Residents, the Federal Aviation Administration and Delta Airlines are asking whether the fuel dumping was necessary.
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The question comes after several schools had to be cleaned up for any possible fuel contamination. The Delta airliner, initially bound for Shanghai, dumped thousands of gallons of jet fuel on neighborhoods east of LAX after the flight experienced engine trouble following takeoff.
The FAA confirmed that air traffic control asked if Flight 89 needed to dump fuel. The typical practice is that the pilot would be directed to the most appropriate location away from people.
Tower: "Bring you back to LAX immediately or do you need to hold to burn fuel? You tell me what you need to do."
Pilot: "We've got the engine - we've got compressor stall. We got it back under control. We're going to come back to LAX. We're not critical."
Tower: "Ok, so you don't need to hold or dump fuel or anything like that?"
The pilot's response was, "Negative, we'll be request runway 25R" but the dump had already happened.
Alex Vargas is among many residents under the flight path who were questioning their own well-being. He complained about having felt skin irritation after the fuel dump.
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While the impacted schools have been scrubbed down, neighboring properties have not been.
"My kids still come home, they play outside in the back. I don't know if there any precautions that we should take," said Eduardo Luna.
The Department of Public Health said the fuel strewn in the air has long evaporated and that the school cleanup was precautionary.
"These fuels are still expected to evaporate and should not continue to present a health risk to the public," said Dr. Cyrus Rangan with the L.A. County Department of Health.
The health department advised residents to throw away any backyard fruit in case it absorbed any petroleum component.
The investigation is ongoing. The FAA said there is a scenario in which the plane could have safely dumped the fuel in the same area but the jet would have been so far up, the fuel would have dissipated before hitting the ground.