I've posted an article over at Political Climate eying the situation in Gert Town, a run-down New Orleans neighborhood that for decades has been plagued by environmental problems and contamination from a disused chemical plant. Last fall, local officials declared that the plant's former site had finally been cleaned up - but local residents aren't so sure:
While the site itself may now be safe, locals fear that neighboring blocks may have been left dangerously polluted by open-air mixing processes that routinely sent clouds of toxic dust billowing across the neighborhood. “You couldn't set on your porch, you couldn't be outside,” one longtime resident told the Living On Earth radio show. “It’d strangle you.” Recent tests by the Natural Resources Defense Council suggest that Katrina’s floodwaters may have made the situation even worse, swirling toxic slurry from the plant across the neighborhood.The EPA’s own testing suggests locals are right to be concerned: Soil samples show DDT derivatives at 3.8 times acceptable levels, and Dieldrin at almost 40 times the safe limit. Other chemicals – Endrin, Endosulphan, and the termite killer Chlordane – were also found in dangerously high concentrations. So far, though, officials have refused to clean up anything but the plant itself, arguing that pollution levels on neighboring blocks aren’t high enough to affect residents’ health.
Read more here.










