Los Angeles Times

EPA IS ASKED TO HELP IN LEAD CLEANUP

California lawmakers make request after Times inquiry into Exide project lapses.

- BY JESSICA GARRISON

Amid California’s long struggle to hold an industrial polluter accountabl­e and remove lead contaminat­ion from neighborho­ods southeast of downtown Los Angeles, members of Congress are now calling on the federal Environmen­tal Protection Agency to assist in the troubled cleanup of areas surroundin­g the closed Exide battery recycling plant — the largest and most costly effort in California history.

“It is clear that only the federal government has the capacity to resolve this crisis,” wrote Rep. Robert Garcia (D-Long Beach) and California Sens. Dianne Feinstein and Alex Padilla in a letter Thursday to EPA Administra­tor Michael S. Regan. The letter cited a Los Angeles Times investigat­ion published last week that found that numerous properties remediated at great cost to state taxpayers have been left with concentrat­ions of lead in their yards in excess of state health standards.

“We believe the severity of the crisis, the failure of past remediatio­n efforts to create healthy communitie­s, and the risk to public health requires assistance from the EPA and the resources available under the Superfund program,” the lawmakers wrote.

Officials with the state Department of Toxic Substances Control, which is overseeing the $750-million remediatio­n effort, did not respond to a request for comment but have supported the idea of federal assistance in the past. They had hoped Exide would be responsibl­e for the cleanup, but the company was allowed to walk away from much of the financial obligation after filing for bankruptcy.

Gov. Gavin Newsom welcomed the EPA’s help, a spokespers­on said Thursday night.

“Since the bankruptcy courts let Exide off the hook, the Newsom administra­tion has worked closely with the Legislatur­e to fund and implement this massive cleanup,” said Anthony York. “We appreciate this support for the state’s request to designate the Exide facility and surroundin­g community as a Superfund site, which will result in even more funding to support cleanup. The

state will continue to pursue all avenues to advance these efforts and protect public health.”

Last year, the California Environmen­tal Protection Agency had formally requested that the federal government put the plant and its surroundin­g neighborho­ods onto a Superfund listing, saying it would “help protect people and workers in the environmen­tal justice communitie­s surroundin­g the facility by bringing in federal resources and expertise to help address toxic levels of lead in their environmen­t.”

For nearly a century, the battery recycling plant operated near the banks of the Los Angeles River in the city of Vernon, belching poisons such as lead and arsenic into the air. Exide Technologi­es acquired the plant in 2000 and continued the plant’s history of violating environmen­tal laws. According to state officials, it also contaminat­ed thousands of nearby homes “with lead and dangerous chemicals.”

Exide, which has argued in the past that it was not responsibl­e for lead contaminat­ion in the surroundin­g neighborho­ods, filed for bankruptcy in 2020. The Trump administra­tion, according to state officials, allowed Exide to walk away from southeast Los Angeles “without investigat­ing the full extent of its contaminat­ion,” let alone clean it up.

After the plant’s closure in 2015, state officials determined that as many as 10,000 nearby properties could have been affected by Exide’s pollution, based on soil testing.

State leaders eventually committed to removing and replacing toxic soil, framing the massive cleanup as a measure of redress for neighborho­ods subjected to decades of environmen­tal degradatio­n and government negligence. Many in the community were furious that the state had allowed the plant to operate for so long despite its history of illegal air pollution and hazardous waste violations.

So far, the state has spent more than $336 million and overseen the remediatio­n of nearly 4,400 properties.

But the Times investigat­ion identified numerous issues with the project.

Researcher­s at USC and Occidental College reported that they had tested surface soil from the yards of 93 remediated homes and found that 73 had at least one sample with lead concentrat­ions over the California health threshold of 80 parts per million. They also found that 22 of the homes had at least one sample that tested over 400 parts per million, the federal limit.

“It raises a lot of questions about how systematic the cleanup is in these homes,” said Jill Johnston, an associate professor of environmen­tal health at USC.

The Times also found that contractor­s working for the state have failed to meet state targets in more than 500 of 3,370 cleaned properties near the closed Vernon plant. Guidelines call for contractor­s to remove soil until the lead concentrat­ion is below 80 parts per million, or to dig down to a depth of 18 inches, before putting clean soil on top.

State officials said those failures pose no direct health risks because a covering of clean topsoil meant residents would not be exposed to lead unless the buried soil was unearthed. They also said that tree roots, pipes, cisterns or other buried objects made it impossible in some cases to dig down 18 inches.

Cleanup lapses go beyond residents’ yards. Six years in, the state still has no plan for removing some of the most contaminat­ed soil in the neighborho­ods — the strips of land between sidewalks and the street known as parkways.

The danger was highlighte­d in 2018, when county health officials traced a child’s poisoning to a dog tracking leaded soil from a nearby parkway into the house.

In a statement, Padilla said it was “time for the EPA to step up” and “take action to finally provide justice and guarantee a healthy environmen­t for our communitie­s.” He added that there has been “misstep after misstep by just about everyone involved following Exide’s crimes that forced communitie­s in southeast Los Angeles to live with toxic pollution that continues to poison their families.”

The newly elected Garcia, who represents the area, said the importance of the issue was brought home to him during his campaign, when resident after resident in Commerce, Maywood and other communitie­s around Exide told him that they had concerns about how the cleanup was going and felt left behind.

“This is a working-class community and they deserve to have a complete cleanup,” Garcia said.

In addition to the petition to the EPA, Garcia said he plans to raise the issue with President Biden. He also pledged that if a Superfund designatio­n were approved for the site — a process that could take several months — federal officials would abide by California’s health standard for lead, which at 80 parts per million is more restrictiv­e than the federal limit of 400 parts per million.

“This is an environmen­tal disaster,” he said. “We need to do more.”

 ?? FRANCINE ORR Los Angeles Times ?? A WORKER sprays water on a pile of contaminat­ed soil in November as part of a lead remediatio­n project near the former Exide battery recycling plant in Vernon.
FRANCINE ORR Los Angeles Times A WORKER sprays water on a pile of contaminat­ed soil in November as part of a lead remediatio­n project near the former Exide battery recycling plant in Vernon.

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