Public Right to Know About Toxics is Under Attack
January 3, 2006

The US Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) is proposing to
radically cut back on the amount of information disclosed to the
public about toxic chemicals used in their communities. The
federal Toxics Release Inventory (TRI) currently requires
companies to publicly disclose information about certain toxic
chemicals they are releasing into the air, land, and water.
EPA's proposed changes would allow corporations to dump more
toxic chemicals without disclosure, and to update the public
less frequently on toxic releases.

The Washington Post reports, "...analysis of the rule's effect
showed that 922 of the nation's more than 33,000 residential Zip
codes would lose 100 percent of detailed pollution data if
companies migrated to the short form."

The Toxics Release Inventory is an invaluable resource for
community members working to clean up their neighborhoods and
researching why they may be getting sick. The TRI was created
following a massive leak of highly toxic gas from a pesticide
plant that killed at least 15,000 nearby residents in Bhopal,
India in 1984 (http://ga4.org/ct/bd1QID91JRb7/). Alarmed
community members and experts in the U.S. demanded to know
exactly which chemicals they were being exposed to in their own
cities and towns. Despite fierce opposition from chemical
companies and the Reagan Administration, citizens convinced
Congress to pass the Emergency Planning and Community Right to
Know Act in 1985, which includes the TRI provisions that require
companies to report releases of certain toxic chemicals. EPA
then publishes this information in an accessible online
database.

Data collected through the TRI program have served as a
cornerstone of community efforts to fight pollution in their
backyards as well as industry programs to reduce toxic
emissions. In the city of Richmond, California, for example,
community environmental groups used TRI data as one of their
sources to identify the Chevron oil refinery as the number one
polluter in the city. Alarmed citizens used their findings to
pressure Chevron to close down older portions of the plant and
install new equipment to reduce toxic releases. "The [TRI]
information is very powerful in raising the community's
awareness and in getting them involved.The company said that
they are not a problem, but the information enables us to show
that there is a concern," noted Henry Clark, Executive Director
of Richmond's West County Toxics Coalition.

EPA is now proposing to weaken this highly successful and
popular TRI program with three changes that will endanger public
health and the environment throughout the country and
internationally. These changes will:

-Cut this successful program in half by eliminating every other
year of reporting;

-Allow companies to release ten times more toxins than currently
allowed before having to report how much pollution they produce
and release;

-Permit facilities to hide information on low volumes of
persistent bioacculuative toxins (PBTs), which are dangerous
even in very small quantities. PBTs are chemicals that are
toxic, persist in the environment, travel long distances through
air and water currents, and build up in through the food chain
and in people's bodies.

These changes would drastically reduce the number of facilities
that are required to report their toxic releases--meaning that
fewer communities will be able to use TRI data to track
chemicals that could be affecting their health. Less frequent
reporting would make obtaining up-to-date information and
tracking trends more difficult for the public.

The TRI web site (http://ga4.org/ct/611QID91JRbm/) currently
provides everyone with access to the Internet with detailed data
on exactly where certain toxic chemicals are being used, and how
they are disposed. Neighbors can view data on the toxics used in
a factory nearby, or levels of toxic pollution dumped in
particular postal codes, or at the county, state, regional or
national level. The TRI web site can also generate maps that
identify the most toxic counties in the state or nation, and
what industries are producing and emitting these toxins.

Linking toxics release information with census data has allowed
environmental justice researchers to document how minorities and
low-income people are disproportionately affected by toxic
pollution. Environmental justice groups in Louisiana, for
example, have used the TRI database to reveal the alarmingly
high concentration of industrial toxic releases in
African-American communities along the Mississippi River
corridor known as "Cancer Alley." Growing public knowledge of
toxics released in this region has allowed local environmental
groups to sound the alarm about the need to monitor and cleanup
toxic substances in the residue of hurricanes Katrina and Rita.

EPA is accepting public comments on the proposed reporting
cutbacks until January 13th. Since the agency announced plans to
weaken TRI pollution reporting on September 21st, hundreds of
organizations and thousands of individuals have voiced their
opposition to the proposed cutbacks. During a "TRI Day of
Action" in December 2005, doctors, first responders, workers and
public officials spoke out against the EPA plans at a national
press event.

As a result of this coordinated effort, opposition to the TRI
rollback is gaining traction in Congress, the media and among
the general public. Several U.S. Senators, including Hillary
Clinton (D-NY) and John McCain (R-AZ), sent a letter to EPA
expressing their concern over the proposals. More than 100 TRI
stories have appeared in national and regional newspapers,
including ten newspaper editorials against the proposals. The
public watchdog organization OMB Watch has tracked more than
15,000 official public comments sent to EPA against the
proposals.

Take action: You can help keep TRI strong and up-to-date. Tell
EPA not to weaken the public's right to know and to maintain the
TRI in its current form as a vital source of critical
environmental health data.

To send your comment on TRI to the EPA, go to our PAN Action
Alert (http://ga4.org/ct/b11QID91JRbI/).

For more information, see http://ga4.org/ct/6d1QID91JRbE/

Sources:
Toxics Release Inventory Program, U.S. EPA. 2003. How Are the
Toxics Release Inventory Data Used? Government, Business,
Academic, and Citizen Uses. EPA-260-R-002-004 May, 2003.
http://ga4.org/ct/bp1QID91JRbj/

OMB Watch. 2005. "More than 15,000 People (and Counting) Oppose
Toxics Release Inventory Changes" in Community Right-to-Know
eUpdate, November / December 2005.

Orum, Paul. 1990. "Citizens Target Giant Refinery." Interview
with Henry Clark in 1990 October Working Notes Newsletter
http://ga4.org/ct/b71QID91JRbu/

Skrzycki, Cindy "Chemical-Data Plan Catalyzes Opposition"
Washington Post 1/3/06.
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2006/01/02/AR2006010201730.html

Contact: PANNA
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