, and contractors at the Good Hope, LA site before modern controls and phase-outs were implemented.
Gatx Terminals Corporation - Good Hope, LA
Gatx Terminals Corporation's Good Hope, Louisiana facility operated as a bulk liquid storage and transfer terminal along the Mississippi River in St. Charles Parish, supporting the region's petrochemical corridor by storing, blending, and moving petroleum products and industrial chemicals between tanks, barges/ships, railcars, trucks, and, where applicable, connecting pipelines. Part of a nationwide terminal network, the Good Hope, LA site functioned as a riverfront tank farm and logistics hub serving nearby refineries and chemical plants, and its ownership and operation were subject to industry consolidation over time. Because many terminal systems built or maintained during the mid-20th century used asbestos, potential exposure at this location could have arisen from insulation on steam lines and tank heating coils, pipe and equipment insulation, asbestos-containing gaskets and valve packing, roofing and fireproofing in terminal buildings, and dockside loading equipment; maintenance, repair, and insulation work posed particular risks for operators, mechanics, pipefitters, insulators, dockworkers, and contractors.
Gatx Terminals Corporation - Norco, LA
The Gatx Terminals Corporation facility in Norco, Louisiana operated as a bulk liquid storage and transfer terminal serving the Mississippi River petrochemical corridor, providing tank storage for petroleum products and industrial chemicals, interconnections to pipelines, marine (barge/ship) docks, rail and truck loading, and product heating/blending to support nearby refineries and chemical plants in Norco, LA. As part of a larger network of third - party terminals historically managed by Gatx Terminals Corporation, the site functioned as a logistics hub for moving and conditioning liquid commodities. Regarding possible asbestos exposure, older terminal infrastructure of this type often used asbestos-containing materials for thermal insulation on steam and process lines, tank heating coils, pumps and valves, and in gaskets, packing, and some building materials; consequently, maintenance workers, pipefitters, insulators, and contractors performing repairs or renovations at the Norco terminal - especially before stricter controls in the late 1970s and 1980s - could have encountered asbestos where such materials were present.
Gaylord - Bogalusa, LA
The Gaylord Container facility in Bogalusa, Louisiana was a major kraft pulp and paper operation that produced containerboard and related packaging, with integrated assets such as a wood yard, pulping and recovery areas, paper machines, a box plant, a powerhouse/steam plant, and wastewater treatment; the site had previously been part of Crown Zellerbach and later became part of Temple-Inland before ultimately being folded into subsequent ownership of the Bogalusa mill. Operations at Gaylord - Bogalusa, LA relied on high-temperature, high-pressure systems typical of pulp and paper mills, including recovery boilers, evaporators, lime kilns, turbines, and extensive steam and process piping. Like many mills built or expanded before the 1980s, asbestos-containing materials were commonly used for thermal insulation and fireproofing in boiler and turbine lagging, pipe and equipment insulation, refractory materials, and in gaskets and pump/valve packing, creating potential exposure risks for workers involved in maintenance, repairs, and insulation work, as well as contractors performing turnarounds or demolition.
Gaylord Container Corp � Mill Division - Bogalusa, LA
The Gaylord Container Corp Mill Division in Bogalusa, Louisiana operated a large integrated kraft pulp and paper mill known for producing containerboard grades such as linerboard and corrugating medium, with on - site pulping, chemical recovery (including recovery boilers and a lime kiln), steam and power generation, and multiple paper machines; the site traces its roots to the early 20th - century Bogalusa paper operations that later became part of Crown Zellerbach before being spun off as Gaylord Container in the late 1980s and subsequently acquired by Temple - Inland in 2002. Located in Bogalusa, LA, the mill's processes involved wood handling, kraft pulping, bleaching or unbleached operations depending on product runs, recovery and causticizing circuits, and finished paper production and shipment. As with many mid - century paper mills, asbestos - containing materials were historically used for high - temperature and insulation needs - such as on boilers, turbines, piping, pumps, drying equipment, gaskets, and refractory components - so workers in maintenance, pipefitting, insulating, millwright, and boiler operations could have experienced asbestos exposure, particularly prior to tighter regulations and abatement practices adopted from the late 1970s onward. Environmental and safety controls improved over time, but legacy materials may have remained in older structures and equipment, making disturbance during repairs or renovations a potential exposure pathway.
Gaylord Container Corp � Mill Division (Crown Zellerbach) - Bogalusa, LA
Located in Bogalusa, LA, this integrated kraft pulp and paper operation traces its roots to the early 20th century, later operating for decades under Crown Zellerbach before those packaging assets were spun off as Gaylord Container Corporation in 1986; the mill was subsequently acquired by Temple-Inland in 2002 and later became part of International Paper. The facility's core operations have centered on producing containerboard (linerboard and corrugating medium) supported by kraft pulping, chemical recovery, power and steam generation, and multiple paper machine lines. Like many pulp and paper mills of its era, the site historically used asbestos-containing materials, including insulation on boilers, recovery furnaces, steam and condensate piping, turbines, and evaporators, as well as heat-resistant gaskets, valve and pump packing, millboard, transite panels, and, in earlier decades, some paper machine dryer felts. This created potential occupational asbestos exposure, particularly for maintenance and repair crews, insulators, pipefitters, millwrights, and boiler and power house personnel, with risks highest before tighter regulations and abatement practices took hold in the late 1970s and 1980s.
Gaylord Container Corp - Purchasing Department - Bogalusa, LA
The Gaylord Container Corp Purchasing Department in Bogalusa, Louisiana functioned as the procurement and materials management arm supporting the Bogalusa paper mill complex, coordinating purchases of raw materials (such as wood fiber, process chemicals, and packaging inputs), maintenance and repair parts, contract services, and warehouse inventory for mill operations that produced containerboard and related kraft papers; the facility's ownership changed over time, with the mill historically associated with Crown Zellerbach before operating under Gaylord Container and later successors in the industry. Like many pulp and paper mills of the mid-20th century, the Bogalusa, LA site likely incorporated asbestos-containing materials in insulation for boilers and steam lines, on dryers, turbines, pumps, valves, gaskets, and packing, creating potential exposure for maintenance and contractor personnel; office and purchasing staff could also have experienced incidental exposure if their work areas were located within or adjacent to production buildings, during site walkthroughs, or from asbestos-containing building materials (such as ceiling or floor tiles and HVAC insulation) common in older facilities. While specific exposure events tied solely to the Purchasing Department are not documented here, the broader mill environment and historical industry practices indicate that asbestos exposure was a potential hazard at this location.
Gaylord Container Corp. - Bogalusa, LA
The Gaylord Container Corp. facility in Bogalusa, Louisiana was a large, integrated pulp and paper operation focused on kraft pulping and the manufacture of containerboard grades such as linerboard and corrugating medium, serving the corrugated packaging market; the mill has operated in Bogalusa for much of the 20th century under various owners, with Gaylord Container taking over in the late 1980s before the business was acquired by Temple-Inland in 2002. Typical mill systems at this site included wood handling, digesters, chemical recovery and power boilers, evaporators, turbines, extensive steam and condensate piping, and paper machine dryer sections - equipment historically associated with asbestos-containing insulation, gaskets, packing, refractory materials, and cement products. As a result, workers such as pipefitters, insulators, millwrights, maintenance crews, boilermakers, and outside contractors in Bogalusa, LA may have faced potential asbestos exposure, particularly before the 1980s and during later repairs, removals, or renovations that disturbed legacy materials.
Gaylord Container Corporation - Bogalusa, LA
Gaylord Container Corporation's Bogalusa, Louisiana facility is a long-running, integrated pulp and paper/containerboard mill in Bogalusa, LA, originally established in the early 20th century to utilize regional timber and later modernized to include kraft pulping, chemical recovery (recovery boilers and evaporators), multiple paper machines producing linerboard and corrugating medium, on-site power generation, wastewater treatment, and extensive maintenance and machine shops; the mill operated under Gaylord Container (including after its 1980s spinoff from Crown Zellerbach) until the business was later acquired by Temple-Inland and ultimately became part of International Paper's network. Like many paper mills of its era, the Bogalusa site historically used asbestos-containing materials in insulation for steam and process piping, boilers, turbines, dryers, pumps, valves and gaskets, refractory and insulating cements, and some dryer felts and building materials, creating potential asbestos exposure for workers - especially insulators, pipefitters, millwrights, maintenance crews, and powerhouse personnel - during installation, repairs, and shutdown overhauls when materials were disturbed.
Geismar - Geismar, LA
Geismar, Louisiana is an unincorporated industrial community in Ascension Parish along the Mississippi River corridor that hosts a dense cluster of large petrochemical and chemical facilities; major operations in Geismar, LA include production of polyurethane intermediates (such as MDI/TDI and related amines and polyols), methanol, refrigerants and other fluorochemicals, plastics intermediates, and associated utilities and logistics, with well-known operators in the area including BASF, Honeywell, Methanex, and Rubicon among others. The complex infrastructure - steam and power generation, high - temperature process units, tankage, pipelines, rail and barge loading - supports continuous manufacturing and frequent maintenance turnarounds. Because many units in Geismar were built or expanded during decades when asbestos-containing materials were widely used for thermal insulation and fireproofing, potential asbestos exposure could have occurred historically on steam lines, boilers, turbines, heat exchangers, pumps, valves, gaskets, refractories, and older building materials, particularly for insulators, pipefitters, boilermakers, maintenance crews, and contractors during repair, outage, or demolition work. While extensive abatement and substitutions have reduced these risks over time, legacy asbestos may remain in older equipment and structures, so work on aging assets in Geismar, Louisiana has required controls to prevent fiber release and exposure.
Geismar Cogeneration Facility - Geismar, LA
The Geismar Cogeneration Facility in Geismar, Louisiana is a combined heat and power (CHP) plant that supplies electricity and process steam to nearby industrial operations in the Ascension Parish petrochemical corridor, supporting continuous chemical and plastics manufacturing with high-efficiency, reliable utilities. Such cogeneration facilities typically use natural gas-fired combustion turbines paired with heat-recovery steam generators and a steam turbine, allowing production of both power and high-pressure steam; output is commonly delivered directly to on-site customers and, when contracted, to the regional grid. Located within one of the nation's most concentrated industrial clusters, the facility's role is to improve energy efficiency, reliability, and emissions performance compared with separate power and steam production. Regarding asbestos, as with many power and steam plants - particularly those constructed or containing legacy equipment from before the 1980s - potential asbestos-containing materials may have been present in insulation on boilers or heat-recovery steam generators, steam and condensate piping, turbines, valves, pumps, gaskets, and packing; maintenance, outage, retrofit, or demolition work in these systems historically created exposure risks for operators, pipefitters, boilermakers, insulators, and contractors if controls and protective measures were inadequate.
Genco Inc - New Orleans, LA
At Genco Inc in New Orleans, Louisiana, there is no additional information available on this site, but it is on the list of sites where asbestos exposure may have occurred.
General American Transport Corporation - Good Hope, LA
General American Transportation Corporation (GATX) operated industrial logistics and maintenance operations supporting the rail and petrochemical sectors, and the Good Hope, Louisiana facility in St. Charles Parish functioned as part of this network, serving nearby refineries and chemical plants along the Mississippi River through activities such as bulk liquid storage and transfer, railcar/tank car staging, and equipment maintenance typical for such terminals; in this context, potential asbestos exposure at the Good Hope, LA site could have occurred during mid- to late-20th-century work involving insulation and lagging on steam lines and process piping, boilers and heaters, gaskets and packing in pumps and valves, brake and other friction materials on rail equipment, and heat-resistant blankets and gloves used during repairs, with pipefitters, insulators, mechanics, welders, laborers, and bystanders in maintenance areas among those who may have been at risk.
General American Transportation Corporation - Good Hope, LA
General American Transportation Corporation in Good Hope, Louisiana: There is no additional information available on this site, but it is on the list of sites where asbestos exposure may have occurred.
General Industrial Alcohol Corporation - Marrero, LA
General Industrial Alcohol Corporation's site in Marrero, Louisiana is referenced on asbestos-exposure site lists, but specific public details about the facility's operating history are limited; the company's business centered on producing industrial ethyl alcohol for solvent, fuel-blend, and chemical-feedstock uses, and facilities of this type typically handled fermentation, distillation, dehydration, bulk tank storage, and shipment by rail, truck, or barge serving the Mississippi River industrial corridor. Potential asbestos exposure at the General Industrial Alcohol Corporation - Marrero, LA location could have occurred - particularly before the 1980s - through insulation and refractory materials on boilers, steam and process piping, heat exchangers, distillation columns, pumps and valves, as well as from gaskets, packing, and fireproofing used during routine maintenance, repairs, and turnarounds.
General Motors Corp - Shreveport, LA
The General Motors Corp - Shreveport, LA facility was a GM assembly plant in Shreveport, Louisiana that operated from the early 1980s until 2012, building compact and midsize trucks and SUVs including the Chevrolet S-10, GMC Sonoma, Isuzu Hombre, Hummer H3/H3T, and later the Chevrolet Colorado and GMC Canyon. The complex carried out typical automotive body, paint, and final assembly operations and employed thousands during peak years, serving as a key light - truck production center for GM before closing when those product lines were restructured and moved. As with many U.S. auto plants of its era, potential asbestos exposure at the Shreveport Operations could have arisen from asbestos-containing building materials and industrial systems (such as insulation on piping or boiler equipment, gasket and packing materials, and certain flooring or roofing products) used when the facility was constructed, as well as from some vehicle components historically manufactured with asbestos, notably brakes, clutches, and engine gaskets, particularly in maintenance, repair, and rework areas; regulatory controls and abatement programs over time were intended to mitigate these risks.
General Services Administration - New Orleans, LA
The General Services Administration (GSA) - New Orleans, Louisiana oversees federal real estate, building operations, leasing, construction and modernization projects, and shared services for civilian agencies in the New Orleans area, coordinating property management, maintenance, custodial services, and contractor oversight for federally owned and leased facilities such as courthouses and office buildings. As part of GSA's nationwide mission established in 1949, the New Orleans, LA office supports day-to-day operations of federal tenants and manages capital improvements and repairs within the local inventory. Because many federal facilities constructed or renovated before the 1980s used asbestos-containing materials (for example in insulation, fireproofing, flooring, and ceiling products), possible asbestos exposure at General Services Administration - New Orleans, LA may have occurred for building maintenance staff, contractors, or occupants when such materials were disturbed during earlier renovations or repairs, particularly prior to formal abatement and modern controls; GSA follows applicable federal regulations for asbestos inspection, management, and abatement to limit exposure risks.
George A. Marr - New Orleans, LA
There is no additional information available on this site, but it is on the list of sites where asbestos exposure may have occurred. The site identified as George A. Marr in New Orleans, LA is referenced without publicly available operational details or dates, so no further background on its activities in New Orleans, Louisiana can be confirmed.
George B. Swift Company - New Orleans, LA
There is no additional information available on this site, but it is on the list of sites where asbestos exposure may have occurred, referring to the George B. Swift Company - New Orleans, LA facility in New Orleans, Louisiana.
George Gale - New Orleans, LA
George Gale in New Orleans, LA. There is no additional information available on this site, but it is on the list of sites where asbestos exposure may have occurred.
George Gole - New Orleans, LA
There is no additional information available on this site, but it is on the list of sites where asbestos exposure may have occurred.
George Hill - Lida Grove, LA
George Hill in Lida Grove, LA is referenced as a site of potential asbestos exposure, but no specific details about its operations, time period of activity, or background are available. There is no additional information available on this site, but it is on the list of sites where asbestos exposure may have occurred.
George Hill - Lobdell, LA
George Hill in Lobdell, Louisiana is referenced as a potential asbestos-related site, but specific details on its operations, industry, and historical background are not publicly documented. There is no additional information available on this site, but it is on the list of sites where asbestos exposure may have occurred.
George Leonard - New Orleans, LA
There is no additional information available on the George Leonard site in New Orleans, LA, but it is on the list of sites where asbestos exposure may have occurred.
George M. Murrell Planting And Manufacturing Company - Bayou Goula, LA
There is no additional information available on this site, but it is on the list of sites where asbestos exposure may have occurred.