NADLER TO SENATE:
EPA RESPONSE TO 9/11 “SCANDALOUS”
Testifies in front of Senate committee that EPA hid critical health
information from public; demands answers and immediate action
NEW YORK – Expressing outrage that the Environmental Protection Agency
(EPA) misled the public on some very important facts about the environmental
integrity in Lower Manhattan, and blatantly hid other findings, Rep. Jerrold
Nadler (D-NY) today called on the EPA to explain itself, and take action
swiftly to remedy the situation. Should they not, Rep. Nadler said,
he will introduce legislation forcing them to act. Rep. Nadler made
his comments in front of a subcommittee of the Senate Committee on Environment
and Public Works at a field hearing in New York, held by Sens. Joseph I.
Lieberman and Hillary Rodham Clinton.
Congressman Nadler stated, “New York was at the center of one of the
most calamitous events in American history and the EPA has essentially
walked away.”
Rep. Nadler made his comments on the heels of a shocking new St. Louis
Post Dispatch story. In Sunday’s Dispatch, it was reported that the
United States Geological Survey (USGS), using the country’s best detection
equipment and methods, found pH levels in World Trade Center dust that
are “. . .as corrosive as drain cleaner” and passed this information along
to health experts at the EPA on a “government-only” website. The
story charges that “the USGS data was not released by the EPA nor apparently
were the environmental agency’s own test results on the dust.” The
EPA claims to have released this data to the public, but a review of all
of the EPA’s statements made since 9/11 found nothing that warned of these
high pH levels. According to the New York Committee for Occupational
Safety and Health (NYCOSH), such dust “once it’s in contact with moist
tissue – the throat, the mouth, nasal passages, the eyes and even sweaty
skin – it becomes corrosive and can cause severe burns.”
“This is utterly scandalous,” said Rep. Nadler. “We must find
out why the EPA hid this information from the public and we must see all
the data now. I hope that Senators Clinton and Lieberman will join
me in calling on the Federal government to explain why New Yorkers were
misled, and to demand the release of the full compliment of data immediately.”
In addition, Rep. Nadler charged, the EPA has engaged in a campaign
of misinformation that has only served to confuse the public. For
example, he said, the following statement was found in a copy of a January
25, 2002 speech by EPA Region II counsel Walter Mugdan, obtained by the
Congressman, “...a significant number of the WTC bulk dust samples
that we have analyzed did have more than one-percent asbestos.” However,
an October 3, 2001 EPA memo claiming that the agency had found no “significant
health risk” states, “The vast majority of EPA and OSHA samples of air
and dust analyzed for asbestos have been at levels that pose no significant
health risk to residents and workers returning to their homes or area businesses.”
This was one of the most often quoted EPA statements, and it continues
to be echoed to this day.
“How are New Yorkers to interpret those conflicting remarks,” asked
Rep. Nadler. “I can’t even tell you what they mean –except that they
cannot both be true.”
“Yet, all is not lost,” testified Rep. Nadler. “The EPA can and
must act now to remedy this situation and make Lower Manhattan safe and
to restore public trust. Despite statements to the contrary, the
agency does currently have the authority and resources to do so, and it
must do so quickly. However, if the EPA continues to fail New Yorkers,
I will introduce legislation to mandate action. Time is of the essence.”
Rep. Nadler made it clear to the Senate Subcommittee on Clean Air, Wetlands,
and Climate Change that no action on his part would have been needed if
the EPA had just responded to his inquiry as to what information they had
that made them confident that there was absolutely no danger in sending
residents and workers back into the area, as they did in September.
The only response the EPA has given to the request is a statement saying
that, unlike at other sites around the rest of the nation, the EPA decided
to shrug-off its responsibility to test indoor air, in favor of allowing
the New York City Department of Health (NYCDOH) to do testing. NYCDOH,
which uses standards more lax that the EPA’s guidelines, will not release
a detailed report on their findings until this spring – some seven months
or more after the EPA sent residents back into the area. Rep. Nadler
said he had serious concerns about the preliminary results, however.
Rep. Nadler also testified that this was not good enough, and that only
immediate test results based on the most modern testing methods and strictest
standards would suffice.
“Based on the limited data that the NYCDOH did release in regards to
their indoor testing, many of the scientists with whom we’ve consulted
believe that full results would directly contradict the EPA’s previous
claims that the ‘air is safe to breathe and water is safe to drink,’” said
Rep. Nadler. “We need reliable testing to be done immediately – without
impeding the cleanup process, where needed, and we need it now.”
“The EPA clearly has already has the authority – and, indeed, the mandate
– to take such action,” said Rep. Nadler, citing Section 303 of the Clean
Air Act, which says the EPA has the authority in an emergency situation
to protect human health when there is an “imminent and substantial endangerment”
presented by a source of pollution. In addition, the Congressman
cited the National Contingency Plan (NCP) of the Comprehensive Environmental
Response, Compensation and Liability Act (CERCLA), which gives the EPA
authority to act on indoor air. Rep. Nadler testified that the EPA
has not fully utilized the NCP in acting around Lower Manhattan.
“I realize that I have leveled some serious charges here today, but
I believe I have the moral responsibility to do so,” said Rep. Nadler.
“We must get the facts and act swiftly and appropriately to get the job
done right. And the burden should not be on the landlords and residents
themselves. The testing procedures and cleanup measures are expensive
and must be conducted by properly trained personnel.”
Rep. Nadler has served in Congress since 1992. He represents the
8th Congressional District of New York, which includes parts of Manhattan
and Brooklyn. Following the attacks of Sept. 11th, he organized the
Ground Zero Elected Officials Task Force, which commissioned one of the
first studies of contaminants in the air around downtown.
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