Sun Sentinel Broward Edition

Full environmen­tal review ordered of plastics complex

- By Janet McConnaugh­ey

NEW ORLEANS — A civilian Pentagon official has ordered the Army Corps of Engineers to conduct a full environmen­tal assessment of a $9.4 billion Formosa Plastics complex planned in Louisiana, drawing praise from environmen­talists.

Jaime Pinkham, the Army’s acting assistant secretary for civil works, ordered the review Wednesday after a virtual meeting with opponents of a Corps wetlands permit that allowed Formosa Plastics Group member FG LA LLC to build 10 chemical plants and four other major facilities on the Mississipp­i River between Baton Rouge and New Orleans.

Critics praised the decision.

“The Army Corps has finally heard our pleas and understand­s our pain. With God’s help, Formosa Plastics will soon pull out of our community,” said a statement by Sharon Lavigne, who founded the local group Rise St. James to fight the planned complex announced in 2018.

Formosa, based in Taiwan, wants to produce polyethyle­ne, polypropyl­ene, polymer and ethylene glycol on 2,400 acres in St. James Parish. Dubbed The Sunshine Project because it’s near the Sunshine Bridge, the project is expected to provide 1,200 permanent jobs and up to 8,000 constructi­on jobs, the state has said.

The Corps issued a permit in September 2019 to let FG LA dredge and fill wetlands and create detention ponds in wetlands, according to a lawsuit by opponents. It said the site includes more than 900 acres of wetlands, of which nearly 62 acres of wetlands and nearly 50 acres of other waters would be permanentl­y affected.

It could take years to put together a full environmen­tal impact statement, Lavigne said in an interview.

She said she silently thanked God when Pinkham said he was planning the order.

“I had to touch myself to see if I’m real,” said Lavigne, who earlier this year was awarded a Goldman Environmen­tal

Prize honoring grassroots environmen­tal activism.

Within an hour, she said, Pinkham’s memo to the Corps’ commanding general was posted on his office’s Facebook and Twitter accounts.

Pinkham, who supervises and sets policy for the Corps’ civil works, wrote that he is committed to having the Army “be a leader in the federal government’s efforts to ensure thorough environmen­tal analysis and meaningful community outreach.”

The Corps needs “to thoroughly review areas of concern, particular­ly those with environmen­tal justice implicatio­ns,” Pinkham wrote.

Major constructi­on has been on hold since the Corps agreed in November to reconsider its permit for the plants in Welcome, where the Census Bureau estimates that nearly 97% of the 880 residents are Black.

Pinkham’s tweet and letter provide little detail about what procedures the Corps intends to use, said an emailed statement from FG LA.

 ?? GERALD HERBERT/AP ?? “The Army Corps has finally heard our pleas and understand­s our pain,” said Sharon Lavigne, second from left, who founded the local group Rise St. James.
GERALD HERBERT/AP “The Army Corps has finally heard our pleas and understand­s our pain,” said Sharon Lavigne, second from left, who founded the local group Rise St. James.

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