The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Lead removal starts in area near stadium

EPA officials consider expanding area for investigat­ion, testing.

- By Andy Miller Georgia Health News

Work teams using heavy equipment began digging up soil contaminat­ed with lead from an empty lot in west Atlanta on Monday morning. It’s the start of an Environmen­tal Protection Agency cleanup action that will take months to complete.

Targeting a neighborho­od near Mercedes-Benz Stadium, the EPA has found unsafe levels of lead — a powerful neurotoxin — in the soil of more than half of the 124 yards already examined.

And the EPA says it’s considerin­g expanding its investigat­ion beyond the 368 properties currently under scrutiny.

After a community meeting last

week, an EPA official told Georgia Health News it had tested 19 properties around the contaminat­ion zone and 12 of them showed a problem with lead.

There are no natural barriers that would separate the current testing zone from surroundin­g neighborho­ods, suggesting that the area of contaminat­ion could be greater than first believed.

The initial EPA investigat­ion has targeted roughly 35 city blocks between Joseph E. Boone Boulevard on the south, Cameron Alexander Boulevard on the north, James P. Brawley Drive on the west and an old CSX rail line on the east.

Chuck Berry, an EPA on-scene coordinato­r, said the agency has $1.8 million allocated for soil removal and yard restoratio­n but more funding will be needed.

“We’re looking at the possibilit­y of expanding the (testing) site,” he said.

A spokesman for the city of Atlanta said the city was monitoring developmen­ts in the neighborho­od.

“This is a matter that is handled at the federal level,” the spokesman said in a statement. “The city has had representa­tion during public meetings to address questions or concerns, but the city does not have a regulatory role, and decisions made during the investigat­ion are within the purview of the EPA.”

Emory professor Eri Saikawa, whose team discovered the lead problem in 2018, said “it’s likely there’s contaminat­ion outside the boundary’’ of the testing area.

“We’re suggesting they do the testing more broadly,” she said. “Having more data helps. We don’t know the scope of the problem.”

Last Thursday’s community meeting, held at a nearby YMCA, appeared to draw more government officials than local residents. But at least two homeowners who attended signed up for their yards to be tested.

Tarajee Najeeullah, who lives on Elm Street, was one. She said she was concerned about the health of children living in her home. Lead exposure is especially hazardous to children.

Soil removal includes trees

The Emory team began analyzing the soil in the westside area in July 2018 and found that it contained high concentrat­ions of lead. Those findings led to the EPA investigat­ion.

Lead contaminat­ion in soil can come from the residue of smelters and other industrial processes, as well as from lead paint, and some areas are still contaminat­ed by vehicle exhaust from the era of leaded gasoline.

EPA researcher­s have speculated that the homes in the westside Atlanta neighborho­od were built on top of slag, a byproduct of smelting, spread from nearby foundries and used to fill in low-lying areas.

Before 1974, slag was commonly used as a fill material, Berry said at the community meeting. It’s a problem that has surfaced nationwide, he said. “Slag can have varying amounts of heavy metals.”

Along with digging up to two feet of soil, Berry said, crews will also remove trees. It’s unavoidabl­e, he told residents at the community meeting, addingthat the soil around tree roots is contaminat­ed.

But the tree removal, already begun on Elm Avenue, came as a shock to at least one area resident.

“I am horrified by all of the trees that have been taken down,” said Rosario Hernandez, a community leader, at the EPA meeting.

“This was never told to us,” she told Berry. “Our trees are our ecosystem.’’ She added that tree removal could also exacerbate the neighborho­od’s flooding problems. “I never knew it could happen like this.”

Ber r y a ckno wl edged t o a reporter that agency’s communicat­ion with residents in every situation could be better.

The EPA will replace trees and shrubs, as well as soil, and plant sod, if homeowners whose yards are dug up request it.

Priority to homes with children

The federal agency has officially designated the westside area as a “Superfund removal action,” a separate classifica­tion from a Superfund site. If the area is designated a Superfund site, more federal dollars would be available.

The EPA is giving high priority to homes inhabited by pregnant women or children under age 6.

Children can absorb as much as 90% more lead into their bodies than can adults. Researcher­s have found that even at low levels, lead can damage a child’s brain, lowering intelligen­ce and damaging the ability to control behavior and attention. At higher levels, lead can affect growth, and it can replace iron in the blood, leading to anemia and fatigue.

There is no safe level of lead exposure, the Atlanta-based Centers for Disease Control and Prevention says.

In adults, lead poisoning can cause a higher risk of high blood pressure and damage the nerves and kidneys. It also can cause miscarriag­es.

The EPA’s thresholdf­or unsafe lead contaminat­ion in soil is 400 parts per million.

In an empty lot across the street from Hernandez’s properties, the Emory team got a reading of more than 2,000 parts per million — five times the EPA’s threshold for remediatio­n and removal. And the EPA said it has found levels as high as 3,400 parts per million.

Andy Miller, a former AJC reporter, is the editor and CEO of Georgia Health News, a nonprofit news site covering health care in Georgia. Email him at amiller@ georgiahea­lthnews.com

 ?? MIGUEL MARTINEZ / FOR THE AJC ?? The EPA started excavating and backfillin­g properties Monday on Atlanta’s westside that were found to have dangerous levels of lead in the soil. The removal includes trees.
MIGUEL MARTINEZ / FOR THE AJC The EPA started excavating and backfillin­g properties Monday on Atlanta’s westside that were found to have dangerous levels of lead in the soil. The removal includes trees.
 ??  ??
 ?? ALYSSA POINTER / ALYSSA.POINTER@AJC.COM ?? Environmen­tal Protection Agency community involvemen­t coordinato­r Kyle Bryant speaks to community members and officials about lead removal and the EPA’s process during a public meeting Thursday at the YMCA of Metro Atlanta in Atlanta’s Vine City neighborho­od.
ALYSSA POINTER / ALYSSA.POINTER@AJC.COM Environmen­tal Protection Agency community involvemen­t coordinato­r Kyle Bryant speaks to community members and officials about lead removal and the EPA’s process during a public meeting Thursday at the YMCA of Metro Atlanta in Atlanta’s Vine City neighborho­od.

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