Add The California Post on Google A Garden Grove City Council meeting turned into a fiery showdown Tuesday night over a chemical tank emergency at GKN Aerospace that forced the evacuation of 50,000 Orange County residents over Memorial Day weekend and sparked growing calls to shut the facility down.
The special hearing drew hours of testimony and heated accusations as residents demanded accountability, full compensation, and long-term medical coverage after an overheating chemical tank at the aerospace plant triggered the mass evacuation and cleanup operation.
At the center of the dispute is a $3 million contribution from GKN Aerospace to the OC Community Resilience Fund, a disaster-relief partnership run by the Orange County United Way and 211OC.
The program increased direct aid from $250 to $500 per address, but residents argued it falls far short of covering the damage and disruption.
Public comment quickly turned explosive, with multiple speakers demanding the plant be shut down entirely.
One resident held up a cot and blanket during testimony, using them to illustrate evacuation conditions.
“A $3 million donation is a drop in the bucket,” said Orange County resident Dalal, who also demanded the county shut down GKN and accused the company of funding genocide in the Middle East.
UC Irvine PhD candidate Zuri Rashad told the council the impact was severe and widespread, stating: “The damage to the air and the potential for a catastrophic explosion required the mandatory evacuation of 50,000 citizens both inside and out of Garden Grove, which disrupted the livelihoods of community members that pay taxes to the city,” she said.
“Even the present clean up process is a financial burden, as the city does not have anyone willing to accept the toxic waste.”She called for the company to pay for evacuation losses, long-term healthcare costs, and remove the facility entirely, repeating the same statement later in the meeting.
GKN Aerospace pushed back hard, stressing its economic role in the region. Senior Vice President of Programs Steve Carlin said: “Over 500 people work in that plant, the majority of which live in Garden Grove and the surrounding communities,” adding, “The plant and the city of Garden Grove have grown up and prospered together.”
He also highlighted the facility’s importance to aerospace manufacturing, saying: “When a window is needed on an airplane or spacecraft, that industry goes to Garden Grove.”
City officials signaled accountability but stopped short of backing closure.
Mayor Stephanie Klopfenstein said: “GKN must be held accountable and I will not stop until everyone that has been impacted by this incident is made whole.”
Councilwoman Yesenia Muñeton has also pushed for zoning reviews and possible future facility bans, moves supporters say are about safety while critics warn they could deal a serious blow to jobs and industry in the area.