Los Angeles Times

Lead fight may expand

Lawmakers seek $16 million to clean contaminat­ed parkways

- By Tony Barboza

A long-overlooked source of lead contaminat­ion in neighborho­ods near a closed Vernon battery recycler could be cleaned under a push by state lawmakers to target the grassy strips between sidewalks and streets.

The publicly owned stretches of land, known as parkways, are not included in the state’s slow-moving cleanup of southeast Los Angeles County yards near the shuttered Exide Technologi­es facility.

But with a budget action approved by an Assembly committee Wednesday, state lawmakers seek to commit $16 million in funds for cleaning parkways. The money would come from existing fees on lead-acid car batteries like the ones that were melted down at the Exide plant.

If made law, it would raise the cost of the taxpayerfu­nded project to about $200 million but bring a more thorough cleanup to communitie­s that have long suffered from health-damaging lead contaminat­ion that spewed from the Vernon facility.

“It’s a small step in the larger fight to get our communitie­s cleaned up that have been neglected for now close to four decades on this issue,” said Assemblyma­n Miguel Santiago (D-Los Angeles).

The Department of Toxic Substances Control’s plan to clean the 2,500 worst contaminat­ed residentia­l parcels, schools, child care centers and parks in the zone of 10,000 properties near the facility has been criticized by community groups and health officials as piecemeal, leaving a checkerboa­rd-like pattern of safe and contaminat­ed land extending more than 1.7 miles from the closed plant.

A department spokeswoma­n said, “We are not able to comment on pending legislatio­n.” Previously, offi-

cials said they have conducted no soil testing of the parkways and will not be cleaning them.

Residents have pushed for more health-protective measures, including the remediatio­n of parkways, without which they fear dangerous levels of lead will remain in the soil next to homes. The state’s plan leaves those areas untouched, saying they pose lower health risks to children than adjacent yards.

Meanwhile, work on the project has been going so slowly that the $176.6 million lawmakers set aside two years ago to test and remediate the soil of thousands of properties is set to expire next month, with most of it unspent and fewer than 275 residentia­l properties and day-care facilities cleaned.

Under the proposal, lawmakers who have criticized the glacial pace of cleanup and other deficienci­es would also grant the request of Gov. Jerry Brown’s administra­tion to extend funding for the project by three years to 2021.

The money for parkway remediatio­n would come from the state’s new LeadAcid Battery Cleanup Fund, establishe­d through 2016 legislatio­n and earmarked for the investigat­ion and cleanup of sites contaminat­ed by battery recycling facilities, including the former Exide plant in Vernon.

The Brown administra­tion had sought to use money from that fund for other programs, including consumer product rules and enforcemen­t initiative­s unrelated to the cleanup of leadacid battery pollution. Last week that request encountere­d opposition from legislator­s who questioned whether the law allows battery cleanup funds to be used for those purposes.

Regulators’ stance on parkway cleanup has vexed residents such as Francisco Cruz, a truck driver whose family’s home on 53rd Street in Maywood was cleaned of lead-contaminat­ed soil in an earlier phase of the project.

More than three years later, he remains disappoint­ed it did not include parkways, which he mows and tends as if they were part of his yard.

“It’s ridiculous to think the other side isn’t contaminat­ed,” he said recently in Spanish, standing on the sidewalk and pointing to his yard on one side and the parkway on the other. “It’s still contaminat­ed.”

Jill Johnston, a professor of preventive medicine at USC, said her team took multiple soil samples from homes and typically found higher levels of lead in the surface soil of the parkways compared to the yards. Because of the proximity of those strips of land to vehicle traffic, they believe at least some of that pollution is a legacy of decades-old vehicle exhaust before lead was phased out of gasoline.

Department of Toxic Substances Control Director Barbara Lee told lawmakers recently that cleaning the parkways would increase the project’s price tag by 10% or more, writing in a letter Monday to Assemblywo­man Wendy Carrillo (D-Los Angeles) that it would cost an estimated $16 million to sample and clean parkways “associated with residentia­l areas prioritize­d for cleanup.”

At a budget hearing last week, Lee attributed the decision not to clean them to a “finite amount of resources” and a department analysis that showed a lower risk of lead exposure to children in those areas.

Limited funds would best be used cleaning play areas in yards “rather than the planted areas along the roadways, where young children don’t generally spend extensive amounts of time playing in the dirt,” Lee told lawmakers.

Los Angeles city and county officials were among those who had disputed the notion that parkways are not high risk. At one home where city officials worked recently, a child’s lead poisoning was traced to a dog that was tracking in contaminat­ed soil from a nearby parkway.

Though additional funds and other steps are needed to strengthen the project, including parkways would mean “a more thorough cleanup in the neighborho­ods,” said Jane Williams, who directs California Communitie­s Against Toxics.

State regulators have defended their approach as targeting areas where lead contaminat­ion poses the greatest risk. They blame cleanup delays on environmen­tal requiremen­ts, the large scope of the project and a major cleanup contract that fell through this year. They’ve pointed to a smaller contract, signed last month to clean 215 of the highest-risk properties, as evidence that the project is moving ahead.

Assembly members also said Wednesday that they would hold an oversight hearing in August to gauge progress on the Exide project.

“We are all understand­ably frustrated with cleanup delays,” Carrillo said, “but we must also ensure that the cleanup is comprehens­ive.”

 ?? Wally Skalij Los Angeles Times ?? HERLINDA SAVARINO is one of many whose yards near a closed Vernon battery recycler are tainted with lead. Legislator­s look to expand soil cleanups to also target the grassy strips between sidewalks and streets.
Wally Skalij Los Angeles Times HERLINDA SAVARINO is one of many whose yards near a closed Vernon battery recycler are tainted with lead. Legislator­s look to expand soil cleanups to also target the grassy strips between sidewalks and streets.
 ?? Photograph­s by Mel Melcon Los Angeles Times ?? AXEL VASQUEZ, left, and his brother Neymar play in the frontyard of their Boyle Heights home. It has elevated lead levels but is not slated for cleanup under the state’s slow-moving $176.6-million remediatio­n plan.
Photograph­s by Mel Melcon Los Angeles Times AXEL VASQUEZ, left, and his brother Neymar play in the frontyard of their Boyle Heights home. It has elevated lead levels but is not slated for cleanup under the state’s slow-moving $176.6-million remediatio­n plan.
 ??  ?? FRANCISCO CRUZ mows the parkway in front of his home in Maywood. His yard was cleaned of lead contaminat­ion a few years ago, but the parkway was not.
FRANCISCO CRUZ mows the parkway in front of his home in Maywood. His yard was cleaned of lead contaminat­ion a few years ago, but the parkway was not.

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