> 12 States say Bush plan aids polluters > Attorneys general in 12 states, > including New Hampshire, > yesterday said the Bush administration's plan to > change the annual Toxic Release > Inventory would help polluters and hurt the public's > right to know about health > risks from the legal release of toxic waste in their > neighborhoods. > The state officials contend that raising some > baseline reporting thresholds and > changing the annual release to every two years would > have the greatest harm in > low-income neighborhoods where plants are often > located. > "New Hampshire would lose critical toxic release > information from most companies > currently reporting, hindering state and local > efforts to protect the public > from toxic releases," said Attorney General Kelly > Ayotte of New Hampshire, the > lone Republican in the effort. > Attorneys general in California, Connecticut, > Illinois, IOWA, Maryland, > Massachusetts, New Jersey, New Mexico, New York, > Vermont and Wisconsin are also > involved. > "The public has a fundamental right to know what > hazardous materials their > children and families are being exposed to in their > communities," said Wisconsin > Attorney General Peggy Lautenschlager. "No one has > the right to hide their > pollution, and the federal government has no > business helping to cover up this > vital information." > The Bush administration in September announced it > wanted to reduce the > regulatory burden on companies by allowing some to > use a short form when they > report their pollution to the EPA's Toxic Release > Inventory. > Those changes would exempt companies from disclosing > their toxic pollution on > the long form if they claim to release fewer than > 5,000 pounds of a specific > chemical - the current limit is 500 pounds - or if > they store it onsite but > claim to release no amounts of the worst pollutants. > Those include mercury, DDT, > PCBs and other chemicals that persist in the > environment and work up the food > chain. However, companies must report any storage of > dioxin or dioxin-like > compounds, even if none are released. > "This EPA move appears to be yet another poorly > considered notion to appease a > few polluting constituents at the expense of a > valuable program," said New York > Attorney General Eliot Spitzer, the lead state > official in the effort. > EPA officials say communities will still know about > the types of toxic releases, > but not some of the details about how each chemical > was managed or released. The > inventory program began under a 1986 community > right-to-know law. If Congress > agrees, the first year the changes could be possible > would be 2008. > "EPA's proposal would create incentive to accelerate > environmental protection > and improve public health while maintaining > competitiveness for small businesses > by setting a very high environmental bar," said Eryn > Witcher, an EPA > spokeswoman. "That is, if they significantly reduce > pollution going into the > environment from their facilities, they can reduce > red tape and paperwork by > using a more streamlined reporting form." > Low-income neighborhoods would be hurt most, said > New Jersey Attorney General > Peter Harvey. > "Citizens will be stripped of one of the most > effective tools they have ever > had," Harvey said. > A three-part series by The Associated Press in > December that provided air > pollution data for neighborhoods nationwide > underscored the need for full and > frequent disclosure of the data, said Judith Enck, > an environmental specialist > in the New York Attorney General's Office. > "The toxic release inventory is the essential first > tool you look at to see > patterns as the AP did very effectively," Enck said. > Without the Toxic Release > Inventory, "you don't get very far," she said. > "States need to fight back against a Bush > administration that seems to believe > that Americans don't have a right to know about > poisons being pumped into our > air and water and wants to give polluters a free > pass," said U.S. Sen. John > Kerry, D-Mass. "We all have a right to know what is > in our environment ... the > truth is the administration is just helping big > corporate polluters avoid public > scrutiny." __________________________________________________ Do You Yahoo!? Tired of spam? Yahoo! Mail has the best spam protection around http://mail.yahoo.com - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - To view the Sierra Club List Terms & Conditions, see: http://www.sierraclub.org/lists/terms.asp