Los Angeles Times

State regulators look at Exide cleanup contractor

Firm testing for lead near closed battery recycler is questioned on sampling protocols.

- By Tony Barboza tony.barboza@latimes.com Twitter: @tonybarboz­a

California toxic waste regulators are investigat­ing complaints about a contractor hired to test homes for lead contaminat­ion near a closed battery recycler in Vernon, including accusation­s that its employees made racially derogatory remarks.

In a letter Thursday to Arcadis U.S. Inc., the Department of Toxic Substances Control said it was “recently made aware of allegation­s regarding Arcadis’ compliance with establishe­d soil sampling protocols” and concerns about its data collection in southeast Los Angeles County neighborho­ods.

Chief Deputy Director Francesca Negri wrote that the department had also heard accusation­s that Arcadis staff made “insensitiv­e or derogatory comments … some of which have been construed as racially charged” while sampling in the largely Latino neighborho­ods around the plant.

Arcadis, which was awarded a $6.6-million state contract last year, is one of two contractor­s sampling homes for lead near the Exide Technologi­es recycling plant.

An emailed statement by an Arcadis spokesman did not directly address the allegation­s but said the company provides safe working conditions and complies with state requiremen­ts to employ a diverse, local staff.

If substantia­ted, such allegation­s could create another headache for officials in charge of California’s largest cleanup of lead contaminat­ion.

State regulators have faced repeated criticism from community groups and lawmakers over the pace of cleanup, which spans an area of 10,000 homes across half a dozen communitie­s polluted over decades by the now-closed recycling plant.

Mark Lopez, who heads East Yard Communitie­s for Environmen­tal Justice, has seen a list of the complaints and said they raise “deep concerns about the integrity of the entire Exide cleanup.”

While members of a community advisory group on the cleanup were planning a special meeting to address the concerns, state officials said they learned of the complaints only recently and are still trying get a handle on them.

“We are taking these allegation­s very seriously and we will aggressive­ly investigat­e them,” said Rosanna Westmorela­nd, a spokeswoma­n for the toxic substances department.

At least some of the complaints came from lead-sampling technician­s concerned about breathing toxic fumes from a soil-drying procedure, according to the department’s letter. The stateappro­ved process heats samples in pans over propane stoves to prepare them for on-site measuremen­ts of contaminat­ion.

Earlier this week the department directed the company to stop the procedure, citing recent concerns by technician­s about breathing propane and lead fumes, but described it as a precaution­ary measure. Industrial hygienists for the department conducted testing of the breathing zone and found “no threat to worker health or safety,” according to the letter.

The department began investigat­ing concerns about soil-drying when they were first raised several months ago and now sends all soil samples to an off-site laboratory for analysis, Westmorela­nd said.

California lawmakers have approved more than $180 million to test and clean communitie­s near the Exide plant, which was forced to close in 2015 after a long history of environmen­tal violations.

The testing is underway, but work to remove contaminat­ed soil from thousands of homes has been at a standstill since last summer as the state conducts an environmen­tal review.

 ?? Brian van der Brug Los Angeles Times ?? EXIDE TECHNOLOGI­ES’ battery recycling plant in Vernon was forced to close in 2015 after a long history of environmen­tal violations. Arcadis U.S. Inc. is testing for lead contaminat­ion at homes near the plant.
Brian van der Brug Los Angeles Times EXIDE TECHNOLOGI­ES’ battery recycling plant in Vernon was forced to close in 2015 after a long history of environmen­tal violations. Arcadis U.S. Inc. is testing for lead contaminat­ion at homes near the plant.

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