Chicago Sun-Times

EPA CHIEF SILENT ON CHICAGO OFFICE

Tours lead- contaminat­ed housing complex in Indiana as agency calls rumors about regional office ‘ pure speculatio­n’

- Staff Reporters BY STEFANO ESPOSITO AND SAM CHARLES

EAST CHICAGO, Ind. — The head of the Environmen­tal Protection Agency on Wednesday would not address rumors about whether Chicago’s regional office would be closed — even as the head of that office issued a memo calling the reports “pure speculatio­n.”

Scott Pruitt walked out of a news conference without taking questions after he and other elected officials discussed their visit to a Superfund cleanup site at a leadcontam­inated public- housing complex.

The visit comes amid reports that two regional offices, including the Region 5 office in Chicago, would be axed by President Donald Trump’s administra­tion — and office employees held a news conference to say they’ve already been cut to the bone.

Bob Kaplan, the acting director of the Region 5 office, sent a memo to employees criticizin­g stories about the office closing as “pure speculatio­n,” according to a memo given to the Chicago Sun- Times and other media outlets.

“These stories are not true, are pure speculatio­n, and undermine our ability to communicat­e with the public the real informatio­n we have,” Kaplan wrote in a memo sent to staff on Monday. “Some of you may be aware that EPA has discussed new ways to better integrate our efforts with the states, as well as eliminate excess office space, so that we can be more effective and save money. At this time, our discussion­s have not veered into the subject of an office closure. Anyone stating anything to the contrary is spreading false informatio­n.”

Pruitt toured the complex with Indiana officials, including Gov. Eric Holcomb and Sen. Todd Young, both Republican­s, as well as the local U. S. Rep. Pete Visclosky and U. S. Sen. Joe Donnelly, both Democrats.

Donnelly said continued funding for the cleanup and soil- testing efforts was assured by Pruitt.

“In terms of resources, administra­tor Pruitt made commitment­s, and made commitment­s that we would have it right,” Donnelly said. “I don’t want to put words in his mouth, but he said, ‘ Look, this is a multistep process that will be made right, and there’s a reason that I’m here first in the entire country.’ And so we take him at his word.”

“The real budget will provide the funds necessary to make sure East Chicago is right,” Donnelly added.

Visclosky emphasized that no budget has been finalized, and the EPA’s fate has not yet been sealed.

“It is up to Congress and the appropriat­ions committee to make sure that wise judgments are made to ensure that agencies such as EPA have the appropriat­e funds to meet their needs,” Visclosky said. “That is a process underway, so I would not jump to conclusion­s that there will not be adequate resources.”

Meanwhile, in Chicago, officials with the American Federation of Government Employees, along with U. S. Reps. Raja Krishnamoo­rthi and Jan Schakowsky, held a news conference to demand that Pruitt meet with office employees.

“We have a crisis — we have an agency that’s already been cut to the bare bone,” said John J. O’Grady, president of AFGE Council 238, the union that oversees all EPA unions nationwide.

O’Grady, talking to reporters at EPA’s Region 5 office downtown, said EPA had about 18,000 employees nationwide in 1999 and now has about 15,000. That’s before a proposed 31 percent budget cut, he said.

O’Grady, standing with Schakowsky and Krishnamoo­rthi, said such huge cuts would mean fewer EPA employees in the field to test water, air and soil — meaning less data and less ability to enforce existing laws.

“That means it’s open season for any company or corporatio­n wanting to dump,” O’Grady said. “We’ve been there. That’s why we have an EPA.”

Residents of the housing complex in Indiana were joined by environmen­tal activists as they pro- tested nearby before Pruitt arrived.

Chanting crowds weaved through streets of East Chicago. Some held signs that read “East Chicago Demands Clean Water.”

Roughly 1,000 people were ordered evacuated from the housing complex because of lead contaminat­ion. Evacuation­s began last summer. Officials say two dozen families remain at the 45- year- old complex, built on a site once occupied by a lead- products factory.

Eleven of the remaining families have found new homes and are in the process of moving, according to HUD. Thirteen other families are appealing their relocation offers from the city housing authority or have been given notice to move. Housing officials said their goal is to move out all families by May.

Resident Demetra Turner, 44, who left Chicago a decade ago for public housing in Indiana, said she was trying to find safe housing for the two children who live with her.

“We are truly in the fight of our lives,” she said.

Residents and the Natural Resources Defense Council are calling for more support and testing. The EPA workers union wants a separate meeting with Pruitt.

“We can’t drink the waters. The land we walk upon is contaminat­ed. And we air we breathe is contaminat­ed,” said Thomas Frank, a resident of the community of roughly 30,000 who lives near the Superfund site.

Pruitt has criticized the EPA for overreach, and Trump’s administra­tion has taken steps to roll back environmen­tal regulation­s. Also, Trump has proposed eliminatin­g EPA’s budget by nearly one- third.

 ?? | TERESA CRAWFORD/ AP ?? Eddis Marie Loving, of East Chicago, Indiana, holds a sign as supporters and residents rally near a public- housing complex ahead of the visit by EPA chief Scott Pruitt Wednesday.
| TERESA CRAWFORD/ AP Eddis Marie Loving, of East Chicago, Indiana, holds a sign as supporters and residents rally near a public- housing complex ahead of the visit by EPA chief Scott Pruitt Wednesday.
 ??  ?? On Wednesday, EPA Administra­tor Scott Pruitt ( at podium) assured residents and leaders of East Chicago, Indiana, that the agency would work to restore trust in the area’s water supply after lead was found in it last year.
| SAM CHARLES/ SUN- TIMES
On Wednesday, EPA Administra­tor Scott Pruitt ( at podium) assured residents and leaders of East Chicago, Indiana, that the agency would work to restore trust in the area’s water supply after lead was found in it last year. | SAM CHARLES/ SUN- TIMES
 ??  ?? MARY MITCHELL is on vacation
MARY MITCHELL is on vacation

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