Chicago Sun-Times

TOXIC LEAK INTO LAKE MICHIGAN SHOULD NOT HAVE BEEN A SECRET

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It’s a new day for the environmen­t, and not in a hopeful sense.

A steel company’s request to Indiana authoritie­s for “confidenti­al treatment” when it dumped toxic metal into Lake Michigan last month is a worrisome sign that under the Trump administra­tion, we will be told less and less about threats to our environmen­t.

Everyone, from environmen­tal activists to ordinary Chicagoans who care about the safety of their drinking water, had better become much more vigilant.

The request came from U. S. Steel in an Oct. 31 letter to the Indiana Department of Environmen­tal Management after chromium leaked on Oct. 25 from a company facility on the shore of Lake Michigan. Just six months earlier, a similar leak from the same plant fouled a river tributary that feeds into the lake.

The request for secrecy— to keep you in the dark— apparently worked. A Chicago Tribune review of online press releases shows that neither state officials nor the U. S. Environmen­tal Protection Agency informed the public about the potentiall­y hazardous leak.

The critical importance of leveling with the public in such matters also is illustrate­d by a new Better Government Associatio­n review and Associated Press investigat­ive report of leaks from local nuclear power plants. The BGA and AP learned that radioactiv­e material continues to leak from Exelon’s Illinois nuclear power plants. The leaks were properly reported, but we now are confronted by an EPA boss, Scott Pruitt, who takes a skeptical view of environmen­t protection­s. We have less confidence that Pruitt’s EPA will partner with the public, and not with the despoilers of the environmen­t, when such leaks occur.

According to the BGA report, radioactiv­e waste continues to leak from the nuclear power plants more than a decade after chronic leaks led to a $ 1.2 million government settlement and the company promised to guard against future accidents. Exelon says the amounts were too little to be a health risk, but the leaks remind us our air and water can quickly become tainted to the point of hazard. We need both industry and authoritie­s to be in the vanguard of protecting the environmen­t.

Clearly, we all deserve to know promptly whenever there is a leak of toxic industrial substances that could endanger public health. In the case of U. S. Steel’s recent leak of chromium, the Halloween Day letter surfaced only because it was seen by law students from the University of Chicago who were tracking pollution violations. If data about the leak had been released promptly, independen­t scientists could have assessed it and made recommenda­tions. That is how the public is protected.

Why didn’t U. S. Steel or the Indiana Department of Environmen­tal Management, an agency considered lax by environmen­talists, inform the public? Why didn’t U. S. Steel report the leak to the National Response Center, which keeps local officials posted about spills and leaks? Embarrassm­ent is not a sufficient reason for secrecy.

Howard A. Learner, president and executive director of the Environmen­tal Law & Policy Center, said the handling of the U. S. Steel leak is a sign that the EPA under Pruitt is signaling to companies that it is indifferen­t to such environmen­tal threats.

“The message coming from Pruitt is to lay off industry,” Learner said. “The EPA is supposed to play the role of watchdog, or the cop on the block, that leads people to be more careful.”

We pay for cops to deter crime in our city, and we pay federal inspectors and scientists to keep monitoring spills and leaks that might endanger our health.

When it comes to our environmen­t, the Trump administra­tion is sending ominous signals.

Exelon says the amounts were too little to be a health risk, but the leaks remind us our air and water can quickly become tainted to the point of hazard. We need both industry and authoritie­s to be in the vanguard of protecting the environmen­t.

 ?? | SUN- TIMES LIBRARY ?? Beaches near Portage, Indiana, were closed last spring after a hazardous chemical leaked into Lake Michigan.
| SUN- TIMES LIBRARY Beaches near Portage, Indiana, were closed last spring after a hazardous chemical leaked into Lake Michigan.

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