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The Geek Beat

by SomeoneKnows from Missouri

Last Post 141 days, 22 hours Ago


An article from MAKE Magazine's blog based on a news story from the Worchester Massachusetts Telegram Gazette has emotions running high for many science geeks and experimenters. The articles describe authorities ransacking a retired chemist, Victor M. Deeb's home for three days while they confiscate his lab's contents. He was not running a meth lab, or involved in terrorist activities but was doing what he knew best, experimenting to develop new materials and coatings for things like food container lids. The article states "Pamela A. Wilderman, Marlboro’s code enforcement officer, said Mr. Deeb was doing scientific research and development in a residential area, which is a violation of zoning laws".

A later article by the Telegram Gazette headlines Chemist considers legal action over materials seized reveals that Mr. Deeb had 1500 containers including 35 drums of chemicals in the home. The chemicals he was using were no more harmful than household chemicals you might find around your own home. Firefighters were called to the residence when a small fire in an upstairs air conditioner broke out. The real concern was with the quantities found and unclear labeling of the contents.

If there's a lesson in this for all of us it is to be responsible within your workspace by keeping it organized. Mr. Deeb should have been more considerate of his neighbors by storing any unused or larger quantities of chemicals off-site. If Mr. Deeb kept unused chemicals away from the house he probably would have gone unnoticed.

Many reactions over the Internet are charged with emotion. It would have been a non story if the officials involved, including the code enforcement officer, had found a way to resolve the problem with Mr. Deeb by including him in the cleanup instead of such drastic measures. The reactions to this story seem to indicate a growing fear of the authorities by citizens more than the threats they purport to protect us from.

Home based science labs are an important part of the Kansas City community too. In the HMS Beagle Science Store's blog they state that an important group is with the home schoolers but they have many other parents and students wanting to explore sciences. While Mr. Deeb's actions were extreme, we can't loose site of the need to encourage lawmakers to take a stand to support education and exploration even when practiced in the home.

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vmdeeb
Oct 27, 2008 | 9:17 PM

(The city of Marlboro requested a restraining order against Victor M. Deeb, a retired chemist who used to spend several hours a week in his crowded basement lab, surrounded by hundreds of containers of chemicals that town and state officials deemed potentially hazardous. Yesterday a judge granted a preliminary injunction, preventing Mr. Deeb from operating a lab in his home that again would violate zoning, sanitary and fire regulations. )

Many of my samples were returned to Mr Deeb's basement by New England Disposal Technologies inc.(NEDT) Hired by The Commonwealth Of Mass Department Of Environmental Protection agency, BUT NOT MY INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY, WHICH ARE OBVIOUS IN PICTURE TAKEN BY THE FIRE DEPARTMENT, are more problematic than what was removed

(The restraining order, issued temporarily on Sept. 22 and extended yesterday, could be lifted, depending on the outcome of the case. But the city is trying to shut down Mr. Deeb’s home lab for good, arguing that the presence of so many chemicals in a residential neighborhood is a public safety threat. )

Who is more qualified to determine what is a public safety threat, the city, or Mr Deeb with 50 years of experience in the Chemical industry, and would he have hazardous material where he, his wife, Child, and visiting Grandchildren, Live.

(“They are preventing me from earning a living,” Mr. Deeb said yesterday. “I tried to pursue my efforts outside of my home. I have not been successful.”
Mr. Deeb, 71, worked for 20 years at chemical company W.R. Grace before retiring in 1995. Since then he has continued

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