Los Angeles Times

Battery plant neighbors say poison lingers

- By Tony Barboza

Many people living near a closed Exide Technologi­es plant in southeast Los Angeles County are concerned about lead poisoning and are not satisfied with progress on a massive state-led cleanup of contaminat­ed homes.

Many people living near a closed battery-recycling plant in southeast Los Angeles County are not satisfied with progress on a massive state-led cleanup of leadcontam­inated homes, a survey by health officials has found.

Of the households surveyed near the former Exide Technologi­es plant, 55% said they have not received results from soil testing completed in their yards, according to results released Friday by the L.A. County Department of Public Health.

And while 3 out of 4 households are concerned about getting cancer or lead poisoning from living near the facility, two-thirds said no one in their home has had their blood tested for lead.

The conclusion­s are based on an unscientif­ic

door-to-door survey of more than 4,000 households across Bell, Boyle Heights, Commerce, East Los Angeles, Huntington Park, Maywood and Vernon. Workers and volunteers visited residents and asked a list of 15 questions during a health department outreach event June 10.

A statement from the health department said the results “establish that residents have a high level of concern for their health, a need for greater medical services, and a dissatisfa­ction with the progress of the cleanup.”

“The survey highlights the need to act with urgency to prevent exposure to continued high levels of lead,” said Barbara Ferrer, director of the health department.

A spokeswoma­n for the California Department of Toxic Substances Control, which is overseeing the lead sampling and remediatio­n project spanning more than 10,000 residentia­l properties, saw the survey differentl­y, saying in an email that it “shows that about half of the respondent­s who know about the contaminat­ion and cleanup are satisfied with the progress to date.”

The department has mailed results to about 4,850 of 8,200 parcels sampled to date, and is sending the remaining results on a weekly basis, DTSC spokeswoma­n Abbott Dutton said.

Tests have found elevated lead levels in the soil of thousands of residentia­l properties near the plant, but community members, lawmakers and health officials have long complained of a slow response by toxic waste regulators.

For decades the Vernon plant melted down old car batteries, and state regulators allowed it to continue operating with only a temporary permit despite a history of air pollution and hazardous waste violations. The toxic substances department now blames the facility for spreading lead contaminat­ion across seven communitie­s within a 1.7-mile radius.

Exide agreed to close the facility permanentl­y in March 2015 to avoid federal criminal charges.

Lead is a potent neurotoxin that is most dangerous to children under age 6, who can ingest it in contaminat­ed soil or dust. Even small amounts of lead can cause permanent problems, including learning and developmen­tal deficienci­es and lower IQs.

About 235 homes were cleaned through June 2016. Cleanup then was at a standstill for months, with regulators arguing that they could not remove tainted soil from any properties until a yearlong environmen­tal review was completed this summer.

In January the toxic substances department announced an expedited cleanup program for the highest-risk properties. Some 21 additional parcels have been cleaned since then, said Rosanna Westmorela­nd, a department spokeswoma­n.

The department expects to release a final cleanup plan in the next few weeks, she said. After that, a new wave of cleanup will begin on 2,500 of the most contaminat­ed properties.

The effort, being paid for with more than $180 million in public funds, is the largest residentia­l cleanup of lead contaminat­ion in California history, according to the toxic substances department.

The county health department estimates that the cleanup area includes about 21,000 households, because some properties have multiple homes and families. The department also oversees a free blood-testing program, funded by Exide, that over the last three years has screened more than 3,000 people near the Exide plant, including about 300 children.

In a statement, Georgiabas­ed Exide said it was committed to upholding its obligation­s, including “ongoing blood testing in the area” and will continue “addressing the need for cleanup of industrial and residentia­l properties to the extent they were impacted by the facility’s former operations.”

Exide has argued that lead emissions from its facility did not extend into residentia­l areas. The company has blamed other industrial pollution sources, leadbased paint in older homes and past lead emissions from vehicle exhaust.

 ?? Irfan Khan Los Angeles Times ?? VOLUNTEERS Elizabeth Mateo, left, and Alex Chang interview Margarita Torrez June 9 as part of a survey of residents near a former battery-recycling plant.
Irfan Khan Los Angeles Times VOLUNTEERS Elizabeth Mateo, left, and Alex Chang interview Margarita Torrez June 9 as part of a survey of residents near a former battery-recycling plant.
 ?? Mel Melcon Los Angeles Times ?? BHARAT DUNGRANI, a Los Angeles County environmen­tal health specialist, uses a camping stove to remove moisture from soil samples Feb. 29 in Commerce.
Mel Melcon Los Angeles Times BHARAT DUNGRANI, a Los Angeles County environmen­tal health specialist, uses a camping stove to remove moisture from soil samples Feb. 29 in Commerce.

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