Los Angeles Times

Outrage in Cudahy over dumping of airplane fuel

At crowded town hall, some say incident is part of a pattern of environmen­tal racism.

- BY RUBEN VIVES

At a raucous town hall meeting in Cudahy on Friday night, hundreds of residents turned out to express their outrage over a Delta Air Lines jet that dumped 15,000 gallons of fuel over the working-class community this week, injuring children and teachers at schools.

Several members of the crowd packed into the city’s community center felt a county health official at the meeting was downplayin­g the effects of the incident.

“Kids got injured, OK, sir,” yelled Gerardo Mayagoitia, a resident who is also the city clerk of neighborin­g Maywood.

“There are families in the hospital,” resident Vanessa Huarte screamed.

One woman cried as she held up a cellphone, showing a picture of herself in a hospital bed. Several mothers showed photos of children with rashes and said they were still feeling ill.

On Tuesday morning, the Shanghai-bound Delta airliner dumped fuel over several schools in the area before making an emergency landing at Los Angeles Internatio­nal Airport. Delta said the pilot was forced to dump fuel in the urban area to reduce the plane’s weight before landing.

Dana Debel, a Delta spokeswoma­n who attended Friday’s town hall, spoke and took questions from the audience, but was booed and heckled by the crowd.

“This is environmen­tal racism,” Jose Gomez shouted from the back of the room.

It wasn’t the first time the term has popped up in southeast Los Angeles County, a region made up of mostly working-class Latino families who are routinely exposed to dust and noxious fumes from nearby factories, commercial vehicles, freeways and a rail yard. It also sits in the flight path of LAX.

For decades, residents and environmen­tal activists have waged one fight after another. They have pushed back against the constructi­on of a toxic waste dump and an oil pipeline. Five years ago, environmen­tal activists succeeded in closing down a battery recycling plant in Vernon, which had been spewing lead and arsenic onto residentia­l neighborho­ods for years.

So when the Delta airliner dropped fuel over the area, people took offense.

“It was the final insult,” 21-year-old Marco Perez of Huntington Park said. “You don’t see this happening in white rich communitie­s.”

Jessica Barragan, 30, a Cudahy resident whose 5year-old daughter attends Park Avenue Elementary, where at least 20 children and 11 adults were treated for minor injuries, couldn’t help but ask Debel one thing: “Why did it only hit where Latinos live?”

Debel said she was limited in her response because of a pending federal investigat­ion, leaving Barragan and others frustrated and angry. Residents could file claims with Delta for any possible health injuries but the airline could not say how it would respond until all investigat­ions are complete, Debel added.

Delta Air Lines Flight 89 had just taken off from LAX when the pilot alerted the control tower that the plane’s right engine had stalled. The air traffic controller asked if the pilot needed to dump fuel.

“Negative,” the pilot is heard saying over the radio. But shortly after, the plane began to release jet fuel as it passed over several cities, including Cudahy, Downey, South Gate and others.

A total of 60 people were treated as a result of the incident, at least 20 of them children.

Four teachers have sued Delta over the incident. The South Coast Air Quality Management District, the air pollution control agency, slapped the company with a notice of violation and said that it could face civil penalties for causing a public nuisance.

Addressing the crowd at Friday’s town hall, Mark Lopez, executive director for East Yard Communitie­s for Environmen­tal Justice, a nonprofit establishe­d in response to the increasing concerns over the effects of industrial pollution in the region, told residents they should keep demanding answers and never stop.

“We’re dumped on every day; our water, our air, the land under our feet, every day,” he said. “And that’s what is allowed by the government agencies that [are] supposed to protect us.

“So when we get sprayed on, it’s on top of all of that,” he added.

Lopez led the crowd in a chant: “This is my community. This is my fight. You will hear me tonight.”

 ?? Brian van der Brug Los Angeles Times ?? RESIDENTS AND activists protest at a Cudahy town hall Friday after a Delta jet dumped fuel over the area. The South Coast Air Quality Management District said the airline could face civil penalties for the incident.
Brian van der Brug Los Angeles Times RESIDENTS AND activists protest at a Cudahy town hall Friday after a Delta jet dumped fuel over the area. The South Coast Air Quality Management District said the airline could face civil penalties for the incident.
 ?? Damian Dovarganes Associated Press ?? MARIANNA TORRES, 11, cries as she is evacuated from Park Avenue Elementary School. Dozens of people, many of them children, were treated for injuries.
Damian Dovarganes Associated Press MARIANNA TORRES, 11, cries as she is evacuated from Park Avenue Elementary School. Dozens of people, many of them children, were treated for injuries.

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