The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Residents unsatisfie­d by state assurances on toxic emissions

Foes want plant shut till independen­t air testing can be done.

- By Meris Lutz mlutz@ajc.com

State regulators sought to assure lawmakers they were taking seriously concerns over toxic emissions from several industrial facilities in Georgia during a conference call Friday as angry residents demanded immediate action.

“Dirty air, they don’t care!” about a dozen protesters chanted at the intersecti­on of Plant Atkinson Road and Atlanta Road in Smyrna. Behind them sat the nondescrip­t brick building belonging to Sterigenic­s, a medical sterilizat­ion plant they want shuttered until independen­t air testing can be conducted.

“We’re here today to let our neighbors know what they can do to get involved and to also demand from our government leaders that they close this plant down,” said Bridget Kurt, who lives about a mile from the facility. She was wearing an orange “Stop Sterigenic­s” shirt and carrying a sign with the same message.

Meanwhile, on the conference call, Richard Dunn, director of the Environmen­tal Protection Division, sidesteppe­d a question from Rep. David Wilkerson, D-Powder Springs, about whether the state could issue stricter rules for the chemical in question, ethylene oxide, a carcinogen.

“The change would come from U.S. EPA,” Dunn said, referring to the federal Environmen­tal Protection Agency.

State environmen­tal regulators can and do take action separately from the federal government.

In Illinois, the state closed a Sterigenic­s plant in Willowbroo­k after air testing showed alarming levels of the toxic chemical. A follow up study by the Illinois Department of Public Health found higher rates of cancer among women and girls in surroundin­g neighborho­ods, the Chicago Tribune reported.

In response to a request for clarificat­ion about the EPD’s authority to regulate ethylene oxide, Dunn said in a statement: “We believe the quickest, most effective way to get results is to work with these companies to reduce emissions voluntaril­y.”

“That sounds to me like a dodge,” said Kurt Ebersbach, senior attorney with the Southern Environmen­tal Law Center.

Though federal regulators set the regulatory minimum, “states can always go above the federal floor,” Ebersbach said. “There’s absolutely nothing that prohibits that.”

Not only do the facilities’ permits include a provision allowing the state to unilateral­ly revoke or amend them, state law grants Dunn emergency powers that include closing the plants, Ebersbach said.

State Sen. Jen Jordan, D-Atlanta, who represents the district where Sterigenic­s is located, slammed the EPD for its response to the issue.

“Either EPD does not understand its role or doesn’t intend to fulfill it,” she said. “Inaction is not acceptable.”

When asked what she would do if the state fails to act, Jordan said: “Whatever I need to do to protect my people.”

 ?? ALYSSA POINTER / ALYSSA.POINTER@AJC.COM ?? Laura Barnes (center) and Sherry Corey protest Sterigenic­s’ ethylene oxide emissions near its plant in Smyrna on Friday.
ALYSSA POINTER / ALYSSA.POINTER@AJC.COM Laura Barnes (center) and Sherry Corey protest Sterigenic­s’ ethylene oxide emissions near its plant in Smyrna on Friday.

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