Decades-old dioxins pollute river, divide US community
MIDLAND, Michigan, Dec 13 (AFP) Dec 13, 2009
The signs posted along Michigan's Tittabawassee River warning of dangerous
dioxin levels don't really worry fisherman David Mitchell. If he catches a fish
that swims here year round he tosses it back. But if he hooks a walleye -- only
an occasional visitor to the river and has lower dioxin levels than the year-rounders
-- then it's time for dinner.
"I don't think it's as big a concern as what people are saying it is," said
Mitchell, 51, as he sat on a pail on the muddy bank and cast his line out into
the water.
"I can remember when the rivers never froze in the winters and now they're
freezing over, so the pollution in the rivers has got to be a lot less than it
was."
The Tittabawassee may be clean enough to freeze now, but it remains one of the
most contaminated waterways in the United States and a key example of the
nation's struggle to deal with its industrial past.
President Barack Obama's administration has vowed to take tougher action against
polluters and has invested nearly a billion dollars of stimulus funds to spur
cleanup efforts.
But the decades-long conflict over this one watershed underscores the
complexities of trying to force companies into environmental action.
It also foreshadows the bitter battle the White House will face when it comes to
implementing the emissions cuts needed to address climate change -- the focus of
talks in Copenhagen to thrash out a deal for the global warming summit there on
Dec 17 and 18.
---- 'This is a 30-year-old issue' ---
--------------------------------------
Dioxins are chemicals so toxic they get measured in trillionths of a gram. They
linger for years in both the environment and the body and pose a host of health
risks from cancer to birth defects.
For most of the last century, Dow Chemical Company dumped waste from the
sprawling complex near its Midland, Michigan headquarters right into the
Tittabawassee and burned it in unfiltered incinerators.
Among that waste were dioxins created during the production of herbicides like
the Vietnam-era Agent Orange and other chemicals which were carried downstream
into the Saginaw River and Lake Huron.
Such dumping was standard industrial practice until the environmental movement
-- horrified by the sight of rivers and lakes so polluted they would catch on
fire -- succeeded in pressing the federal government to start regulating air,
water and ground pollution in 1970.
Since then, Dow -- one of the world's biggest chemical companies with 2008 sales
of 57.4 billion dollars -- has invested millions in sophisticated pollution
controls which carefully manage the toxic waste it produces.
Dow estimates its total accrued liability for the Midland-area cleanup is 312
million dollars and concluded in its 2008 annual report that "the possibility is
remote" that the cleanup costs will have an "adverse impact" on its balance
sheet.
Yet little has been done to clean up the dioxins which spread for more than 50
miles (80 kilometers) downstream and downwind of the Midland plant.
"Dow wrote the book, they wrote the book on how to delay things," said
environmental activist Michelle Hurd Riddick of the Saginaw-based Lone Tree
Council who has spent years fighting for a comprehensive cleanup.
"This is a 30 year-old-issue and no one has yet to have the political will to
move that company."
---- A series of scandals ---
-----------------------------
There are a lot of different reasons why the cleanup has taken so long.
Much of the 1980's were spent on figuring out how to prevent further pollution
from the chemical complex.
Much of the 1990's were spent trying to understand the extent of the
contamination.
Dow has spent much of the past decade fighting with the state of Michigan about
what needs to be done about it and insisting that the dioxins do not pose a
significant health risk to residents.
A series of scandals have engendered a great deal of mistrust.
A 1983 congressional investigation found that the Environmental Protection
Agency allowed Dow to cut critical passages from a report so it would not
conclude that Dow was responsible for the bulk of the contamination in the
Tittabawassee.
The head of the state regulatory agency was accused in 2002 of covering up
evidence of contamination in the area and blocking further investigations.
And just last year the regional EPA administrator accused the Bush
administration of forcing her out of her job by for being too tough on Dow.
Amid pressure from the Obama administration, Dow agreed in September to accept
responsibility for the contamination and get to work on a comprehensive cleanup
plan under the EPA's Superfund program.
"We think that we have a really solid tool in place with this proposed
settlement to really move the process forward quickly," said Wendy Carney, the
regional Superfund manager who is overseeing the project.
Dow has kept its public comments on the issue to the absolute minimum.
"We're focused right now on moving this agreement forward and focused on the
implementation of that agreement so we can move towards resolution," Dow
spokeswoman Mary Draves told AFP.
Critics say the deal is little different from one Dow reached with the state of
Michigan in 2003 which has never been fully implemented.
Even if the EPA exerts more pressure than the state, it will be several years
until the actual cleanup work begins and at least a decade for it to be
completed.
--- A community divided ---
---------------------------
The issue has divided the community, said Ralph Wirtz, managing editor of the
Midland Daily News.
Many here are not sure if the benefit outweighs the cost. They worry about the
impact on their property values or simply don't believe the dioxins are actually
that dangerous.
Others call the river a chemical soup which threatens the health of thousands of
people and hampers future economic development.
The real question, Wirtz said, is "how do you go about cleaning this up, setting
this straight without bankrupting an entire community?"
At a public meeting held downriver at Saginaw Valley State University, the
desire to just get this over with was palpable. So was the fear of what would
happen next.
Ron Thurlow, who owns a riverfront house in nearby Freeland, was worried about
the cottonwood trees after seeing how Dow had stripped the banks bare at a test
site.
"Some of us have concerns that the river's going to end up looking like a ditch
in Kansas, no trees for as far as you can see," he told EPA officials.
"Or it's the old Vietnam analogy we had to destroy the village to save it and I
hope we're not going to end up destroying this river to save it."
http://www.spacedaily.com/2006/091213051118.y5c0wm5w.html
For additional articles like this one, go to the Tittabawassee River Watch web site www.trwnews.net for complete coverage of the Tittabawassee River Dow Chemical dioxin contamination saga. . The Newspaper / Media page of our site contains an extensive archive of media articles dating back to January 2002. The source organization's web site link is listed to the right of the article, visit often for other news in our area. The Newspaper / Media page may be accessed by scrolling down to the bottom of the CONTENTS section and clicking on the Newspaper/Media link.