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Locate a Toxic Waste Site Near You!

Discussion in 'BBS Hangout' started by Jeff, Apr 23, 2002.

  1. Jeff

    Jeff Clutch Crew

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  2. Jeff

    Jeff Clutch Crew

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    Note that one of the sites near Hobby Airport (Geneva Industries/Furhman Energy) was a $20 million clean up just up to 1998. I remember the Mayor's environmental expert discussing this during the campaign last year saying that it was one of the largest "brownfield" clean-ups in the US and that the cost would run, all-in-all, near $100 million.

    Most of these companies dump and run or dump and go out of business meaning the taxpayers have to foot the bill for clean up. Mmmmmm...PCB's.

    Isn't one of the first things we learn as children to clean up after ourselves???

    :mad:
     
  3. BobFinn*

    BobFinn* Member

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    One of these sites (Lackawanna) is near me. I know families that live within a mile of it (and there are 9,000 that do). While visiting a couple of years ago in the summer, the stench was unbelievable.


    Oh yeah, and the rate of cancer in that area is the highest (per capita) in the country, if not the world.
     
  4. right1

    right1 Member

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    I think Texas produces more toxic waste than any other state. I don't know where it all goes? Galveston Bay? Buffalo Bayou? The air? I guess the solid stuff goes in the ground somewhere? I wonder how much garbage that Houston alone produces in one week? One trash pick-up. Mucha basura and a lot of toxic black smoke from those trash trucks, too. Industry produces a lot more, plus more toxic things related to petrochemical production and such.
    I remember the trash dumps outside Mexico City. If you pass by on a bus, you can see the dump stretches for miles and miles. People are building homes out of garbage and small children are searching through the waste. It's like this in a lot of places around the world. It's pretty bad to pollute a huge hole in the ground with plastic and aluminum. Poisoning the water and the air are ( I was going to say worse, but that's not right) bad, too. I guess it's all connected. I mean, it all leaks into our groundwater anyway, right?
    Every person has a hand in this problem. There are a lot of choices we get to make everyday. I still see so many people throwing trash out their car window. It happens all the time, everywhere. Cigarette butts, beer cans, fast food wrappers, everything. It's disrespectful to the children.
    As for the industrial pollution, I think we can clean it up if people in power (that's us) make the right decisions. In 100 years I can't imagine we'll be making so much pollution by using oil for energy. Hopefully, we won't bemaking nuclear waste either.
    Oh, and can anyone tell me where the large landfills for Houston are or any info. on that? And, also, does anyoone know what ever became of the contanimated load of anthrax from D.C. and New York that was supposed to be brought down to Port Arthur, Tx. for disposal? Any information on that would be great! Thanks.
     
  5. Jeff

    Jeff Clutch Crew

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    You think we're bad? Check the listings for New Jersey.
     
  6. right1

    right1 Member

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    From what I've heard New Jersey has a lot of garbage, but I still think Texas produces more toxic waste than California or any other state. It's pretty bad everywhere really? Oil conglomerates are everywhere, industry is everywhere, people are everywhere. Pollution is everywhere.
     
  7. BobFinn*

    BobFinn* Member

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    Pennsylvania has the largest rural population and the 2nd highest elderly population out of any state. In a measure of community "rootedness" (defined as one family living in the same house for at least 30 years), Pennsylvania has some of the most "rooted" communities in the United States. These demographic factors cause the state to be heavily targeted for waste facilities.

    Pennsylvania has the 2nd largest number of Superfund toxic waste dumps next to New Jersey.

    Pennsylvania is #1 in toxic discharges to surface water, #2 in toxic air emissions from coal mining/processing, #3 in toxic air emissions from coal & oil electric utilities, and #4 in toxic chemicals releases from manufacturing facilities.



    :(
     
  8. BobFinn*

    BobFinn* Member

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    Earth Day Report Documents Sweeping Rollback of Environmental Protections by Federal Agencies

    Major Polluters Given Carte Blanche in Washington
    WASHINGTON (April 22, 2002) -- Under the Bush administration, federal agencies have quietly launched the worst attack on key environmental safeguards in modern history, according to a report released today by NRDC (Natural Resources Defense Council). The agency rollbacks span the spectrum of the nation's most important environmental programs, including those protecting the nation's air, water, forests, wildlife, and public lands.

    In its report, NRDC documents more than 90 environmental assaults at six federal agencies, noting that the attack on environmental protections intensified after September 11, when public attention was diverted by the war on terrorism.

    "It is now painfully clear that this is the most anti-environmental presidential administration ever," commented Gregory Wetstone, NRDC's director of advocacy. "There is no mistaking the trend. On issue after issue, federal agencies have been promoting the agenda of corporate polluters at the expense of our clean air, clean water, protected lands and forests, and even our planet's climate."

    The NRDC report, Rewriting the Rules: The Bush Administration's Assault on the Environment, provides a detailed review of more than 30 recent or continuing federal agency actions, along with an appendix of more than 90 environmentally destructive actions since January 2001. The report also details the White House Office of Management and Budget's efforts to weaken environmental safeguards by twisting the regulatory process to benefit industry at the expense of public health and the environment.

    Some of the most glaring examples documented in the report include:

    A pending Environmental Protection Agency proposal that would undermine the fundamental Clean Air Act requirement directing older power plants, refineries and other major air pollution sources to install state-of-the-art cleanup equipment when they expand or modernize their facilities.


    A recent Army Corps of Engineers proposal that would reverse the "no net loss" of wetlands policy issued under the first Bush Administration, which has been the cornerstone of America's approach to wetlands preservation for more than a decade.


    Bush administration's efforts to shift Superfund hazardous waste clean up costs from polluters to taxpayers, dramatically slowing the pace of clean ups.


    An Interior Department rulemaking that undermines the minimal environmental safeguards for private mining company operations on public lands, and renounces the agency's own authority to deny an operating permit to a mine causing "irreparable harm" to the environment.


    White House intervention to block a key EPA program to stem the discharge of raw sewage into America's waters.
    The report also documents efforts to promote clear-cutting in pristine national forests, roll back safeguards for storing nuclear waste, weaken controls on untreated livestock waste from factory farms, and undermine protections for national parks and national monuments.

    "The Bush Administration actions to subvert the vital federal rules that translate environmental laws into specific requirements for industry poses the gravest challenge ever to our landmark environmental laws," concluded Wetstone.

    The Natural Resources Defense Council is a national, non-profit organization of scientists, lawyers and environmental specialists dedicated to protecting public health and the environment. Founded in 1970, NRDC has more than 500,000 members nationwide, served from offices in New York, Washington, Los Angeles and San Francisco.

    http://www.nrdc.org/media/pressreleases/020422.asp
     

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