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Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsEPA Has Finally Opened Civil Rights Investigations Over Pollution in "Cancer Alley"
https://www.motherjones.com/politics/2022/04/epa-has-finally-opened-civil-rights-investigations-over-pollution-in-cancer-alley/April 18, 2022
EPA Has Finally Opened Civil Rights Investigations Over Pollution in Cancer Alley
It is so obvious whats happening is discriminatory.
Oliver Laughland
This story was originally published by the Guardian and is reproduced here as part of the Climate Desk collaboration.
snip//
The civil rights inquiries will investigate Louisianas environment department (LDEQ) over a series of permits approved in both St. John parish and St. James parish and elsewhere in the region, where chronic air pollution in majority Black communities has led to a wave of activism and international attention.
One investigation, targeted at the states health department, will examine whether the department violated the rights of Black residents and schoolchildren living near a neoprene facility in St. John by allegedly failing in its duty to provide parish residents with necessary information about health threats, and whether the department failed to make recommendations to community members and local government over how to reduce exposure to pollution.
The neoprene facility, operated by the Japanese chemicals firm Denka, is the only location in America to emit the pollutant chloroprene, listed by the EPA as a likely human carcinogen. Residential locations around the site, including an elementary school near the plants fence line, often record levels of chloroprene well above the EPAs lifetime exposure guidance levels.
The investigations will also examine permits related to a proposed gargantuan plastics site in the neighboring parish of St James, operated by the Taiwanese company Formosa, permitted to emit up to 15,400 lbs of the cancer-causing chemical ethylene oxide. That project has been placed on hold during a federal government review.
snip//
Recent studies have pointed to elevated cancer diagnoses in areas around the plant, and EPA data points to a cancer risk rate 50 times the national average in census tracts near the plant.
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EPA Has Finally Opened Civil Rights Investigations Over Pollution in "Cancer Alley" (Original Post)
babylonsister
Apr 2022
OP
Response to babylonsister (Original post)
Chin music This message was self-deleted by its author.
BeckyDem
(8,361 posts)2. 50 times the national average.
Why are we always harming ourselves?
Strelnikov_
(8,116 posts)3. Because it maximizes profit for our Oligarchs n/t
BeckyDem
(8,361 posts)4. Sad but all too true.
It seems we are always fighting to curb pollution/poisoning but it just continues to creep in.