The
Lone Star Chapter of the Sierra Club consists
of over 25,000 members and supporters. The Chapter
supports 13 Regional Sierra Club Groups in Texas,
from Big Bend to the Piney Woods.
Located in Austin, the Lone Star Chapter's State Conservation Office
serves Sierrans as their grassroots communications center. We also provide
Sierrans with a full time professional activist staff employed to represent
Sierrans as we fight at the state level to protect and conserve Texas'
diverse and valuable natural heritage.
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE: June 12, 2009
Contact:
Jim Pew/Raviya Ismail, Earthjustice, (202) 667-4500
Neil Carman, Sierra Club, (512) 477-1729
Donna Hoffman, Sierra Club (512) 477-1729
U.S. EPA to Review Standards for Hazardous Waste
Combustors
Failure to regulate has allowed release of tons
of toxic pollution released annually
Austin, DC – The U.S. Environmental Protection
Agency has agreed to a new review of a Bush-era
rule that fails to provide adequate controls on
highly toxic emissions released by facilities that
burn hazardous waste.
Sierra Club, represented by Earthjustice, challenged
the rule when it was issued by the Bush administration
in late 2005.
“Facilities that burn hazardous waste spew
poisons into backyards and playgrounds in communities
in Texas, including the Texas Industries (TXI)
cement complex at Midlothian, Texas. TXI has been
burning hazardous industrial waste and dumping
toxic chemicals into the air of Midlothian for
over a decade effecting people’s health,” said
Neil Carman , Clean air director of Sierra Club's
Lone Star Chapter. “Before her first taste
of milk, an American infant has already received
an in utero slug of toxic chemicals which have
passed from hazardous waste combustor emissions
into the food chain, from the food chain into her
mother’s body, and, crossing the placenta,
from her mother's body into her own. We are counting
on EPA to end this toxic pattern by drawing up
some decent, lawful emissions standards.”
Texas leads the nation in the number of hazardous
waste incinerators. Communities with either incinerators
or hazardous waste burning cement kilns include
Port Arthur, Houston, Deer Park, Pasadena, Freeport,
Midlothian, and other Gulf Coast communities.
Sierra Club is seeking a standard that would substantially
reduce emissions of dioxins, mercury, lead, arsenic,
chromium, and other toxic substances that are emitted
by the approximately 265 facilities that burn hazardous
waste in America. These facilities include incinerators,
some cement kilns, and many industrial boilers.
A related rule that EPA proposed in May for cement
kilns that do not burn hazardous waste will reduce
toxic emissions by approximately 75-95%, saving
600-1600 lives and billions of dollars each year.
“By issuing a rule for hazardous waste combustors
that complies with the Clean Air Act — instead
of the illegal rules previously issued by the Bush
administration — EPA could provide similar
benefits for people in communities exposed to toxic
pollution from hazardous waste burning incinerators,
cement kilns, and boilers,” said Earthjustice
attorney James Pew. “Families who live near
these combustors are at a higher risk for cancer
and other illnesses. It has been a long struggle
to bring these polluters under control and we’ve
still got a long way to go, but we’re pleased
EPA is finally moving in the right direction.”
In 2001, the United States Court of Appeals for
the District of Columbia Circuit agreed that EPA’s
first rule for hazardous waste combustors was flatly
unlawful. Under the Bush administration, EPA committed
to issue a replacement rule by 2005. However, the
2005 replacement standards were unlawful as well
and the Bush administration was forced to admit
in 2008 that more than half of the emission standards
it established were defective.
The Obama administration has now reviewed the
rule and determined that all the emission standards
in the rule need to be reexamined.
“Cement kilns, incinerators and other facilities
that burn hazardous waste are putting much of that
waste into the air and distributing into neighboring
communities,” said SCarman. “When they
burn waste with mercury in it, they contaminate
their neighbors with mercury. When they burn lead
and arsenic, they expose their neighbors to lead
and arsenic. At a minimum, these facilities should
have to operate as cleanly as possible. Under the
previous administration, they were permitted to
avoid installing the best controls and to emit
far more toxic pollution than the law allows.”
“Hazardous waste is not burned in the comfortable
suburbs,” said Donna Hoffman, Sierra Club’s
Lone Star Chapter communications director. “The
vast majority of it is burned in poor communities,
and much of it in minority communities that are
already badly overburdened with toxic pollution.
Treating these communities as our dumping grounds
for environmental toxins is not acceptable, and
we are glad that Administrator Jackson has put
us on course to stop this injustice.”
Earthjustice and Sierra Club have been committed
to reducing toxic emissions from a host of industrial
polluters such as PVC and plywood manufacturers,
cement kilns, power plants, industrial waste
incinerators and mobile sources such as cars,
buses and trucks. In all of these cases, the
Bush administration’s dismissal of federal
law, court orders and meaningful pollution reduction
have forced conservation, public health and community
groups into litigation to seek stronger clean
air protections.