Guest guest Posted September 28, 1999 Report Share Posted September 28, 1999 >OPPT NEWSBREAK Monday 27 September 1999 > > > Today's " Toxic News for the Net " > Brought to you by the OPPTS Chemical Library > http://www.epa.gov/opptintr/oppt_nb.txt > > NEWS > > " Blasts at Fireworks Warehouse, Market Kill at Least 56, Hurt >348. " Washington Times, 27 September 99, A15. > At least 56 people were killed and 348 others were injured > after a series of explosions at an illegal fireworks depot > in Celaya, Mexico, yesterday. The cause of the disaster is > not yet known. > > " EPA Proposes to Prohibit Chemicals That Are Being Dumped in >Great Lakes. " Wall Street Journal, 27 Sept 99, B19. > The EPA has proposed to prohibit the dumping of so-called > " bioaccumulative chemicals of concern, or BCCs " , into the > Great Lakes. This includes mercury and PCBs. There are > about 300 " mixing zones " in industrial areas of the Great > Lakes Basin where chemicals have been dumped and diluted > with water. The proposal, which EPA hopes to finalize by > next fall, was made to ensure that Great Lakes mixing zones > are also prohibited in Illinois, New York, Ohio and > Pennsylvania. By the end of the year, EPA expects to > complete its final review of state cleanup plans by > Illinois, New York and Wisconsin. EPA has already approved > plans by Indiana, Michigan, Minnesota, Ohio and > Pennsylvania. > > " With New Diagnosis, Experts Suspect More Died of Encephalitis >[New York Report]. " New York Times, 27 Sept 99, A19. > As many as 11 people have been killed by the mosquito-borne > virus outbreak in New York, that, until recently, officials > had attributed to a single virus, St. Louis encephalitis. > Additional tests on blood samples, including those from > people who died but did not test positive for encephalitis, > revealed the presence of a different virus called the West > Nile or Kunjin virus. Officials have changed their testing > approach and are currently retesting blood samples from all > of the people who died. They announced that 1 of the 3 > initial deaths that had been attributed to encephalitis are > now being attributed to the West Nile virus. The West Nile > has also been detected in dead birds from the New York > metropolitan area. Symptoms and treatment of both viruses > are similar. > > " Nuclear Site Is Battling A Rising Tide of Waste [National >Report]. " New York Times, 27 Sept 99, A10. > Officials at the Department of Energy and Lockheed > Hanford Corporation reported that the crust in a million- > gallon radioactive-waste storage tank at the Hanford nuclear > reservation, near Richland, Washington, has grown too thick. > Its subsequent expansion, despite efforts to lance the crust > with high-powered water jets, threatens to clog a pump that > is used to prevent hydrogen gas from reaching dangerous > levels. Officials are " rushing to pump some of the waste > into another tank, possibly within a month " . A schematic > diagram of the nuclear-waste storage tank is included. > > " Owners to Demolish Dam that Blocks Fish from Breeding Areas. " >USA Today, 23 September 99, 4A. > The owners of the Condit Dam on the White Salmon River in > Washington state have agreed to begin dismantling the dam in > 2006. The dam, which was built in 1913, has been blocking > salmon and trout from reaching their breeding grounds. > Sidebar: map. > > " Stopgap Spending Measure Looms. Budget May Yet Tap Social >Security Fund. " Washington Times, 27 September 99, A1, A13. > Congressional Republicans have indicated that Congress will > pass a " 'continuing resolution' " to keep the government > running beyond Sept. 30 if the fiscal 2000 budget is not > approved by then. > > USA TODAY, FROM USA TODAY > > " Boise, Idaho [Across the USA]. " USA Today, 23 September 99, >12A. > EPA's Inspector General's Office is praising state and > regional EPA officials for improving Idaho's program that > penalizes polluters. There are now three settlements up to > $200,000 pending with companies who violated the Clean Air > Act. > > " Ellsworth, Maine [Across the USA]. " USA Today, 24 September 99, >8A. > State officials are encouraging residents to have their well > water tested for arsenic. State geologists speculate that > arsenic occurs naturally and is common in the state's > bedrock. > > " Alamogordo, New Mexico [Across the USA]. " USA Today, 24 >September 99, 8A. > The city warned residents to boil drinking water after > traces of E. coli bacteria were found in the water supply. > The source of the contamination has not been found. > > " Greenville, South Carolina [Across the USA]. " USA Today, 23 >September 99, 12A. > The Greenville County Council agreed to remove 3,000 barrels > of metal sludge from the Blackberry Valley landfill and will > try to force Carolina Plating to pay some or all of the > $700,000 cleanup costs. > > PHARMACEUTICALS IN THE NEWS > > " As Bacteria Outsmart Old Antibiotics, Drug Makers Ready New >Arsenal [Marketplace]. " Wall Street Journal, 27 Sept 99, B1, B4. > This article highlights the most recent gains and > developments the drug industry has made against " the rising > tide of medicine-resistant bugs " . Several companies, named > in the article, are pressing forward with experimental > antibiotics, called ' " super-antibiotics " ', that promise to > stand up to mutant bacteria. Among new drugs mentioned are > Synercid, approved by the FDA last week, and Daptomycin, > which is undergoing human trial testing. Zyvox is waiting > for FDA approval as well. In San Francisco this week, > infectious-disease researchers will discuss their progress > at the annual meeting of the American Society of > Microbiology. Strains of resistant bacteria are becoming a > serious problem for hospitals; the Centers for Disease > Control reports that hospital-acquired infections have risen > about 36% in the past 20 years. > > CAR CORNER > > " EPA Plans Stricter Emission Rules for Big Trucks [Economy]. " >Wall Street Journal, 27 Sept 99, A2. > In the next few weeks, the EPA is expected to unveil an > initiative proposing tougher standards for both engine > emissions and diesel fuel. The proposal is aimed at > reducing emissions of nitrogen oxide and particulate matter > (soot) from large trucks. Details will be available next > year. The proposal is tentatively expected to start taking > effect in 2007. Further details provided in the article. > > LIVING IN THE INFORMATION AGE > > " Unsuspecting Web Users Get 'Page-Jacked' into Porn Sites. " USA >Today, 23 September 99, 3A. > The Federal Trade Commission is cracking down on Internet > scams in which scammers use a popular search engine to trick > users into visiting porn sites, then disable the controls on > users' Web browsers so they can't leave the sites. > > INTER ALIA > > " Floyd Uncovers 4-Million-Year-Old Fossils [Metro in Brief: >Virginia]. " Washington Post, 27 Sept 99, B3. > In southeastern Virginia, Hurricane Floyd provided > paleogeologists with " a treasure trove of fossils at a > Colonial burg golf course where a dam gave way " . > The fossils are those of 4-million-year-old scallop shells > of the ancient mollusk known as Chesapecten jeffersonius. > Some shells are 8 inches wide. > > " Clearcutting In Your National Forests? [Advertisement: > Extinction Crisis]. " New York Times, 27 Sept 99, A11. > Advertisement is the 3rd in the Extinction Crisis series put > out by the Turning Point Project, an environmental > coalition. The ad, which declares that 95% of the original > forests in the U.S. have been destroyed, urges membership > with coalition groups (listed) that are actively campaigning > against commercial logging on public lands. By continuing > to log, the ad says, " we lose species, we lose > biodiversity... " . The ad says that our National Forests are > not protected and that " Smokey the Bear " is " auctioning off > vast tracts of trees far below market value " . The effect of > logging on the economy and on taxpayers is also described. > > " Endangered Bats. " Wall Street Journal, 27 Sept 99, A1. > Tourism executives and local officials are among critics in > North Carolina who say that mills " encourage clear-cutting, > trashing local landscapes and harming wildlife " . Last month, > the U.S. Forest Service halted logging on a national forest > in N.C. after environmentalists discovered 2 dozen Indiana > bats living there. The bats are on the endangered-species > list. > > >* All items, unless indicated otherwise, are available at the >U.S. Environmental Protection Agency >Office of Prevention, Pesticides, and Toxics Substances (OPPTS) >Chemical Library >Northeast Mall, Room B606 (Mailcode 7407) >Washington, D.C. 20460 >(202) 260-3944; FAX x4659; >E-mail for comments: library-tsca@.... >(Due to copyright restrictions, the library cannot provide >photocopies of articles.) > >*Viewpoints expressed in the above articles do not necessarily >reflect EPA policy. Mention of products does not indicate >endorsement.* > >To subscribe to OPPT Newsbreak, send the command > subscribe OPPT-NEWSBREAK Firstname Lastname >to: listserver@... >To unsubscribe, send the command > signoff OPPT-NEWSBREAK >Also available on the World Wide Web (see banner for address) >The OPPTS Chemical Library is operated by GCI Information >Services > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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