2006 CPEO Brownfields List Archive

From: Lenny Siegel <lsiegel@cpeo.org>
Date: 11 Jan 2006 20:16:44 -0000
Reply: cpeo-brownfields
Subject: [CPEO-BIF] Coalition blueprint for New Orleans recovery
 
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Natural Resources Defense Council
January 10, 2006

IN BATTLE OVER NEW ORLEANS RECOVERY BLUEPRINT, COALITION URGES FOCUS ON
HEALTH & ENVIRONMENTAL JUSTICE, FULL COMMUNITY INPUT

All Residents Have a Right to Return to a Clean, Safe City, Groups Say

NEW ORLEANS (January 10, 2006) -- As city, state and federal officials
duel over competing New Orleans recovery plans, a coalition of local and
national health and environmental organizations today issued a 10-point
plan of action for protecting residents' health and safety during and
after the rebuilding. The coalition plan identifies a number of critical
short- and long-term tasks, including cleaning up contamination,
explaining health risks, ensuring safe schools, strengthening health
care services, and reconstructing levees. (To see "Rebuilding New
Orleans," click here.)

The 13 groups released their guidelines one day before Mayor Ray Nagin's
Bring New Orleans Back Commission is expected to present the first of
several plans for reviving the city. 

"We want to make sure that all residents have the right to return to a
clean and safe city, that the hardest-hit areas are given the highest
priority for cleanup and rebuilding, and that returning residents can
fully participate in the decisions that will affect them," said Pam
Dashiell, president of the Holy Cross Neighborhood Association and
co-chair of the Bring New Orleans Back Commission's sustainability subcommittee.

The coalition's top concern is cleaning up the dried toxic sludge
blanketing much of the city. Independent tests by the Natural Resources
Defense Council (NRDC) and others found that contaminated sediment poses
long-term health risks. NRDC also found dangerously high levels of mold
contamination that no government agency is addressing.

The coalition urged local officials to press the federal government to
meet its legal obligation to remove dangerously contaminated sediment.
The groups also said local, state and federal officials must do a better
job of informing returning residents about potential risks, and provide
them with clear guidelines on how they can protect themselves when
cleaning and repairing their homes.

"We found arsenic or other cancer-causing contaminants in sediment
across the entire city," said Dr. Gina Solomon, an NRDC physician who
oversaw independent air and sediment tests in New Orleans last fall. "We
also found hot spots where there were some nasty surprises, like spilled
pesticides that have been outlawed for decades. The government has a
legal obligation to begin the cleanup immediately. People have a right
to return to healthy homes and neighborhoods."

(For more on NRDC test results and recommendations, click here.)

As for reconstruction, the coalition groups acknowledge that some
buildings reduced to rubble by the hurricanes and flooding may be
difficult to rebuild, but their overriding concern is that rebuilding
the Crescent City be done in a "fair and equitable manner." 

"Low-income residents in the hardest-hit neighborhoods need the most
support," said Beverly Wright, director of the Deep South Center for
Environmental Justice and co-chair of the city commission's
environmental health subcommittee. "The city must speed up housing
requests to FEMA with a focus on low-income families."

The coalition includes Advocates for Environmental Human Rights,
Alliance for Healthy Homes, Deep South Center for Environmental Justice,
Healthy Schools Network, Holy Cross Neighborhood Association,
Interreligious Foundation for Community Organization/Pastors for Peace,
Louisiana Environmental Action Network, National Black Environmental
Justice Network, Natural Resources Defense Council, 9/11 Environmental
Action, People's Hurricane Relief Fund, Physicians for Social
Responsibility-Louisiana, and Sierra Club Delta Chapter.

For the original release and links, go to
http://www.nrdc.org/media/pressreleases/060110.asp

-- 


Lenny Siegel
Director, Center for Public Environmental Oversight
c/o PSC, 278-A Hope St., Mountain View, CA 94041
Voice: 650/961-8918 or 650/969-1545
Fax: 650/961-8918
<lsiegel@cpeo.org>
http://www.cpeo.org
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