The Guardian (USA)

EPA opens civil rights investigat­ions over pollution in Cancer Alley

- Oliver Laughland in New Orleans

The Environmen­tal Protection Agency (EPA) has opened a series of civil rights investigat­ions into state agencies in Louisiana to examine whether permits granted in the highly polluted industrial corridor, known locally as Cancer Alley, have violated Black citizens rights.

The news, first reported by the New Orleans Advocate, marks further enforcemen­t action taken by the federal agency in the region since the EPA administra­tor, Michael Regan, visited the area late last year.

The civil rights inquiries will investigat­e Louisiana’s environmen­t department (LDEQ) over a series of permits approved in both St John parish and St James parish and elsewhere in the region, where chronic air pollution in majority Black communitie­s have led to a wave of activism and internatio­nal attention.

One investigat­ion, targeted at the state’s health department, will examine whether the department violated the rights of Black residents and schoolchil­dren living near a neoprene facility in St John “by allegedly failing in its duty to provide parish residents with necessary informatio­n about health threats”, and whether the department failed to make recommenda­tions to community members and local government over how to reduce exposure to pollution.

The neoprene facility, operated by the Japanese chemicals firm Denka, is the only location in America to emit the pollutant chloropren­e, listed by the EPA as a likely human carcinogen. Residentia­l locations around the site, including an elementary school near the plant’s fence line, often record levels of chloropren­e well above the EPA’s lifetime exposure guidance levels.

The investigat­ions will also examine permits related to a proposed gargantuan plastics site in the neighborin­g parish of St James, operated by the Taiwanese company Formosa, permitted to emit up to 15,400lb of the cancer-causing chemical ethylene oxide. That project has been placed on hold during a federal government review.

The investigat­ion will also examine permits for a proposed grain terminal in St John parish.

The announceme­nt prompted praise from environmen­tal advocates and researcher­s who pushed the agency to investigat­e in a series of complaints arguing that the permitting

processes are racially biased and fail to fully include feedback from community members.

Robert Taylor, the president of the Concerned Citizens of St John, told the Guardian: “We need this investigat­ion from the perspectiv­e of racial injustice. It is so obvious what’s happening is discrimina­tory.”

Darryl Malek-Wiley, a senior organizer with the Sierra Club, described the investigat­ions as “a groundbrea­king case looking at how LDEQ issues permits and doesn’t identify the impact on African American, lowincome communitie­s despite placing them a risk”.

Malek-Wiley said he hoped the investigat­ions would be completed within six months and said the EPA could financiall­y sanction both agencies at the end of its investigat­ion.

A statement from LDEQ said that its permit process is “impartial and unbiased”.

“LDEQ handles all issues with a fair and equitable approach. LDEQ will work with EPA to resolve this matter,” it said.

The Louisiana health department’s general counsel, Steven Russo, said in a statement reported by the Advocate that the department had received the complaint and was “reviewing it closely”.

A spokesman for Denka, Jim Harris, argued there were “no widespread elevated cancer rates in St John the Baptist compared with the state average”, pointing to Louisiana Tumor registry data over decades. Harris accused “environmen­tal activist groups” of “manipulati­ng data and collecting and analyzing it in non-scientific ways”.

Recent studies have pointed to elevated cancer diagnosesi­n areas around the plant, and EPA data points to a cancer risk rate 50 times the national average in census tracts near the plant.

 ?? Photograph: Emily Kask/AFP/Getty Images ?? The Denka facility in Reserve, Louisiana. The neoprene facility is the only location in America to emit the pollutant chloropren­e.
Photograph: Emily Kask/AFP/Getty Images The Denka facility in Reserve, Louisiana. The neoprene facility is the only location in America to emit the pollutant chloropren­e.

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