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A longish but excellent book review on what must be an excellent book; read at
least the review -and weep -just gets worse and worse.
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Fenceline Patrol American
Scientist Magazine
Book Review
by Lauren Byrnes, Sara Mele, Daniel Faber
SACRIFICE ZONES: The Front Lines of Toxic Chemical Exposure in the United
States
Steve Lerner. xvi + 346 pp. The MIT Press, 2010. $29.95.
Steve Lerner, the research director of Commonweal’s Fair Growth Project,
always has an important environmental story to tell in his books. His latest,
Sacrifice Zones: The Front Lines of Toxic Chemical Exposure in the United
States, is a compelling and unnerving account of 12 communities fighting
for their right to a clean and healthy environment. The book shows that in
towns from Florida to Alaska, residents are discovering that the air they
breathe, the water they drink and the homes they live in have been invaded by
one or another of a host of dangerous toxins that are associated with a plague
of environmentally induced diseases. The industries and U.S. military bases
responsible for the pollution appear to be following a clear strategy of
sacrificing entire communities as a matter of expediency or to protect bottom
lines. To avoid the expense of installing highly effective pollution control
systems or disposing of toxic substances safely, they are dumping billions of
pounds of pollutants in communities where residents have little political or
economic power. It follows that those suffering the most are African Americans,
Hispanics, working-class whites and indigenous peoples such as the Yupik
Eskimos.
The “fenceline” communities that Lerner has
chosen to investigate are adjacent to some of the most environmentally
hazardous sites and facilities in the country. He believes that mixing
residential and industrial zones is a dangerous practice and should be avoided.
The book demonstrates that companies freely displace, or
“externalize,” costs of production onto the public by polluting
neighborhoods just outside the factory gates. Yet time after time these
companies escape accountability for the damage they cause. The costs may then
be absorbed by the state and the larger economy, through government-funded
cleanup operations, emergency-response programs, increased medical and
disability costs, and lower commercial and residential property values. But
sometimes the government doesn’t want to pay for the cleanup either.
Lerner says that agencies and state officials often duck their regulatory
responsibilities, sometimes because they find it politically expedient to
protect the profits of the polluters.
The environmental regulatory system in the United States is
proving to be grossly ineffective at addressing such “pollution hot
spots” once they are created. Residents of these environmental
“sacrifice zones” (a term originally used during the Cold War to
designate areas that had been contaminated with radioactive materials from
nuclear weapons production) are expected to forgo their fundamental right to a
safe and healthy environment. But instead, as Lerner vividly describes, the
ecological crises and social injustices they confront have led at least some of
them to mobilize into a powerful new movement for environmental justice.
Part of what makes Sacrifice Zones such an
interesting read is that Lerner gives names and faces to these local heroes.
The book is based on hundreds of interviews with the people who are living,
working and sometimes dying in these communities, and Lerner lets them tell
their stories in their own words. Each chapter highlights the perspective of
grassroots leaders. Their discussion of their experiences in organizing and
mobilizing their communities reminds us that even those in difficult
circumstances have the ability to create positive change. Each story offers
unique insights into the history of a particular community, the hardships of
chemical exposure, or the personal sacrifices that must be made by those
fighting corporate polluters and the state.
Consistent patterns are found in all of these sacrifice
zones: the pollution of less fortunate communities with little means to resist,
the failure of industry and government agencies to inform residents of known
contamination, the reluctance of regulatory agencies and officials to ensure
thorough and quick cleanup of contamination, and the insistence that no action
be taken until absolute proof of serious human health effects is available. On
reading the first case study in the book, one is likely to think, “What
an extraordinary situation!” But then the same political roadblocks show
up in one case study after another. Fortunately, Lerner has some major
victories to report. He outlines the forces required for bringing about social
change, including effective community leaders and grassroots organizing,
critical support from dedicated people in the scientific community, legal
assistance, organized evidence and a long-term commitment to building the
movement.
The first two sacrifice zones described are African-American
communities in Florida. One is in Ocala, where black soot from the Royal Oak
charcoal factory rains down on residents and their homes, and the other is in
Pensacola, where excavated sludge containing chemicals such as dioxin,
pentachlorophenol, benzene, toluene, dieldrin and asbestos has been piled up
into a mound 60 feet high, aptly named “Mount Dioxin.” Both
communities consider themselves to be victims of environmental racism, and the
evidence suggests that they are right. Early racial segregation in Ocala forced
blacks onto unwanted land, and afterward the city invariably found black
neighborhoods to be the ideal site for highly polluting facilities. Black
Pensacola residents demanded and eventually won relocation to escape
environmental health threats, but most were paid very little for their homes or
were given inferior replacement housing; white homeowners in a polluted
community in Pennsylvania were given much better treatment.
One sad truth that emerges from the book’s case studies
is that government and industry often fail to adequately inform residents of
contamination risks. Lerner explores the devastation that residents feel when
they are informed of serious chemical exposure only after health problems and
diseases are already rampant in the community. In the tiny African-American
town of Tallevast, also in Florida, townspeople didn’t learn of a severe
pollution problem until a resident asked members of a drilling crew why they
were boring a hole in her lawn and discovered that they had been hired by the
high-tech weapons plant down the street to test the groundwater for toxins. The
company that owned the plant, Lockheed Martin, had long known about spills of
cancer-causing chemicals into the soil and groundwater and had informed county
environmental officials but had decided against informing the townspeople, even
though they depended on wells for their drinking water. Kept in the dark for
three years, residents were denied their right to make informed choices to
protect their health.
Similarly, residents of Greenpoint, a Polish-American
community in Brooklyn, New York, where 17 to 30 million gallons of oil have
leaked into the ground over the past 100 years, were not made aware of a deal
between state regulatory officials and oil companies: The companies would
gradually remove the oil themselves, and in return the state would not impose
fines or a timetable for the cleanup. Residents have been living with
contaminated groundwater during what has proved to be a slow and inferior
cleanup process. The officials who made the secret deal, Lerner argues, denied
citizens important information, thereby failing to protect them from harm.
One of the most disturbing patterns Lerner finds in the
sacrifice zones is that government agencies (including the Environmental
Protection Agency) and local and state officials have often blocked efforts to
bring about environmental reform. Citizens rightfully expecting regulatory
agencies to be proponents of clean air, water and soil have sometimes been
shocked at their unresponsiveness. In Corpus Christi, Texas, state regulatory
officials claimed that there were no health concerns when their own air
monitoring stations indicated that levels of benzene (a carcinogen) were seven
times higher than the acceptable standard. In Pensacola, residents were
actually harmed by the grossly inadequate and dangerous EPA
“cleanup” that created Mount Dioxin. The agency dug up more than
300,000 tons of contaminated soil and placed it in a giant pile in the
community under a plastic cover that is now 10 years older than its intended
lifespan. Although he recognizes that the EPA had limited funds at its
disposal, Lerner argues that their failure to remove the contaminated soils
from Pensacola warrants a fuller evaluation of how the agency is handling toxic
exposures nationwide.
Lerner shows that despite the barriers to enforcing better
pollution control, change can occur in these communities when dedicated
individuals fight for a cleaner environment. In Corpus Christi, spurred by
illnesses in family members and “fed up with what she saw as the
do-nothing approach of state regulators,” Suzie Canales founded a group
called Citizens for Environmental Justice. She researched the health effects of
environmental pollution in the city for years, pushing for health studies and
data on air quality. Unsatisfied with the information provided by regulators,
she conducted health surveys and carried out surveillance of refineries. She
was questioned by the FBI for “suspicious activity” when she filmed
heavy particulate pollution coming off a Citgo facility. Monitoring the air for
toxins became much easier for her when an activist working for cleaner air in
Port Arthur, Texas, supplied her with an expensive monitor. With the help of
environmental organizations, she has begun successfully contesting the air
permit applications of refineries.
Why does this grandmother have to do the work that regulators
should be doing?, Lerner asks. That individuals must invest so much time and
effort to protect their right to clean air and water reveals a serious problem
within our regulatory system.
Lerner’s in-depth exploration of the often-ignored
stories of those living and dying in America’s most polluted and
neglected communities forces us to contemplate the wide disparity between the
privileged and the less fortunate. The cost of pollution-control technology is
hardly comparable to the toll that contaminants take on residents, some of whom
pay with their lives.
The thoroughness of Lerner’s research into effective
strategies for fighting pollution should prove invaluable for those who
struggle for environmental justice. This book offers an inside view of a new
form of activism, one that promises to fuse struggles for ecological
protection, economic and social justice, and human health into a more
transformative environmental politics.
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