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About Street roots. (Portland, OR) 1998-current | View Entire Issue (July 1, 2016)
Page 10 Commentary Watered-down promises EPA extends comment period on the Superfund clean-tip plan for the Willamette River, which drew protests for doing too little BY STEPHEN QUIRKE varying combinations of gravel, clay and to see how that happened: the polluting sand. The caps would be monitored to see industries have been putting pressure on how quickly they are destroyed by erosion. elected officials for several years, and arly this month the EPA released its “Companies that collectively make officials redirected that pressure at the EPA. draft plan to remove toxic In an Environment and Economy contamination from the bottom of the billions of dollars a year have dumped their Subcommittee meeting in September, Rep. Willamette River. The plan represents the waste in the river at the expense of human beings,” said Rahsaan Muhammad, a PHCG Kurt Schrader (D) told an EPA official, "... I culmination of 16 years of study, a federal organizer. “Bayer CropScience, Chevron, am concerned about EPA’s approach to that mandate to remove toxic substances, and Gunderson, Exxon, BP, Shell, Schnitzer harbor.... And I am worried about the extensive jockeying from government Steel, Toyota, the U.S. science that is involved in agencies, polluting industries and Navy, should pay their this,” adding “you are community and environmental groups. fair share. They are supposed to do a cost The plan stumbled out of the gate at 2 not paying their fair effectiveness analysis.... p.m. June 8 and critics took aim "In no way shape or form share.” And that is not what I am immediately. Earlier that day the does the plan address seeing in the report” “It’s a huge deal,” says Mary Ann Warner Yakama's concerns or needs Schrader then interrupted EPA announced they of the Portland Harbor Community would extend the for clean healthy fish. This EPA employee Mathy Coalition. “It’s just beyond me how they comment period on Stanislaus six times could actually put out this plan and think plan is entirely not protec their draft plan to a before letting him explain that it was OK.” tive of Yakama's treaty total of 90 days - the work the EPA had On June 24, the Portland Harbor resources." Community Coalition held a 50-person press giving people until « ROSE LONGORIA done. Sept. 6 to submit YAKAMA NATION'S SUPERFUND Earlier that year conference downtown, blasting the EPA’s COORDINATOR comments. Schrader told the draft plan, which would leave 92 percent of River advocates at Oregonian “Every time the 10-mile stretch “toxic to both people and the PHCC say that is they try to defund the wildlife indefinitely,” the Coalition said. still not enough time, EPA, I vote against that. The plan - dubbed Alternative I - calls But when people start gnawing at the edges, for removing just 150 acres of the toxic stew and are asking for a total of 120 days. “The fact is that a lot of migrant families where it’s hurtful to Oregon’s economy and at the bottom of the river. A stunning 1,876 that eat from this river leave during the only gets marginal benefit, we have to think acres of contaminated sediment would be summer to visit their families. That kind of about that.” left alone to see how well it recovers on its cuts into their 60 day comment period,” In a telephone press conference unveiling own - relying on the flow of up-stream the draft plan on June 8, EPA officials sediments to simply cover the pollution over says Mary Ann Warner. Warner and many other river advocates repeatedly described it as the most an uncertain period of time (A technique argue that the EPA’s plan represents a “balanced” plan among eight alternatives called “monitored natural recovery.”). giveaway to big polluters. And it ’ s not hard they were considering (alternatives B-I). Another 64 acres would be “capped” with STAFF WRITER E Street Roots • July 1-7, 2016 When asked whether they believed this alternative represented a balanced approach to the treaty rights of the Yakama Nation - which relies heavily on local fisheries - EPA Region 10 Administrator Dennis McLerran responded “We do,” adding, “What we heard from tribes is that they would like to see a watershed approach that actually goes beyond just the cleanup of the site itself.... they want to see a cleaner river, they want to see the risks reduced. They did not create this pollution. They did not create this insult to the river, so they would like to see a very aggressive cleanup here.” When asked if he thought the plan met treaty obligations to the tribes, McLerran responded “We do.” One of the people listening in to that press conference was Rose Longoria, Yakama Nation’s Superfund Coordinator. “I was very troubled .... and rather surprised by his response. I think the only thing that was mentioned by Dennis McLerran that we considered was the loading to the Columbia River. That is probably the only thing that I can see where EPA slightly heard Yakama and our concerns. But in no way shape or form does the plan address Yakama’s concerns or needs for clean healthy fish. This plan is entirely not protective of Yakama’s treaty resources.” * “Allowing these toxins to remain in the river to be covered up or washed down to the Columbia River is unacceptable, and even more than unacceptable, it is a violation of our human rights and it is a violation of the Yakama Nation’s treaty rights.” Rather than balancing the needs of various river users, Longoria says the agency chose to strike a balance between “the needs of industry and business and profits. “I’m rather disillusioned, quite frankly, she said. “It seems that EPA has made a decision, and that decision is very much on the side of appeasing the industries so that they will sign on to moving forward with clean up. It seems to me they understood what industry would accept, and that’s what they proposed - that’s what they built the proposal around. And they’re moving forward with that, and I’m having a hard time seeing how we get a different plan that’s actually more beneficial to the resources, the people and Yakama’s treaty rights.” In 2011, Senators Ron Wyden and Jeff Merkley joined Reps. Blumenauer and Schrader for a tour of the Portland Harbor hosted by Vigor Industrial, one of the EPA’s responsible parties. Months later they signed a letter to EPA Administrator Lisa Jackson describing the Portland Harbor as “a regional gateway to global markets” that generated tax revenue while “getting people back to work.” The letter then suggested that “as EPA performs its evaluation, it is imperative to consider the economic impacts of EPA’s decisions on our community,” adding “In this time of limited resources and budget constraints ... the Portland Harbor conversation about cleanup options should be focused on where this point of diminishing returns lies.” At a Feb. 9 Portland City Council work See PROMISES, page 11