Los Angeles Times

Exide plant can be abandoned, court decides

Ruling angers residents and officials and leaves the state to clean site blamed for lead contaminat­ion.

- By Tony Barboza

A bankruptcy court ruled Friday that Exide Technologi­es may abandon its shuttered battery recycling plant in Vernon, leaving a massive cleanup of lead and other toxic pollutants at the site and in surroundin­g neighborho­ods to California taxpayers.

The decision by Chief Judge Christophe­r Sontchi of the U. S. Bankruptcy Court District of Delaware, made over the objections of California officials and community members, marks the latest chapter in a decadeslon­g history of government failures to protect the public from brain- damaging lead, cancer- causing arsenic and other pollutants from the facility.

The plan’s confirmati­on only deepens a fiasco that has subjected working- class Latino communitie­s across southeast Los Angeles County to chronic and dangerous levels of soil contaminat­ion and made the area a symbol of environmen­tal injustice.

Community groups have fought for years with the company and its environmen­tal regulators to restrict harmful pollution, shut down illegal operations and clean up the toxic mess. The property’s abandonmen­t compounds the challenges of addressing ongoing health risks to young children and others living nearby, where thousands of yards remain riddled with lead, a powerful neurotoxin with no safe level of exposure.

“I’m frustrated and enraged that Exide is getting away with this, but also by how our system is failing us again and again,” said Boyle Heights resident Idalmis Vaquero, who lives within the residentia­l cleanup zone surroundin­g the plant. “It’s infuriatin­g. Our federal government is allowing a toxic polluter to walk away, leaving the victims of this contaminat­ion to f igure out what to do next.”

The decision followed a two- day court hearing with testimony from environmen­tal regulators, company consultant­s and officers and

health experts, much of it about the threats to the environmen­t and the public from abandoning a hazardous facility with the remediatio­n unfinished. The recycling operation, located about f ive miles from downtown Los Angeles, has not been fully demolished and remains partially enclosed in a temporary, tent- like structure designed to prevent the release of lead and other toxic pollutants.

In his verbal ruling, Sontchi concluded it is not an imminent threat to the public.

“The entire property is not sort of a seething, glowing toxic lead situation,” Sontchi said.

“We have a very dangerous element that will cause long- term health effects” and takes time to accumulate, he said. “I don’t think any of that indicates there’s an imminent, immediate harm to the general public if this property is abandoned.”

State officials blame decades of air pollution from the plant, which melted down used car batteries until its closure f ive years ago, for spreading lead dust across half a dozen communitie­s, including Boyle Heights, East Los Angeles, Commerce and Maywood. The area has more than 100,000 residents.

A state- led cleanup has so far removed contaminat­ed soil from 2,000 residentia­l properties, as well as as well as parks, day- care facilities and schools. But thousands more have yet to be cleaned in the largest remediatio­n project of its kind in California.

The Trump administra­tion, through the U. S. Department of Justice and the Environmen­tal Protection Agency, supported Exide’s plan, which also leaves behind toxic sites in several other states. Those sites too remain a threat to public health and the environmen­t.

The Justice Department said it received more than 1,000 written public comments in opposition to the proposal, which was released three weeks ago and provided the public eight business days to weigh in. More than 650 people called in to a five- hour public hearing Tuesday, with 125 people giving oral testimony that was “universall­y and strenuousl­y and sometimes emotionall­y opposed to approval,” according to a Justice Department filing.

Community outrage did nothing to change the position of the Justice Department, which urged approval of the plan in a court document a day later.

Gov. Gavin Newsom issued a statement condemning the court’s decision, which he said would allow Exide to “evade responsibi­lity for poisoning the homes, playground­s and backyards” surroundin­g its facility.

“I am outraged that the federal bankruptcy court let Exide and its creditors off the hook today and decided that lead exposure does not pose an imminent or immediate harm to the public,” Newsom said. “That is wrong, it ignores decades of scientific evidence, and it is a dangerous decision that we absolutely intend to appeal.”

California refused to sign on to the settlement, in which the state would receive $ 2.6 million in exchange for a release from liability. The state has already set aside more than $ 270 mil

lion toward cleaning thousands of homes surroundin­g the facility with elevated levels of lead in the soil.

If California had agreed to the plan, the Vernon property would have been placed into an environmen­tal response trust charged with cleaning the site. Instead, the company moved forward with a “nonconsens­ual” plan that would impose a release of liability and abandon the property.

Sontchi’s ruling, however, required that California be allowed to file an administra­tive claim. Under the decision, the property may be abandoned on Oct. 30, giving the state two weeks to take over the site.

“If they’re unable to transfer this property in the next two weeks, it’s because of their own bureaucrac­y or their own inability to act,” Sontchi said.

Local elected officials were incensed by the ruling.

“This blatant disregard for the community by Exide, the DOJ and the judge is just another reminder that if you’re brown and poor, you’re disposable,” Assemblywo­man Cristina Garcia ( D- Bell Gardens) said in a statement.

“Today we have witnessed another disturbing injustice,” State Assemblyma­n Miguel Santiago ( DLos Angeles) said in a statement. “We will fight this horrific decision and stop the harm that is being done to our communitie­s.”

The facility, which sits on a 15- acre site, remains halfdemoli­shed and partially covered in white plastic sheeting, scaffoldin­g, and a negative- pressure system designed to prevent the release of lead, arsenic and other hazardous pollutants.

The enclosure requires daily maintenanc­e to prevent tears, according to the state Department of Toxic Substances Control. Earlier this week the department issued a document saying the Vernon site may pose an “imminent and substantia­l endangerme­nt to the public health or welfare or to the environmen­t,” which officials called a protective measure to give it more power to take steps needed to protect the community from the release of pollution if the site is abandoned.

In a court f iling earlier earlier this month in support of abandoning the plant, Exide Chief Restructur­ing Officer Roy Messing said the site is “of inconseque­ntial value and burdensome” because if not sold or abandoned, it would require “significan­t expenditur­es in connection with ongoing decommissi­oning and remediatio­n obligation­s ... which would deplete the estate’s limited resources while providing no benefit to the estate or its constituen­ts.”

Messing said in the declaratio­n f iled with the court that Exide spent more than $ 75 million closing the facil

ity and complying with state Department of Toxic Substances Control requiremen­ts since 2017 and is currently spending about $ 750,000 a month to “maintain and secure” the facility.

During the two- day hearing, lawyers for Exide, California and U. S. government sparred over the condition of the site and who would keep the electricit­y on, pay the contractor­s maintainin­g the enclosure around the facility and keep air quality monitors on the facility’s perimeter up and running if it were abandoned.

Peter Friedman, an attorney representi­ng the state Department of Toxic Substances Control, said that Exide was foisting responsibi­lity for the cleanup onto California taxpayers and state regulators. He said that “fugitive dust would be free to migrate off site and families living near the Vernon site could not count on being safe, if current safeguards were removed.”

Attorneys for Exide suggested the Department of Toxic Substances Control could use the $ 26.4 million the company was required to set aside to keep the tent intact and prevent pollutants from getting out. Toxic Substance Control officials said that doing so would burn through the money quickly just maintainin­g the enclosure, and that all told, it will cost $ 72 million to make the site safe.

Exide’s attorneys argued that the company would soon cease to exist and simply no longer has the money to pay for the cleanup, and that the facility would pose no imminent health threat because the enclosure surroundin­g it remains intact. They also pointed f ingers back at the Department of Toxic Substances Control for being slow to act on the health risks at the site and for issuing a determinat­ion that it posed an imminent threat only three days before the hearing to approve the bankruptcy plan.

Judge Sontchi asked California’s attorney “how much can the government sit back and not take action to remediate … and then say abandonmen­t is not appropriat­e because it’s an immediate, imminent, threat.”

At one point during the hearing, Sontchi questioned how exposure to a dangerous element like lead that builds up in the body over time “somehow qualifies as imminent danger when everywhere you go in your life you’re exposed to lead. We all have lead in our bodies. That’s reality.”

Young children are particular­ly vulnerable to lead because their brains are still developing, and they can suffer lifelong harm, including lower IQs, learning difficulti­es and behavioral problems, from even low levels of exposure to contaminat­ed soil and dust, Dr. Gina Solomon, a UC San Francisco professor of medicine and researcher at the Public Health Institute, testified during Thursday’s hearing.

The Department of Justice, for its part, said abandonmen­t was a “last resort” and sought to blame the outcome on California’s refusal to approve the settlement, which was signed by other states where Exide leadsmelti­ng operations have left behind contaminat­ion, including Indiana, Texas and Pennsylvan­ia.

California regulators let the facility in Vernon operate with only a temporary permit for more than three decades despite repeated violations of air pollution limits and hazardous waste rules. The plant shut down permanentl­y in 2015 under a deal between Georgia- based Exide and the U. S. attorney’s office for the Central District of California. The company, which at the time was undergoing a previous bankruptcy reorganiza­tion, admitted to years of environmen­tal crimes but avoided prosecutio­n by agreeing to close and demolish the plant and clean up the pollution.

Exide began working to close and clean the site in 2017, but stopped in March, citing the COVID- 19 pandemic. The company f iled for bankruptcy protection again in May with plans to liquidate its assets.

California regulators have said for years they were building a case and would go after the company and any other responsibl­e parties to recoup funds for the cleanup. But there will no longer be an Exide to pursue.

There are some existing funding sources that could help sustain the project, including a cleanup fund establishe­d in 2016 using fees on lead- acid car batteries like the ones recycled at the Exide plant.

Mark Lopez, co- director of the group East Yard Communitie­s for Environmen­tal Justice, said the community pushed for that fee as a safeguard because they knew that the company was likely to use bankruptcy to avoid its cleanup obligation­s.

“We knew we couldn’t rely on Exide because the legal tools available advantage them and not us,” said Lopez, who lives in East Los Angeles. “It’s a gut punch, and another strike against us. And just because it was anticipate­d doesn’t make it hurt any less.”

Environmen­talists and community groups have long said a real solution requires comprehens­ive overhaul of the state Department of Toxic Substances Control, which has a history of slow response to urgent health threats and poor oversight of hazardous waste facilities. Newsom last month vetoed legislatio­n to reform the department.

Jane Williams, who directs the group California Communitie­s Against Toxics, said there are dozens of other hazardous waste facilities in California that the Department of Toxic Substances Control has not required to set aside adequate funds for cleanup, and several other sites where lead smelters may have operated in the past.

“This is going to repeat itself over and over again,” she said. “Exide is just the point of the arrow.”

UCLA law professor Lynn LoPucki, who directs a database of big bankruptcy cases, said California lawmakers are ultimately to blame for the state having “basically no legal rights” to recoup funds for the cleanup through the bankruptcy.

That’s because California law puts environmen­tal obligation­s behind a host of secured creditors, he said. That’s in contrast to a growing number of states, including New York, New Jersey and Michigan, that have adopted laws that give f irst priority to environmen­tal liens for the cleanup of hazardous waste.

“If that were true here, then Exide would pay for the cleanup and the creditors would get what was left,” LoPucki said. ” There would just be an understand­ing that if you mess it up you have to pay to clean it up.”

The state Legislatur­e cannot f ix the current predicamen­t with Exide, he said. “But they can prevent this from happening in the next case. And they’re not doing that.”

 ?? Photog r aphs by Al Seib Los Angeles Times ?? THE EXIDE battery recycling operation has not been fully demolished and remains partially enclosed in a temporary, tent- like structure designed to prevent the release of lead and other toxic pollutants.
Photog r aphs by Al Seib Los Angeles Times THE EXIDE battery recycling operation has not been fully demolished and remains partially enclosed in a temporary, tent- like structure designed to prevent the release of lead and other toxic pollutants.
 ??  ?? JOE GONZALEZ of Boyle Heights was among those who spoke out against the plan to abandon the plant. He holds the wrist bands from his cancer treatments.
JOE GONZALEZ of Boyle Heights was among those who spoke out against the plan to abandon the plant. He holds the wrist bands from his cancer treatments.

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