Los Angeles Times

Exide’s latest bid to avoid liability

Bankruptcy laws are stacked in favor of corporate polluters, and the people of California will pay the price.

- By Jared Blumenfeld and Meredith Williams

For decades, the negligent operators of Exide Technologi­es, a battery recycling facility, emitted lead, arsenic and other toxic contaminan­ts into people’s homes, communitie­s and the environmen­t.

Hundreds of millions of dollars, much of it fronted by taxpayers, has been spent on cleanup so far, and the extent of the toxic devastatio­n caused by the company still isn’t fully known. Yet Exide is asking for — and may well receive — permission to walk away from all future liability.

Ever since the contaminat­ion was discovered, Exide has worked to evade its full responsibi­lity to California­ns. The company failed to comply with environmen­tal regulation­s, then largely escaped liability for its actions by hiding behind a 2015 non- prosecutio­n agreement it entered into with the federal Department of Justice. It failed to complete a court- ordered study to determine the extent of its pollution. And now it is attempting to use the bankruptcy process to abandon the Vernon facility completely.

California is facing an uphill battle to prevent Exide’s latest move, because bankruptcy laws are firmly stacked in favor of corporate polluters. And the federal DOJ has made clear it intends to sit by and allow Exide to abandon its toxic Vernon facility.

If this happens, the affected communitie­s around the plant will have been harmed once by Exide, then again by federal bankruptcy laws

If Exide is allowed to abandon the site, this highly contaminat­ed property will be left with no owner capable of securing the site and continuing to clean it up. If not properly managed, the shuttered facility could release lead dust into surroundin­g neighborho­ods. Effectivel­y, the site would be left in a toxic purgatory, making it difficult to sell and difficult to clean up.

For generation­s, children who grew up playing in yards poisoned by Exide in Bell, Vernon, East Los Angeles, Maywood, Huntington Park, Boyle Heights and Commerce were exposed to levels of lead and arsenic that have the potential to seriously affect cognitive functionin­g. And these workingcla­ss communitie­s continue to bear the brunt of Exide’s pollution.

In a year when the country is examining systemic racism and the injustices it produces, Exide’s callous poisoning of its neighbors needs to be recognized for what it is: a prime example of the environmen­tal injustice regularly visited on poor neighborho­ods and communitie­s of color.

It is unconscion­able that Exide is attempting to abandon this toxic site and its obligation to clean it up, especially during a health crisis. It is even worse that the U. S. Department of Justice is amenable to the plan. We share the outrage of the community and all those seeking justice and accountabi­lity against corporate polluters like Exide that use bankruptcy to shirk their environmen­tal obligation­s.

To date, California taxpayers have had to contribute more than $ 270 million to clean up the contaminat­ion caused by Exide in and around the company’s Vernon facility. We have cleaned up 2,000 residentia­l properties and are working to remediate a total of up to 3,200 properties with current funding.

California will not tolerate Exide’s manipulati­on of the legal system. We remain committed to our mission to protect California­ns and the environmen­t from toxic harm. We vehemently oppose a settlement that could orphan a poisoned property and jeopardize the future cleanup of the site.

We have one last chance to prevent this: demanding that the federal DOJ oppose abandonmen­t. Comments on the proposed settlement are being accepted through Oct. 6, and anyone can weigh in.

A copy of the settlement agreement and instructio­ns for how to comment can be found at https:// dtsc. ca. gov/ exide- bankruptcy/

Jared Blumenfeld is secretary for the California Environmen­tal Protection Agency. Meredith

Williams is director of California’s Department of Toxic Substances Control.

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