Marin Independent Journal

EPA urged to clean battery plant toxins

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VERNON >> Members of Congress asked the federal government to help clean up toxic lead contaminat­ion from a former battery recycling plant outside Los Angeles.

Sens. Dianne Feinstein and Alex Padilla joined Long Beach Rep. Robert Garcia in appealing Thursday to the Environmen­tal Protection Agency for help with the former Exide Technologi­es plant cleanup, the Los Angeles

Times reported.

The plant in Vernon is the source of the largest and most costly cleanup in California history. The letter by the three Democrats said EPA should designate the plant a Superfund site to get the necessary funds to cleanup lead from as many as 10,000 properties.

The letter cited a Los Angeles Times report that said research showed soil in the yards of 73 of 93 remediated homes had lead concentrat­ions over the state health limit. In 22 of those homes, at least one sample exceeded the threshold fivefold.

The state is currently overseeing the $750-million remediatio­n effort and has, so far, spent more than $336 million to remediate nearly 4,400 properties.

“It is clear that only the federal government has the capacity to resolve this crisis,” the lawmakers wrote to EPA Administra­tor Michael Regan. “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 plant operated near the Los Angeles River for nearly a century and was cited by local, state and federal officials for violating hazardous waste laws by emitting too much lead and arsenic around the plant and on highways where its trucks traveled. Exide Technologi­es acquired the plant in 2000 and ran it until 2015.

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