The Tittabawassee River downstream from the Dow chemical plant in Midland, Mich., washes carcinogens into Lake Huron. Anglers are warned not to eat the fish. (Chris Walker / Chicago Tribune / August 11, 2009)
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By Michael Hawthorne
November 6, 2009 E-mail Print Share Text Size
Reporting from Saginaw, Mich. - Every spring, Dow
Chemical sponsors a fishing tournament "celebrating all
things walleye" on the river that flows past its
sprawling world headquarters.
Signs warn anglers not to eat the fish, which are
contaminated with cancer-causing dioxins that the
company dumped into the Tittabawassee River for most of
the last century. Yet tournament organizers sell hats
featuring the slogan "Dioxins My Ass."
Such conflicting messages are common in this picturesque
and economically distressed region, where Dow is a major
employer but is also responsible for poisoning a vast
river valley that stretches more than 50 miles into the
Saginaw Bay and Lake Huron.
Now, after three decades of promises by federal and
state officials to force Dow to clean up the mess, the
Obama administration is stepping in with a new plan
intended to scour away decades of contamination that
turned this area into one of the nation's most polluted
sites.
Last month, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency and
Dow announced a deal they contend will finally address
dioxin contamination from the company's chemical complex
in nearby Midland, about 200 miles northeast of Chicago.
The success -- or failure -- of what happens here could
affect dozens of other heavily polluted sites along the
Great Lakes. The Saginaw Bay is one of 31 "areas of
concern" on the U.S. side of the lakes that wash toxic
chemicals into the world's largest source of fresh
surface water.
Under provisions in the federal Superfund law, Dow will
be required to evaluate and clean up dioxin-contaminated
land along the Tittabawassee and Saginaw rivers starting
this winter. Dow also agreed to work downstream from its
plant to remove or cap dioxin-contaminated sediment,
preventing toxic muck from churning back into the water
and spreading farther into the Saginaw Bay. The goal is
to restore the watershed by 2018.
"We are on the right track now," said Robert Sussman,
senior policy advisor to EPA Administrator Lisa Jackson.
"Once the work begins, we will have the momentum to get
this done."
Given the sluggish pace of previous cleanup work, the
EPA's inspector general recently had concluded the sites
wouldn't be restored until 2086. The Obama
administration has promised to set aside more money to
speed things up and is pushing to restore a tax on
polluters to help cover the tab, estimated to reach $4.5
billion.
Dioxins, a family of compounds that were manufacturing
byproducts of the Vietnam-era herbicide Agent Orange and
other chlorinated chemicals, are so toxic they are
measured in trillionths of a gram. The most potent,
known as 2,3,7,8-TCDD, was responsible for two of the
nation's most infamous environmental disasters, leading
to the evacuations of the Love Canal neighborhood in
upstate New York and the entire town of Times Beach, Mo.
In the Saginaw area, Dow has fiercely resisted federal
and state cleanup efforts and insisted the pollution
doesn't threaten people or wildlife.
Company records show Dow has known since at least the
mid-1960s that dioxins could sicken or even kill people.
Based on independent studies, the EPA says the chemicals
can cause cancer and disrupt the immune and reproductive
systems, even at very low levels. The agency says there
is no safe level of exposure.
Critics, including the EPA, have accused Dow of
repeatedly delaying action and misleading the public
about the dangers of dioxins. The company insists the
contamination does not pose health risks but hailed its
deal with the EPA anyway.
"We are committed -- in both our words and our actions
-- to moving forward . . . to resolve the issue," Dow
spokeswoman Mary Draves said in an e-mail response to
questions.
One small sign of the company's commitment: Dow recently
agreed to follow through on a 2004 legal agreement with
Michigan officials to pay for more dioxin warnings along
the contaminated rivers. The additional signs should be
up by next spring -- in time for the annual walleye
tournament on the Tittabawassee.
As for the watershed restoration, critics remain wary.
"This cleanup can get done, and a company like Dow can
afford it," said Tracey Easthope of the Ecology Center,
a Michigan environmental group. "But we are under no
illusions that this will be carried out without constant
pressure from concerned citizens."
mhawthorne@tribune.com
http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/nation/la-na-dow-dioxin6-2009nov06,0,6503229.story