Delay Of Report Is Blamed On Politics
Document Suggests Public Health Risks Near Great Lakes
By Kari Lydersen
Washington Post Staff Writer
Monday, February 18, 2008; Page A03
CHICAGO -- The lead author and peer reviewers of a government report raising the possibility of public health threats from industrial contamination throughout the Great Lakes region are charging that the report is being suppressed because of the questions it raises. The author also alleges that he was demoted because of the report.
Chris De Rosa, former director of the division of toxicology and environmental medicine at the Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease Registry (ATSDR), charges that the report he wrote was a significant factor in his reassignment to a non-supervisory "special assistant" position last year. The House Committee on Science and Technology is investigating De Rosa's reassignment, in light of allegations that it was related to the Great Lakes report and his push to publicize the possibility of a cancer risk from formaldehyde fumes in Federal Emergency Management Agency trailers housing victims of Hurricane Katrina.
De Rosa said his agency cited the Great Lakes report being below expectations as one of the reasons for his removal from the post he had held since 1992. The ATSDR is housed within the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. CDC spokesman Glen Nowak said he could not discuss personnel issues. The Center for Public Integrity, a nonprofit investigative group, has obtained a copy of the draft report and posted portions on its Web site...
Portions of the report posted on the Center for Public Integrity's Web site say that of more than 100 hazardous waste sites surveyed, two pose "urgent public health hazards" that could cause health problems with less than a year of exposure and 29 pose "public health hazards" that could cause problems with more than a year of exposure. Among the contaminants logged at different sites are now-banned DDT, as well as PCBs, mercury, lead, cyanide and dioxins. Breast, lung and colon cancer, as well as infant mortality, were found to be above expected levels near many of the contaminated sites. The report estimates that 230,000 "vulnerable" people -- defined as children younger than 6, the elderly and reproductive-age women -- live within one mile of contaminated sites in the Great Lakes region, mostly around Lake Michigan...
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2008/02/17/AR2008021702186.html