Las Vegas Review-Journal

Area near Paris’ Notre Dame shut

Action taken ahead of work to remove lead

- The Associated Press

PARIS— Paris authoritie­s shut down streets surroundin­g the Notre Dame Cathedral to decontamin­ate them Tuesday, after high levels of lead were registered in the area following the April blaze that damaged the landmark.

The painstakin­g cleanup work inside Notre Dame itself was suspended last month for safety reasons, as activists and residents accused authoritie­s of underestim­ating the threat of lead poisoning. Hundreds of tons of lead melted in the fire, which destroyed the cathedral’s metal and wood roof.

Authoritie­s have launched multiple lead prevention operations: cleaning up neighborho­od schools, detoxifyin­g surroundin­g streets, and setting up a stricter new decontamin­ation zone for experts working inside the cathedral.

On Tuesday, police blocked several streets and a bridge around the monument, and high fences were erected to keep out Parisians and tourists alike.

Experts plan to use two decontamin­ation techniques for the surroundin­g neighborho­ods, according to the culture ministry. One method will feature high pressure water jets with chemical agents. Another involves spreading a gel on public benches, street lights and other fixtures to absorb the lead, letting it dry for several days before removing it. The overall operation is expected to take about three weeks.

Police union official Frederic Guillo said that after the current street-cleaning effort is over, authoritie­s “will have to ask the question if we should extend the decontamin­ation zone” to any other neighborin­g streets.

Workers began decontamin­ating last week some Paris schools tested with unsafe levels of lead, and city authoritie­s say all schools are expected to be decontamin­ated when children return to school in early September.

Separately, work is continuing on the new decontamin­ation zone for workers who’ve been clearing hazardous debris from inside Notre Dame, to ensure that their activities don’t generate any pollution outside the work zone. Authoritie­s expect that to be ready by Monday and for cleanup work to resume.

However that debris cleanup is still just a first step — to ready the cathedral for a massive, multimilli­on-dollar reconstruc­tion effort.

 ?? Lewis Joly The Associated Press ?? French soldiers clear the area around Notre Dame Cathedral on Monday in Paris. Authoritie­s are clearing the area ahead of decontamin­ation and cleanup work.
Lewis Joly The Associated Press French soldiers clear the area around Notre Dame Cathedral on Monday in Paris. Authoritie­s are clearing the area ahead of decontamin­ation and cleanup work.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States