FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE:
October 7,
2005
CONTACT:
Christina Kreitzer (415) 977-5619
DELlSLE RESIDENTS LACKING CONFIDENCE IN GOVERNMENT'S SAFETY
ASSURANCES
Groups Resort to Independent
Testing in Schools, Neighborhoods
DeLisle, MS -- Local residents,
concerned that government officials are
playing down health risks around the
DuPont chemical plant, are taking
matters in their own hands by enlisting the
help of private organizations
to evaluate whether Katrina's storm surge
spread toxic contaminants in the
surrounding area. Working with the
Sierra Club, environmental consultant
and chemist Wilma Subra is conducted
testing in the residential
neighborhoods surrounding the plant as well as the
DeLisle Elementary
School. Results from the testing will be available in
roughly two weeks.
Subra provides technical assistance on environmental
issues to Southern
Mutual Help Association (SMHA), a private organization
founded in 1969 to
aid distressed rural communities.
"The flooding of
the DuPont DeLisle chemical plant created a serious cause
for concern over
the safety of the residences and schools surrounding the
area," said
Subra. "Officials should have been the ones conducted testing
in these
areas."
Nearly nine feet of water buried DeLisle's chemical facility, the
country's
second-largest titanium dioxide maker, in at least 7 to 9 feet of
hurricane
floodwaters. The plant produces 14 millions pounds of toxic
waste
annually, but Mississippi Department of Environmental Quality
(MDEQ)
officials claim that no hazardous material leaks have been found at
the
DuPont facility. MDEQ and the Environmental Protection Agency
just
recently began monitoring the facility.
"How can DuPont and MDEQ
officials possibly claim that the area around the
DeLisle plant is safe?"
said Becky Gillette, co-chair of the Sierra Club's
Mississippi Chapter.
"Families will head back to their destroyed or
flooded houses to clean and
save their possessions and may be exposed to
harmful poisons that they won't
even know about. Communities have a right
to know about the potential
health risks associated with the plant's toxic
waste contaminating soil and
drinking
water."
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