Search This Blog

Translate

Blog Archive

Middleboro Review 2

NEW CONTENT MOVED TO MIDDLEBORO REVIEW 2

Toyota

Since the Dilly, Dally, Delay & Stall Law Firms are adding their billable hours, the Toyota U.S.A. and Route 44 Toyota posts have been separated here:

Route 44 Toyota Sold Me A Lemon



Sunday, May 22, 2016

RSN: Clinton to California: "Drop Dead", Toxic Battery Plant Has to Tell Its 12,000 Neighbors in Los Angeles They Might Get Cancer




Reader Supported News | 22 May 16

Can Anyone Help With a Donation, Please
We are way behind where we should be at this point in the month. Really because only a precious few of you are donating. The rest are not but can.
Now would be a great time.
Marc Ash 
Curator, Reader Supported News

If you would prefer to send a check: 
Reader Supported News 
PO Box 2043 
Citrus Hts 
CA 95611



It's Live on the HomePage Now: 
Reader Supported News

William Boardman | Clinton to California: "Drop Dead" 
Hillary Clinton speaks at a campaign rally in Las Vegas, Nevada, February 19, 2016. (photo: Reuters/David Becker) 
William Boardman, Reader Supported News 
Boardman writes: "By now, anyone paying the least attention knows that the dishonest Democratic establishment and dishonest mainstream media have created a false narrative of bad behavior by Bernie Sanders supporters at the Nevada State Democratic State Convention on May 14." 
READ MORE
The "Patriots" Primed to Fight the Government 
Kevin Sullivan, The Washington Post 
Sullivan writes: "Law enforcement officials and the watchdog groups that track the self-styled 'patriot' groups call them anti-government extremists, militias, armed militants or even domestic terrorists. Some opponents of the largely white and rural groups have made fun by calling them 'Y'all Qaeda' or 'Vanilla ISIS.'" 
READ MORE
How Big Pharma Uses Charity Programs to Cover for Drug Price Hikes 
Benjamin Elgin and Robert Langreth, Bloomberg 
Excerpt: "This is not a feel-good story. It's a story about why expensive drugs keep getting more expensive, and how U.S. taxpayers support a billion-dollar system in which charitable giving is, in effect, a very profitable form of investing for drug companies-one that may also be tax-deductible." 
READ MORE
Drones and the Conscientious Objector 
John Kaag and Clancy Martin, The Boston Globe 
Excerpt: "Over the course of American warfare, the battlefield has grown increasingly less intimate. If the soldiers at Lexington and Concord had to be within 100 feet to seriously injure their British foes, killing by drones allows US troops to be half a world away from their targets. The psychological toll, however, has not necessarily dissipated in kind." 
READ MORE
The Canine Terror: Dogs and the Repression of African Americans 
Tyler Parry and Charlton Yingling, Jacobin 
Excerpt: "In 2014, twenty-four-year-old Maurice McCreary was sentenced to thirty-five years in prison after fatally shooting a police dog that had latched onto his arm as McCreary ran from the police. Federal law now states that a person can receive up to ten years in prison for assaulting, maiming, or killing a police dog." 
READ MORE
Mexico Says Yes to Marriage Equality 
Vanessa Calva Ruiz, The Hill 
Ruiz writes: "Even though the legislative process will now have to take its due course, this announcement is an enormous step towards the inclusion and defense of the Mexican LGBT community." 
READ MORE
Toxic Battery Plant Has to Tell Its 12,000 Neighbors in Los Angeles They Might Get Cancer 
Aura Bogado, Grist 
Bogado writes: "A smelter in the Los Angeles area has 30 days to tell its 12,000 neighbors that the plant's arsenic emissions put them at a high risk for developing cancer. It also has to come up with a plan to reduce those emissions - but that could take years, if it happens at all." 
READ MORE
A smelting plant. (photo: iStockphoto)
A smelting plant. (photo: iStockphoto)
 smelter in the Los Angeles area has 30 days to tell its 12,000 neighbors that the plant’s arsenic emissions put them at a high risk for developing cancer. It also has to come up with a plan to reduce those emissions — but that could take years, if it happens at all.
Quemetco operates a lead-acid battery recycling plant in City of Industry, a largely Latino community in the San Gabriel Valley, east of downtown L.A. The South Coast Air Quality Management District (AQMD) notified the company on Tuesday that it must inform neighbors of the high cancer risk its operation poses in City of Industry and three adjacent communities. As it happens, all four are neighborhoods full of people of color, mostly Latino and Asian.
The arsenic, a carcinogen, gets into the air as a byproduct of Quemetco’s lead smelting. But health officials didn’t consider the level at which the plant emits arsenic life-threatening until about a year ago, when the state updated its health risk assessment standards. After an extensive evaluation, the state determined that previous guidelines had underestimated the consequences of toxic emissions such as arsenic, especially for children.
Aside from having 30 days to inform its neighbors of the high cancer risk, Quemetco has 180 days to come up with a proposal to reduce its arsenic emissions in line with AQMD’s standards. Once regulators approve its new proposal, the plant then has another three years to implement it. That means it could take nearly four years for Quemetco’s neighbors to finally breathe a small sigh of relief. And that’s only if things go according to plan.
Quemetco’s lead-acid battery recycling plant – the only one operating in the western U.S. – hasn’t had a great record of complying with air-pollution regulations. California’s toxic substances agency outlined a plan to test for arsenic and lead within a half-mile radius to Quemetco last October. The company opposed the plan, claiming that it was impossible to know whether Quemetco or another company was polluting the area. The two struck a deal, which initially limits the scope of testing to a smaller, quarter-mile area Quemetco suggested.
The AQMD confirms that Wayne Nastri, who took over as the agency’s top executive last month, recused himself from any decisions on the plant because Quemetco is his former client.
http://readersupportednews.org/news-section2/318-66/37003-toxic-battery-plant-has-to-tell-its-12000-neighbors-in-los-angeles-they-might-get-cancer


No comments: