Los Angeles Times

DOUBTS REMAIN AFTER EXIDE DEAL

Some question whether cleanup obligation­s will be met

- By Tony Barboza

Over the last year, federal authoritie­s built what appeared to be a strong criminal case against Exide Technologi­es, the Vernon battery recycler that has long faced scrutiny for spewing lead and arsenic into neighborho­ods in southeast Los Angeles County.

Investigat­ors found environmen­tal crimes spanning two decades and documented the transgress­ions in hundreds of pages. Among other violations, the company and previous operators had illegally stored lead and caustic battery acid at the 15acre facility and then dripped hazardous waste all over Southern California roads as they transporte­d it in leaking trailers to an unpermitte­d facility in Bakersfiel­d.

But instead of charging Georgiabas­ed Exide with crimes that could have landed its executives in jail, the U.S. attorney’s office struck a deal. It allowed the company—and firm employees—to escape criminal charges by agreeing to permanentl­y close the Vernon facility, demolish it and clean up the pollution. Exide also had to commit to pay nearly $50 million to clean up the site and surroundin­g communitie­s while admitting to an array of felony violations.

The U.S. attorney’s office defended the strategy as a way to ensure a timely cleanup without leaving taxpayers saddled with the bill. But some state officials and community groups say that after watching decades of lackluster environmen­tal enforcemen­t by California regulators, they have serious doubts about

whether the agreement will ensure that Exide doesn’t walk away from its mess before it’s fully cleaned up.

Joseph Johns, assistant U.S. attorney and chief of environmen­tal crimes, said he believes there are safeguards in place to ensure Exide finishes the cleanup work. “We struggled with this, and we decided that the right thing to do was not worry about sending one or two people to jail for a year or two, but rather, to prevent another 50-to-100-year sentence for the 110,000 people, the children and grandchild­ren that live in the communitie­s,” he said at a news conference.

The Exide plant, about five miles southeast of downtown Los Angeles, has been a source of community frustratio­n for years. The concerns were heightened after a March 2013 report to the South Coast Air Quality Management District found its arsenic emissions posed an increased cancer risk to 110,000 people who live nearby. The plant sat idle for the last year because it could not comply with air quality rules. Federal officials were worried that Exide, which is in the middle of bankruptcy proceeding­s, was preparing to resume operations in a matter of weeks.

The terms of Exide’s plans to emerge from Chapter 11 bankruptcy, which a court could confirm by the end of March, would have almost certainly been liquidated if it still faced the threat of criminal prosecutio­n, federal officials said. That would leave no one but the taxpayers to fund cleanup of the site and homes in Maywood and Boyle Heights that had been contaminat­ed by decades of lead emissions.

Community groups in southeast Los Angeles County that have long worried about the health effects of the facility and demanded action against the plant reacted to the deal between federal officials and Exide with a mix of surprise, relief and skepticism.

“We’re concerned that they will not be pursued for criminal prosecutio­n,” Roberto Cabrales, a community organizer with Communitie­s for a Better Environmen­t, said. “But if that means that Exide will stay closed, then that’s in itself a victory for the community.”

He said community groups would push state regulators to quickly and thoroughly clean nearby homes contaminat­ed with lead from the battery recycler.

State Senate leader Kevin de León (D-Los Angeles) said that while the closure was a victory for those in the community who have long wanted the facility shuttered, he was concerned about the terms of the agreement not to prosecute Exide.

“What concession­s did the U.S. attorney get for letting them off the hook?” De León asked. “We need to make sure the community doesn’t get shortchang­ed by this settlement.”

Federal officials said the agreement requires the company to pay the cost of the entire cleanup, even if it exceeds $50 million.

That’s because the deal contains a “hammer,” they said: If the company does not comply with federal and state agreements at any point in the next 10 years, it will be prosecuted for the felonies to which it has now admitted.

Federal officials’ agreement with Exide does not require funds beyond the $50 million the company previously promised to set aside under a 2014 settlement with state regulators to pay for closure and cleanup of the facility and to clean leadtainte­d soil from surroundin­g homes.

But under a related closure agreement with Exide state regulators announced Thursday, some of those payments will be accelerate­d. The company will also be required to pay an additional $5 million to clean homes in 2018.

The state Department of Toxic Substances Control will oversee a years-long cleanup of the property, which will remain under the ownership of Exide Technologi­es, and nearby homes.

Over the next two years, Exide will be required to remove all buildings and structures, reducing the site to dirt. After that, studies will start “to better characteri­ze the full extent of the contaminat­ion on the site,” DTSC Director Barbara Lee said in a conference call with reporters. Further remediatio­n will follow, she said.

“We will make sure they get the job done,” Lee said.

Lee acknowledg­ed Thursday that cleaning up the facility and surroundin­g neighborho­ods is likely to exceed $50 million. She said the department has collected about $16 million of that so far.

Lee said she told Exide on Feb. 26 that the department would not issue a full permit for the facility, prompting weeks of discussion­s with the company about the terms of its closure.

Under a new state law adopted in the wake of the outcry over the pollution, lawmakers had required the DTSC to either issue a permit or force Exide to close the facility by year’s end.

The Department of Toxic Substances Control had allowed the facility to operate for decades without a full permit, even as it racked up dozens of hazardous waste violations.

The hundreds of pages of documents released by federal officials Thursday provided a snapshot of extensive contaminat­ion and hazardous waste violations at the facility since at least 1985.

They detail how acid, lead and other metals fouled groundwate­r around an earthen acid dump pit; how hazardous waste was released from dozens of work stations at the facility; and how pollution migrated from the plant through the soil, air, surface and ground water, resulting in high lead levels in surroundin­g soil.

The criminal investigat­ion, disclosed publicly in August, also included investigat­ors from the U.S. Environmen­tal Protection Agency and Department of Transporta­tion.

The facility, which employed about 130 workers, began operations in 1922 and was taken over by Exide in 2000. The company has been in chapter 11 bankruptcy since June 2013.

In a statement, Exide said the agreements with federal and state officials will allow the company to proceed with its plan to emerge from bankruptcy.

“Exide expects to be able to meet its closure and cleanup obligation­s under these agreements, continue to honor its environmen­tal obligation­s at its other facilities, and preserve nearly 10,000 jobs globally,” the company’s statement said.

The deal also extends an ongoing program to test the blood of surroundin­g residents for lead, a potent neurotoxin, for which there is no safe level of exposure. The metal, one of the oldestknow­n toxic substances, can cause learning disabiliti­es and other developmen­tal problems in children.

Of 118 homes in areas of Boyle Heights and Maywood tested so far, all but three had lead concentrat­ions high enough to require soil removal, according to data from the state toxic substances department. About three dozen of those homes have been cleaned up. The residentia­l property cleanup could be expanded if testing currently underway shows elevated levels further away from the facility, state officials said.

At Indiana Street and Union Pacific Avenue in Boyle Heights on Thursday, workers in orange and green neon vests could be seen replacing lead-contaminat­ed soil. Two large sacks of dirt sat on the front lawn of one of the homes.

At another home nearby, workers used an excavator to lay new dirt.

Not far away, Miguel Dominguez, 50, a 10-year resident of the neighborho­od stood in front of his new lawn and said his 3-year-old son is staying mostly with his grandmothe­r since workers began replacing some of the contaminat­ed soil.

“I’m happy that they’re closing the plant,” he said in Spanish, “but in reality, it’s not just the plant who should be held accountabl­e, but those who let them operate for so long.”

 ?? Irfan Khan Los Angeles Times ?? WORKERS DIG potentiall­y contaminat­ed soil from a yard in the 1200 block of South Indiana Street in Boyle Heights.
Irfan Khan Los Angeles Times WORKERS DIG potentiall­y contaminat­ed soil from a yard in the 1200 block of South Indiana Street in Boyle Heights.
 ?? Al Seib Los Angeles Times ?? ALICIA RIVERA, Maya Herrera and Carmen Garcia, left to right, chant at an environmen­tal rally at the Exide plant last April.
Al Seib Los Angeles Times ALICIA RIVERA, Maya Herrera and Carmen Garcia, left to right, chant at an environmen­tal rally at the Exide plant last April.
 ?? Michael Robinson Chavez Los Angeles Times ?? A FEDERAL PROBE found that the Exide plant in Vernon had committed environmen­tal crimes for two decades, including illegal storage of caustic battery acid and hazardous waste leaks on roads.
Michael Robinson Chavez Los Angeles Times A FEDERAL PROBE found that the Exide plant in Vernon had committed environmen­tal crimes for two decades, including illegal storage of caustic battery acid and hazardous waste leaks on roads.
 ?? Irfan Khan Los Angeles Times ?? EXIDE WILL close its Vernon plant immediatel­y. Federal prosecutor­s say cleaning up the community was more important than putting employees in jail.
Irfan Khan Los Angeles Times EXIDE WILL close its Vernon plant immediatel­y. Federal prosecutor­s say cleaning up the community was more important than putting employees in jail.

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