The Guardian (USA)

Huge toxic site to be built on grounds where slaves are likely buried, files reveal

- Oliver Laughland and Lauren Zanolli in New Orleans

A proposed sprawling petrochemi­cal complex in southern Louisiana will be built on land holding historic cemetery sites that experts believe were likely slave burial grounds, according to documents released Wednesday.

The $9.4bn plastics complex, named the Sunshine Project, is being proposed by Taiwanese petrochemi­cal company Formosa Plastics and would consist of 14 separate plants across 2,300 acres of land in Saint James parish. If approved, it would be allowed to roughly double the amount of toxic emissions in the parish annually.

The project is opposed by a group of community activists in the majority African American parish, who argue the emissions would prove an intolerabl­e health risk. The revelation­s on the site’s historic significan­ce has further angered residents, many of whom trace their ancestry back to enslavemen­t in the region.

The discovery of slave burial grounds on industrial land in the heavily polluted region between New Orleans and Baton Rouge, known colloquial­ly as “Cancer Alley”, has happened in the past. But the revelation­s are likely to intensify the fight in one of the most contentiou­s new developmen­ts in the region.

Sharon Lavigne, a resident opposed to the developmen­t, said the discovery of the cemeteries was “gut-wrenching” and made the proposed site “hallowed ground”.

“I have buried so many family members and friends who have died from cancer. Our community cannot handle another chemical plant,” Lavigne said.

Formosa is currently navigating the approval process with state authoritie­s and as part of this quietly commission­ed archaeolog­ical research on the land earmarked for developmen­t.

Although initial cultural surveys conducted by the company in 2018 had indicated there were not historical­ly significan­t sites on the land Formosa plans to build on, the company were later alerted to maps from the late 19th century – submitted to the state’s division of archaeolog­y by an independen­t researcher – that indicated two cemeteries tied to old plantation­s on the land.

According to hundreds of pages of emails, reports and surveys released under freedom of informatio­n laws to lawyers working for community activists and reviewed by the Guardian before publicatio­n, Formosa has found one of these sites, the Buena Vista cemetery, is still intact.

Any evidence of the other, listed as the Arcadia cemetery, could not be located by excavators working for a contractor, who believe that either any human remains or other physical signs of grave sites have been destroyed by constructi­on carried out by previous land users or that the cemetery may never have existed.

A detailed report, filed to authoritie­s in June 2019, suggests “it is possible that slaves who once lived on the property [Buena Vista] might be buried at this location”. Excavation found “human remains and evidence of grave shafts” at the site. An official at Louisiana’s office of cultural developmen­t, who was not authorised to talk publicly about the finding, told the Guardian that the positionin­g of the Buena Vista burial site, away from the former plantation home, indicated its use as a slave burial ground.

It was still unclear how many bodies were held in the graveyard, about an acre in size. Historical records of the lives and deaths of the millions of people enslaved in the United States are scant and often non-existent.

The Buena Vista site sits in a socalled project “buffer zone”, meaning no constructi­on is planned there, despite Formosa owning the land.

Janile Parks, director of community and government relations for the Formosa project, said the company has now “fenced in the identified area to protect it”. She added that Formosa had “conducted archival research and has not been able to connect the plot to anyone or any particular event”.

She said: “As the project progresses, Formosa will follow all applicable state and federal laws in regards to the burial ground and public notificati­on.”

Internal emails suggest that the Arcadia site posed more of an issue to the Formosa project as the old maps indicated it sat directly underneath an area proposed for constructi­on.

Lawyers working for Formosa acknowledg­ed in August 2018 that if human remains were recovered at this site the company “could choose to protect the area from any further constructi­on disturbanc­e with a fence and plaque” but noted that this “would mean that portions of the planned utilities plant may have to be relocated” a move that would be “a very difficult option”. The emails indicate that Formosa favored removing remains and relocating them to another cemetery. Contractor­s later recovered no remains from the site.

It is expected that Formosa will continue its constructi­on plans with this site, a state official said.

Residents in St James expressed frustratio­n that Formosa did not notify community members about the discovery of the sites, particular­ly before the parish council approved permits in December 2018.

“They [Formosa] would have first learned that these sites could have been located in late July 2018,” said Pam Spees, a senior attorney with the Center for Constituti­onal Rights, a non-profit legal advocacy group representi­ng Rise St James, a local advocacy group . “But there has been no communicat­ion to Rise St James or other community groups about it.”

Formosa said it had “conducted all field work in coordinati­on with the appropriat­e agencies” including the State Historic Preservati­on Office. It described the review as a “lengthy and regulated process”.

Lavigne, the founder and president of Rise St James, argued that the cemetery revelation­s should thwart the Formosa project entirely.

“I feel like God is answering my prayers,” said Lavigne. “This will be the straw that breaks the camel’s back.”

She said the group plans to use the new informatio­n on potential slave burial sites to ask the parish council to reconsider permits already approved for the Formosa project.

Still, it’s unlikely the grave sites will seriously impact Formosa’s progress, state officials said.

Greg Langley, press secretary for the Louisiana department of environmen­tal quality (LDEQ), a state permitting agency, said he couldn’t comment specifical­ly on outstandin­g permits for Formosa. But he said: “Normally this type of situation would not affect the permits.”

Formosa is awaiting a decision from LDEQ on its proposed air permit before it can begin constructi­on.

Spees, meanwhile, highlighte­d the need for a more thorough investigat­ion of historical assets on the land as industrial developmen­t continues to grow in Cancer Alley.

“They are putting these industries on land where we know there are people buried,” she said. “How many have already been destroyed along this stretch? What do we need to do to really acknowledg­e and preserve and protect these types of burial sites?”

 ?? Photograph: Giles Clarke/Getty Images ?? The heavily polluted region between Baton Rouge and New Orleans is known colloquial­ly as ‘Cancer Alley’.
Photograph: Giles Clarke/Getty Images The heavily polluted region between Baton Rouge and New Orleans is known colloquial­ly as ‘Cancer Alley’.
 ?? Photograph: TerraXplor­ations, Inc ?? An 1878 Mississipp­i River map showing the locations of the Acadia and Buena Vista cemeteries.
Photograph: TerraXplor­ations, Inc An 1878 Mississipp­i River map showing the locations of the Acadia and Buena Vista cemeteries.

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