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Healthy Communities News
For Immediate Release:
2005-12-01
For More Information:
Contact David Masur (215) 732-5897 Proposed Bush Administration Toxics Rule Lets Polluters Off the HookPHILADELPHIA– A new PennEnvironment analysis of a proposed Bush Administration rule reveals that residents of Pennsylvania would lose valuable information about the amounts and type of harmful chemicals discharged by industrial facilities in their neighborhoods if the rule is finalized. Environmental Protection Agency Administrator Stephen Johnson proposed changes to the Toxics Release Inventory Program (TRI) in October 2005 that would significantly decrease the information that the public and state and local officials have about harmful chemicals released into Pennsylvania’s water, air, and land. “On the anniversary of the deadliest chemical accident in history in Bhopal, India, Administrator Johnson wants to help corporate polluters hide toxic pollution,” stated David Masur, PennEnvironment Director. “The Bush Administration’s proposal puts corporations first and communities last.” In Pennsylvania, the local impact could be widespread. Analysis of the 2003 Toxics Release Inventory by Grassroots Connections and the National Environmental Trust showed that: 216 facilities would no longer be required to report toxic chemical releases to the public; this is the fourth highest number of facilities no longer required to report under the TRI in the nation, following California (297), Ohio (261), and Texas (217). Pennsylvania would lose all information about releases, transfers, and disposal of chloroethene, which is a known carcinogen. Specific communities in Pennsylvania will be most affected. Communities in fifty-one Pennsylvania zip codes will lose all the pollution information about chemical releases in their neighborhoods. In October 2005, EPA Administrator Johnson proposed to cut the amount of pollution information that companies are required to disclose. These changes to the Toxics Release Inventory (TRI) would be three-fold: -
A rule to propose that companies be allowed to release ten times as
much pollution before they are required to report their releases; The TRI program is a pollution disclosure program. Since 1987, companies have been required to report toxic releases to air, land, and water, as well as toxic waste that is treated, burned, recycled, or disposed of. Approximately 26,000 industrial facilities report information about any of the 650 chemicals in the program. “Pennsylvanians deserve the right to know about toxic chemicals released by facilities in their own backyards,” said Joseph Otis Minott, Esq., Executive Director of Clean Air Council, a statewide environmental group. “Many of these chemicals are known to cause cancer, birth defects and other serious health problems. There is no reason why companies working with dangerous toxins cannot account for their usage in a timely, accurate and complete manner.” The TRI program was established in 1986, following a devastating chemical accident in Bhopal, India. December 4th marks the twenty-sixth anniversary of this accident, where thousands of people immediately lost their lives from exposure to chemicals, and tens of thousands have since died from continued contamination. Soon thereafter, Congress passed and President Reagan signed the Emergency Planning and Community Right-to-Know Act, which established the Toxics Release Inventory. “The TRI has been an important tool for residents in industrial areas to empower themselves and stand up against polluters who threaten their health and quality of life,” said Eric Wilden, Eastern Pennsylvania Director for Clean Water Action, a national environmental organization. “The proposed rule changes would make it more difficult than it already is for communities around the state to hold polluters accountable for the health problems they cause. Anyone who is concerned about environmental justice and their right to know what’s in their air and water should contact their elected officials and urge them to oppose these changes.” The Toxics Release Inventory has been credited with a wide range of successes. Since the TRI program began, disposals or releases of the original 299 chemicals tracked have dropped nearly 60 percent. A PennEnvironment Research and Policy Center analysis showed that releases of chemicals linked to health effects have decreased as well. Between 1995 and 2000, releases to air and water of chemicals known to cause cancer declined by 41 percent. EPA’s own research has shown that the public, companies, governments, academics, and investment groups have all used the TRI program. A May 2003 report by EPA highlighted twenty different state governments that use the TRI program for environmental targeting, risk assessments, regulations, legislation, quality assurance and control, and other uses “The TRI program has proved that requiring polluters to report their pollution creates an incentive for these facilities to reduce their pollution,” said Masur. “But the Bush administration wants to take this spotlight off polluters and leave the public and our communities in the dark about pollution in our state.”
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