Guest guest Posted December 29, 2002 Report Share Posted December 29, 2002 What else haven't they warned us about? This is just unbelievable! The Libby mines were operated by WR Grace. Anyone ever heard of Woburn, MA and the movie "A Civil Action"? The government works FOR US but they seem to forget this. We have to find ways to remind them. How can there even be a QUESTION about notifying people when their health is at risk? There is quite enough information out there about the dangers of exposure to toxic levels of mold that our government has known about for years. Let's hope the New Year will bring us closer to getting well and reaching some sort of resolution to our problems associated with exposure. Mulvey son THIS STORY HAS BEEN FORMATTED FOR EASY PRINTING Boston Sunday Globe, December 29, 2002, Page A-14 By Schneider, St. Louis Post-Dispatch, 12/29/2002 WASHINGTON - Last spring, the Environmental Protection Agency was on the verge of warning millions of Americans that their attics and walls might contain insulation that was contaminated with asbestos. But at the last minute, the White House intervened. The warning has never been issued. The agency's refusal to share its knowledge of what is believed to be a widespread health risk has been criticized by a former EPA administrator who served under two Republican presidents, and physicians and scientists who have treated victims of the contamination. The announcement to warn the public had been expected in April. It was to have accompanied a declaration by the EPA of a public health emergency in Libby, Mont. In that town near the Canadian border, ore from a vermiculite mine was contaminated with a lethal asbestos fiber called tremolite that has killed or sickened thousands of miners and their families. Ore from the Libby mine was shipped around the world, and was in insulation called Zonolite that was used in millions of homes, businesses, and schools. A public health emergency declaration had never been issued by any agency. It would have authorized the removal of the insulation from homes in Libby and provided long-term care for those made sick. Additionally, it would have triggered notification of property owners elsewhere who might be exposed to the insulation. Zonolite insulation was sold throughout North America from the 1940s through the 1990s. Almost all of the vermiculite used came from the Libby mine, last owned by W. R. Grace & Co. In a meeting in mid-March, EPA Administrator Christie Whitman and nne Horinko, head of the Superfund program, met with Peronard, the EPA coordinator of the Libby cleanup. Whitman and Horinko agreed they had to move ahead on a declaration, a participant in the meeting reported. By early April, the declaration was ready to go. News releases had been written and rewritten. Lists of governors to call and politicians to notify had been compiled. Internal e-mail messages show that discussions had been held on whether Whitman would go to Libby for the announcement. It was never made. Interviews and documents show that days before EPA was set to make the declaration, the plan was thwarted by the White House Office of Management and Budget, which had been told of the proposal months earlier. Both the OMB and the EPA acknowledge that the White House agency was involved, but neither agency would discuss how or why. Former EPA administrator Ruckelshaus, who worked for Presidents M. Nixon and Reagan, called the decision not to notify homeowners of the dangers posed by Zonolite insulation ''the wrong thing to do.'' ''When the government comes across this kind of information and doesn't tell people about it, I just think it's wrong, unconscionable, not to do that,'' he said. ''Your first obligation is to tell the people ... of the possible danger.'' This story ran on page A14 of the Boston Globe on 12/29/2002. © Copyright 2002 Globe Newspaper Company. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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