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Cover-up: toxic waters 'will make New Orleans unsafe for a decade'

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cynatnite Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Sep-11-05 09:09 AM
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Cover-up: toxic waters 'will make New Orleans unsafe for a decade'
Toxic chemicals in the New Orleans flood waters will make the city unsafe for full human habitation for a decade, a US government official has told The Independent on Sunday. And, he added, the Bush administration is covering up the danger.

In an exclusive interview, Hugh Kaufman, an expert on toxic waste and responses to environmental disasters at the US Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), said the way the polluted water was being pumped out was increasing the danger to health.

The pollution was far worse than had been admitted, he said, because his agency was failing to take enough samples and was refusing to make public the results of those it had analysed. "Inept political hacks" running the clean-up will imperil the health of low-income migrant workers by getting them to do the work.

His intervention came as President Bush's approval ratings fell below 40 per cent for the first time. Yesterday, Britain's Deputy Prime Minister, John Prescott, turned the screw by criticising the US President's opposition to the Kyoto protocol on global warming. He compared New Orleans to island nations such as the Maldives, which are threatened by rising sea levels. Other US sources spelt out the extent of the danger from one of America's most polluted industrial areas, known locally as "Cancer Alley". The 66 chemical plants, refineries and petroleum storage depots churn out 600m lb of toxic waste each year. Other dangerous substances are in site storage tanks or at the port of New Orleans. No one knows how much pollution has escaped through damaged plants and leaking pipes into the "toxic gumbo" now drowning the city. Mr Kaufman says no one is trying to find out.

Mr Kaufman claimed the Bush administration was playing down the need for a clean-up: the EPA has not been included in the core White House group tackling the crisis. "Its budget has been cut and inept political hacks have been put in key positions," Mr Kaufman said. "All the money for emergency response has gone to buy guns and cowboys - which don't do anything when a hurricane hits. We were less prepared for this than we would have been on 10 September 2001."

He said the water being pumped out of the city was not being tested for pollution and would damage Lake Pontchartrain and the Mississippi river, and endanger people using it downstream.

http://news.independent.co.uk/world/americas/article311818.ece
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elehhhhna Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Sep-11-05 09:24 AM
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1. Wee. looks like the displaced poor will be allowed back home afterall.
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ret5hd Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Sep-11-05 10:37 AM
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4. i don't think so...the REAL cover-up will begin...
with endless dump-trucks of fill-dirt, raising those poor neighborhoods a few feet and voila: no more poor neighborhoods...only a whitebread disneyland that hires a few black sax/trumpet/trombone players on the weekends and holidays for the tourist crowd out to see "A Taste of Old Orleans" (tm).
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SheilaT Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Sep-11-05 09:46 AM
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2. Well aren't we all lucky
that hardly anyone lives downstream of Lake Pontchartrain? (exit sarcasm mode)

What I've been noticing the last week or so is to what extent disaster novels have gotten it right, especially the part about an invisible or incompetent government and lawlessness almost immediately after a major disaster. Writers of fiction, oddly enough, seem to understand that the social contract is fragile under the best of circumstances.
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PuraVidaDreamin Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Sep-11-05 10:32 AM
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3. That won't stop Halliburton
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