0:00
Breaking overnight, a potential
0:01
catastrophe with 40,000 people under
0:04
evacuation orders in Orange County.
0:06
>> This thing is going to fail. We don't
0:08
>> Officials in Southern California are
0:10
racing to solve a toxic chemical crisis
0:13
that could cause an unprecedented
0:16
industrial disaster. 40,000 people have
0:19
been ordered to evacuate an area not far
0:21
from Disneyland. Officials fearing a
0:23
toxic explosion after noxious vapors
0:26
spewed into the air due to a leak at
0:28
this aerospace manufacturing company in
0:30
Garden Grove, California, about 35 miles
0:34
>> We do have three leaking tanks.
0:35
>> Firefighters and hazmat teams racing to
0:40
tank from exploding in a mushroom cloud
0:43
>> This is highly volatile. It's highly
0:46
toxic and it's highly flammable. Imagine
0:48
being told you have 1 hour to grab what
0:51
you can carry and leave your home with
0:54
no idea when or whether you will ever
0:58
come back. That is exactly what happened
1:00
to as many as 50,000 people in Southern
1:03
California over Memorial Day weekend.
1:05
And the cause was a single valve on a
1:08
single chemical tank at a factory most
1:11
Americans have never heard of.
1:12
>> It's a respiratory irritant. So it can
1:14
start off very mild, but it can progress
1:16
to a point where yes, you would probably
1:18
require hospitalization, if not more.
1:20
>> Thousands of residents evacuated and at
1:22
least a dozen schools closed. Overnight,
1:24
lines of evacuated residents stretching
1:26
out the door of shelters.
1:28
>> Got a knock on the door and I was told
1:31
uh we were supposed to leave.
1:32
>> Just waiting and not knowing what's
1:34
going to happen cuz we all want to go
1:37
home. The fire chief in charge of the
1:38
response called it possibly one of the
1:41
worst chemical incidents in California
1:43
history and the crisis sits a few miles
1:49
The facility carries the name GKN
1:51
Aerospace Transparency Systems and it
1:54
occupies 15 1/2 acres at 12,122
1:58
Western Avenue in Garden Grove,
2:00
California in an industrial corridor
2:03
just a few blocks from Suburban Homes
2:05
and an elementary school. Drive past and
2:09
you would have no idea what goes on
2:11
inside. According to GKN's own website,
2:15
this plant is the world's leading
2:17
producer of military aircraft
2:19
transparencies, which means the canopy
2:21
on the F-35 Lightning 2 fighter jet
2:23
originates here. So do the windows on
2:26
the Boeing 787 Dreamlininer, the Boeing
2:29
737, the Airbus A350, the Honda Jet, and
2:34
the Bombardier Cer. If you have flown on
2:37
a modern commercial jet in the past
2:39
decade, the glass you looked through was
2:42
likely manufactured at this site. On
2:44
Thursday afternoon, May 21st, 2026, a
2:48
chemical storage tank at this facility
2:51
began to overheat. By Saturday, Governor
2:55
Gavin Nuome had declared a state of
2:57
emergency for the entire county. And by
3:00
Sunday, somewhere between 40 and 50,000
3:03
residents had been ordered out of their
3:06
As of the most recent reporting, the
3:08
tank remains a live threat.
3:12
Let me walk you through what is actually
3:14
inside that tank, why crews cannot
3:16
simply drain it, and why this failure
3:19
exposes something far larger than one
3:21
bad valve at one industrial corner of
3:23
Orange County. The chemical sitting
3:26
inside the tank carries the name
3:30
known by the shorthand MMA.
3:32
It looks like clear colorless liquid
3:35
with a faintly sweet smell and chemists
3:37
call it a monomer which is the raw
3:40
building block that gets turned into
3:42
acrylic plastic. The material you might
3:44
recognize as plexiglass or lucite
3:46
originates from methylmethacrylate
3:49
and this is precisely why GKN keeps it
3:51
on hand. Workers at the plant polymerize
3:54
the liquid into transparent acrylic
3:56
sheet, stretch it, laminate it with
3:58
polycarbonate, and shape it into the
4:00
bird strike rated transparencies that
4:03
protect F35 pilots and Boeing 787
4:08
But here is the thing about
4:11
According to the safety data sheet
4:16
one of the largest chemical
4:17
manufacturers on the planet, MMA can
4:21
undergo what specialists call
4:23
spontaneous and violent self-p
4:24
polymerization if its inhibitor is lost
4:28
or if the liquid is exposed to excessive
4:30
heat. The federal government's chemical
4:33
hazard database run by the National
4:35
Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration
4:38
puts the warning in even planer terms.
4:41
stating that if polymerization takes
4:43
place inside a container, the container
4:46
may rupture violently. The closed cup
4:50
flash point of methylmethacrylate sits
4:52
at around 50° F, which is colder than
4:56
the inside of a refrigerator, and the
4:58
flammability range in air runs from 2.1%
5:02
all the way to 12.5%.
5:04
Its vapor is heavier than air, which
5:07
means a leak sends fumes traveling along
5:10
the ground looking for a spark.
5:13
7,000 gall of that material sit inside
5:15
the tank in question.
5:18
Here is how the crisis actually
5:19
unfolded. At roughly 3:40 in the
5:22
afternoon on Thursday, May 21st, the
5:25
Orange County Fire Authority was
5:27
dispatched to a vapor release coming
5:29
from chemical storage tanks at the GKN
5:31
facility. By that evening, the tank's
5:34
automatic pressure relief valve and
5:36
onboard sprinklers had triggered as the
5:38
temperature climbed, and the first
5:40
evacuation order went out. Thursday
5:43
night, crews sprayed water on the
5:45
outside of the tank. The relief valve
5:48
closed, and overnight, the evacuation
5:50
orders were lifted because officials
5:53
believed they had the situation under
5:56
At around 4:00 Friday morning, the
5:59
incident commander, Orange County Fire
6:01
Authority Division Chief Craig Kovi,
6:03
received word that conditions had
6:05
severely worsened. The crews realized
6:08
something terrifying as Friday morning
6:10
developed. The discharge valve on the
6:12
tank had been damaged, which meant they
6:14
could not pump the methylmethacrylate
6:16
out. They could not inject a fresh
6:19
polymerization inhibitor to stabilize
6:21
it, and they could not vent the contents
6:23
in a controlled way. the chemistry of
6:26
the substance itself was working against
6:28
them. A chemistry professor at the
6:31
University of Southern California, Elias
6:34
Picasso, told the Los Angeles Times that
6:36
the most likely explanation was that the
6:39
methylmethacrylate had already begun to
6:41
polymerize inside the outlet. And his
6:44
words to the paper captured the horror
6:46
of the situation. The chemical inside
6:49
the tank had turned itself into solid
6:52
plastic right where the valve needed to
6:54
open. Picazo described it as a
6:57
glass-like solid material, and nothing
6:59
was going to go in or out. This is the
7:03
heart of the crisis. A storage tank
7:05
designed with one critical valve had
7:08
been sealed shut by its own contents,
7:10
and every standard emergency response
7:12
technique for a runaway chemical
7:14
reaction was off the table because the
7:16
access point no longer existed. By
7:19
Friday afternoon, Chief CVY stood before
7:22
residents and the press and laid the
7:24
situation out in plain language. The
7:27
tank was going to fail, he told them,
7:30
and nobody knew when. Two options
7:32
remained in his words, and he stated
7:35
them directly. Option one, the tank
7:39
fails and spills somewhere between 6 and
7:43
7,000 gallons of very bad chemicals into
7:46
the parking lot. Option two, the tank
7:50
goes into a thermal runaway and blows
7:52
up, which would affect the adjacent
7:54
tanks holding fuel and additional
7:56
chemicals. to ABC News. Cubby called it
8:00
as real as it gets, the worstc case
8:03
scenario of his entire career. Speaking
8:06
to NBC News, he warned that they were
8:08
talking about possibly one of the worst
8:10
chemical incidents in California
8:12
history. The line that stayed with
8:14
people though was this one. Letting this
8:17
thing just fail and blow up is
8:19
unacceptable to us. CVY told the
8:22
cameras. We're going to do everything we
8:24
can to mitigate this. protect your
8:26
residences, protect our environment, and
8:29
get you back home." That quote tells you
8:32
exactly how serious the people on the
8:35
ground believe the situation had become.
8:39
The evacuation zone expanded outward
8:41
into a buffer of roughly 1 mile,
8:44
covering about 10 square miles of
8:46
Southern California. Its borders ran
8:48
from Ball Road in the north to Tras
8:51
Avenue in the south and from Valley View
8:53
Street in the west to Dale Street in the
8:56
east. The zone swept across parts of
8:58
Garden Grove and all of the neighboring
9:00
city of Stanton with slices of Cypress,
9:03
Buena Park, Anaheim, and Westminster.
9:06
Garden Grove Police Chief Amir Alara
9:09
placed the official evacuation count at
9:11
40,000 people, while ABC News and other
9:15
outlets working from internal briefing
9:17
memos reported numbers as high as
9:21
Wikipedia editors tracking the event
9:23
landed at more than 44,000.
9:26
The honest answer is that somewhere
9:28
between 40 and 50,000 Americans were
9:31
ordered to leave their homes on short
9:33
notice over Memorial Day weekend.
9:36
15 schools in the Garden Grove Unified
9:38
School District closed with additional
9:41
closures rippling out through the
9:42
Magnolia, Savannah, Westminster, and
9:46
Cypress districts. A reunification
9:49
center opened at Rancho Alamitos High
9:51
School. The American Red Cross set up
9:54
shelters at the Garden Grove Sports and
9:56
Recreation Center, Stanton City Hall,
9:59
the Cypress Recreation and Community
10:01
Center, Freedom Hall at Miles Square
10:04
Regional Park in Fountain Valley, John
10:06
F. Kennedy High School in La Palma,
10:09
Savannah High School in Anaheim, Ocean
10:12
View High School in Huntington Beach,
10:14
Golden West College, and Loss Amigos
10:16
High School in Fountain Valley. Two of
10:19
those shelters filled to capacity within
10:22
Planet Fitness locations across Orange
10:24
County opened their doors free of charge
10:26
to displaced residents and CALR shut
10:28
down the eastbound and westbound
10:30
off-ramps on State Route 22 at Beach
10:32
Boulevard, Not Avenue and Valley View
10:37
Disneyland sitting roughly 5 mi east of
10:39
the plant remained open and outside the
10:42
evacuation zone and Knott Berry Farm
10:45
about 4 miles to the north also kept its
10:48
gates open. The city of Garden Grove,
10:51
however, cancelled the Strawberry
10:53
Festival Parade, a Memorial Day weekend
10:55
tradition that has run for decades.
10:58
Around midday on Saturday, Governor
11:00
Gavin Nuome issued a formal proclamation
11:03
of a state of emergency for Orange
11:06
His statement called the safety of
11:08
Orange County residents the top priority
11:11
and pledged that the state was
11:13
mobilizing every available resource to
11:15
support local responders.
11:17
That proclamation activated the
11:19
California Office of Emergency Services,
11:22
opened state-owned fairgrounds as
11:24
additional shelter sites, and unlocked
11:27
state mutual aid. California Attorney
11:30
General Rob Bont issued a price gouging
11:33
consumer alert under the same emergency
11:35
statute, warning local hotels and gas
11:38
stations against taking advantage of
11:40
displaced families. That afternoon,
11:43
Orange County District Attorney Todd
11:45
Spitzer opened a formal investigation,
11:47
and his anger was not subtle. The
11:50
facility sat in the middle of a
11:52
commercial area, a residential area, an
11:55
urban population, he told reporters, and
11:58
he called the situation irresponsible
12:00
and horrific. Spitzer said the company
12:03
had failed and that he would be
12:05
coordinating with other law enforcement
12:06
and prosecutorial agencies to find out
12:09
why the system collapsed and why no
12:12
redundancy was built in when a system
12:14
fails. The district attorney's office
12:17
published a tip line 7143478714
12:22
seeking information from whistleblowers
12:25
or anyone with knowledge of conditions
12:29
This is the part of the story that older
12:32
Americans who have watched the
12:33
industrial economy of this country for
12:35
five or six decades will recognize
12:39
because this incident did not come out
12:41
of nowhere. According to reporting by
12:44
the Los Angeles Times, the Garden Grove
12:46
site has been the subject of four
12:48
Federal Occupational Safety and Health
12:50
Administration inspections since 2018,
12:54
which produced 10 violations.
12:56
In 2019, the California Department of
12:59
Industrial Relations sued an Orange
13:02
County Superior Court to collect unpaid
13:04
civil penalties from an April 2018
13:07
citation. That citation alleged the
13:10
company had failed to ensure that all
13:12
machinery and equipment in service were
13:14
inspected or maintained as recommended
13:16
by the manufacturer and that it had
13:18
failed to implement an effective written
13:20
injury and illness prevention program.
13:23
Then came 2021 when according to Fox 11,
13:28
Los Angeles citing the Orange County
13:30
Register and the South Coast Air Quality
13:32
Management District, the same facility
13:34
paid approximately $900,000
13:37
to settle multiple environmental
13:39
violations, including failure to keep
13:42
emission records and operating equipment
13:44
without a permit. Methylmethylry is not
13:47
some obscure chemical that slipped
13:49
through the cracks. It appears on the
13:51
federal risk management plan list as a
13:53
regulated flammable substance under
13:55
section 112 ER of the Clean Air Act and
13:59
it falls under California's stricter
14:01
accidental release prevention program
14:06
Facilities storing methylmethacrylate
14:08
above threshold quantities are required
14:10
to file a risk management plan with the
14:12
Environmental Protection Agency every 5
14:15
years, documenting worst case release
14:17
scenarios, prevention programs, and
14:20
emergency response coordination with
14:22
local responders. On paper, this entire
14:25
incident was supposed to be impossible
14:27
to be surprised by. Yet, here we are.
14:31
One more thread of this story deserves
14:33
attention, particularly for an audience
14:36
that pays attention to the American
14:37
economy and American industry.
14:41
GKN Aerospace, the company that owns
14:43
this facility, is itself owned by GKN
14:47
plc, which is in turn owned by Melrose
14:50
Industries plc, a London listed
14:53
turnaround company that completed a
14:55
roughly 8.1 billion pounds hostile
14:58
takeover of GKN in March 2018. Financial
15:02
analyses of that transaction describe it
15:05
as the largest successful hostile
15:07
takeover in the United Kingdom since
15:09
Craft acquired Cadbury in 2010.
15:12
The Garden Grove plant originated as
15:15
Pilington Aerospace, a division of the
15:17
British glass giant Pilington. And in
15:20
July 2003, Pilington sold its global
15:23
aerospace business to GKN for roughly 42
15:26
million or about 67.5 million.
15:31
The deal closed in August 2003. GKN
15:35
folded the operation into a new division
15:37
called GKN Aerospace Transparency
15:40
Systems and the company moved into the
15:42
Western Avenue site in 2004. The plant
15:46
that builds the canopy of America's most
15:48
expensive fighter jet is owned by a
15:50
British company that is itself owned by
15:52
another British company specializing in
15:55
buying industrial assets, restructuring
15:57
them, and selling them on at a profit.
16:00
That fact is not in itself a scandal. It
16:04
is however a fact that an American
16:06
audience deserves to know when they are
16:08
looking at a state of emergency
16:10
triggered by a maintenance failure at
16:12
this specific site. GKN released a
16:15
statement during the crisis. The company
16:17
described its response, confirmed that
16:20
emergency response protocols had been
16:22
activated and noted that fire brigade
16:24
and specialized hazardous material teams
16:29
No injuries had been reported. Safety at
16:32
their facilities was paramount, the
16:35
statement claimed, and standard safety
16:37
protocols and processes were being
16:39
followed with regular audits conducted
16:42
by numerous state and federal agencies.
16:45
The company apologized for the
16:48
significant disruption to the many local
16:50
residents and businesses forced to
16:54
The response to the crisis itself has
16:58
The Orange County Fire Authority took
17:00
unified command, supported on the ground
17:02
by the Garden Grove Police Department,
17:04
Garden Grove Fire, the Orange County
17:06
Sheriff's Department, the Orange County
17:09
Healthcare Agency, the California Office
17:11
of Emergency Services, the California
17:14
Department of Toxic Substances Control,
17:17
Cal OSHA, the California Highway Patrol
17:20
and CALR, the South Coast Air Quality
17:23
Management District, the United States
17:26
Environmental Protection Agency,
17:28
and the American Red Cross. The EPA
17:30
dispatched two onseen coordinators and
17:33
deployed 24 stationary air monitors,
17:35
while Los Angeles Mayor Karen Bass
17:38
placed the Los Angeles Fire Department
17:39
on standby. Crews flew drones with
17:42
thermal imaging roughly every 10 minutes
17:44
to track the tank's exterior
17:46
temperature. SandberMS went up and storm
17:49
drains were plugged to keep any spilled
17:50
chemical out of the Westminster Channel
17:52
and ultimately the Pacific Ocean. A
17:55
second adjacent tank holding 15,000
17:57
gallons of methylmethacrylate was
17:59
successfully neutralized by injecting an
18:02
inhibitor through its still functioning
18:04
valve. Through all of this, as of the
18:07
most recent verified reporting, no
18:09
injuries have occurred.
18:11
South Coast Air Quality Management
18:13
District scientists, including Dr. Jason
18:16
Lowe, have reported that ongoing air
18:18
testing showed levels of
18:20
methylmethacrylate in the surrounding
18:22
community were completely normal. and
18:24
the EPA's monitoring equipment has
18:26
detected no gas leaking from the tank.
18:30
For the moment, the chemical remains
18:33
The temperature inside the tank, though,
18:36
when crews finally managed to read the
18:38
internal gauge rather than the water
18:40
cooled exterior, sat at 90° F.
18:45
That reading was 13° warmer than what
18:47
officials had believed earlier in the
18:49
day, and the temperature has been
18:51
climbing at roughly 1°ree hour. The
18:54
valve cannot be opened and the chemistry
18:57
by its own nature accelerates itself. A
19:00
classaction lawsuit has already been
19:02
filed by the ex-law group and Prescidio
19:05
Law Firm on behalf of evacuated
19:07
residents. Congressman Derek Trron of
19:10
California's 45th district, which
19:12
includes Westminster, has said he is in
19:14
contact with federal disaster relief
19:16
officials, including FEMA and the EPA,
19:19
and he has urged the governor to seek a
19:22
federal disaster declaration if the tank
19:24
fails. Cal OSHA has confirmed it will
19:27
inspect the plant, and the district
19:29
attorney's investigation is moving
19:32
What does all of this actually mean? It
19:35
means that one of the largest emergency
19:37
evacuations in modern Orange County
19:40
history was triggered not by a
19:42
hurricane, not by a wildfire, and not by
19:45
an earthquake, but by one valve on one
19:48
storage tank at one industrial facility
19:51
that almost no member of the surrounding
19:53
community had ever heard of. It means
19:56
that the regulatory paperwork supposed
19:59
to make incidents like this impossible
20:02
to be surprised by the federal risk
20:05
management plans, the California
20:07
accidental release prevention filings,
20:10
the OSHA inspections, the South Coast
20:13
Air Quality Management District
20:15
settlements did not in the end prevent a
20:18
maintenance failure on a tank holding
20:20
7,000 gallons of a chemical that
20:23
everyone involved knew could polymerize.
20:25
eyes itself shut. It means that as many
20:29
as 50,000 Americans, including families
20:32
with young children attending the
20:34
elementary school just a few hundred
20:35
yards from the plant, spent their
20:37
Memorial Day weekend in shelters,
20:40
hotels, and the homes of relatives,
20:43
waiting to find out whether they still
20:45
had a home to return to. And the
20:48
question Orange County District Attorney
20:49
Todd Spitzer asked on Saturday
20:51
afternoon. Why there was no redundancy
20:53
built in when a system fails is the
20:56
question that ought to be asked at every
20:58
facility like this one across the
20:59
country. Aerospace Transparencies
21:02
plants, chemical storage facilities, and
21:04
industrial sites holding regulated
21:06
hazardous substances sit within walking
21:08
distance of American homes from coast to
21:11
coast. Most of them operate quietly and
21:14
safely for decades at a time. The Garden
21:17
Grove crisis is a reminder though that
21:20
quietly and safely is not the same as
21:23
guaranteed. That paperwork compliance is
21:26
not the same as engineering redundancy.
21:28
And that the modern emergency response
21:30
system with all its drones and air
21:33
monitors and gubernatorial proclamations
21:35
can only manage the consequences of
21:37
decisions that were made long before the
21:42
As of this moment, the tank in Garden
21:44
Grove has not been resolved. The
21:46
evacuations remain in effect. The
21:49
investigation is just beginning. And the
21:52
question of what comes next, both for
21:54
the residents of Orange County and for
21:56
the regulatory framework that was
21:58
supposed to protect them, is one the
22:00
rest of the country would do well to pay