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Mothers, don't let your babies
grow up to be botanists. Or birders, hunters, campers, or off-road
hell-raisers. At least not at Clear Creek Management Area in central
California.
Since 1979, when researchers at
UC Berkeley confirmed that the Clear Creek recreational area contained huge
amounts of lethal chrysotile, the federal government has been trying to
decide what to do about this toxic playground. Site of the Superfund toxic
dump site created by the defunct Atlas asbestos mines, off-roaders, birders,
native plant enthusiasts, hikers, hunters, and families spend thousands of
hours enjoying this natural wonderland.
On May 1, the Bureau of Land
Management officially closed 31,000 acres of Clear Creek Management Area
after the Environmental Protection Agency concluded that the area was
potentially lethal due to the high amounts of asbestos disturbed during even
casual activities.
Deadly data
Rangers and other workers at
Clear Creek regularly wear hazmat suits and employ decontamination
procedures when leaving work to avoid bringing home lethal asbestos fibers
to their unsuspecting families. Some recreational enthusiasts, however, have
remained sanguine. The Blue Ribbon Coalition, a non-profit advocacy group
funded by off-road industry giants like
Kawasaki,
disputes the study's findings and promises an immediate legal battle.
The EPA report was released
after a data-intensive survey that spanned more than four years and involved
extensive on-site analysis using activity-based air sampling, fiber analysis
using transmission electron microscopy, and nine days of intensive sampling
for motorcycling, ATV riding, SUV riding, off-road vehicle riding, hiking,
and camping.
Building on the more than one
hundred years of empirical data that prove beyond any doubt that asbestos is
a lethal carcinogen, the EPA's report unequivocally concluded that "There
was no combination of scenario, toxicity value, or visits per year that was
below the lower end of EPA's acceptable risk range," and that even one visit
per year for recreational scenarios put users above EPA's acceptable risk
range. The risks, concluded the study, "are still extremely high."
Mix-and-match carcinogens
The study found that deadly
chrysotile asbestos at Clear Creek are mixed with other lethal forms of
tremolite asbestos. Since the study only looked at the risk of death from
asbestos-caused cancers like mesothelioma, EPA acknowledged that non-cancer
effects, which were not considered by the study, "could actually be more
significant to total disease outcome from Clear Creek Management Area
asbestos exposure."
Refusing to pull any punches
whatsoever, EPA concluded that total asbestos disease may have been
significantly underestimated in the report.
The presence of this asbestos
witches' brew and the kinds of people who were exposed to it raised
particular concerns by EPA. In the anti-regulatory, pro-business environment
of the early 21st Century, EPA's conclusions that Clear Creek asbestos posed
particular dangers to children, and that recreation in the area threatened
more extensive poisoning due to take-home exposures, were courageous in the
face of the asbestos industry's coordinated attacks on asbestos regulation.
EPA noted that in its breathing samples, children inhaled concentrations
that exceeded those of adults. "The higher the exposure, the higher the
risk," was one of the unmistakable, bulleted items in the summary of the
report.
EPA refused to shy away from the
corollary of its findings, either, concluding that reducing exposure will
reduce the risk.
Sins of the fathers
The contamination of the
recreation area occurs in tandem with the vast pollution caused by the
closed Atlas asbestos mine. This Superfund site, in essence a gaping wound
into mother earth that spews out toxic fiber, has cost the state and the
federal government millions-far more than the pittance of tax dollars that
Atlas ever paid.
Clear Creek is part of the New
Idria formation, a serpentine rock body whose 31,000-acre outcrop is the
largest asbestos deposit in the United States. Decades of asbestos
mining and other extractive industries gradually stripped the already
fragile and nutrient-poor soils from the lethal rock. The uptick in off-road
activities and explosive population growth in the Bay Area has created a
lethal dust bowl so fierce that even before EPA released its findings the
Bureau of Land Management would routinely shut the entire area between the
months of June and October.
The irony that serpentine,
otherwise known as poisonous asbestos ore, is the state rock of
California, is not lost on those who know the legislative
history behind the act---it was suggested, pushed, and seen to execution by
the California asbestos industry.
Drastic measures for drastic times
Closing off a paradise for
hikers, birders, botanists, and off-road enthusiasts is a drastic measure
but it points up the highly toxic nature of chrysotile. The situation at
Clear Creek closely mirrors, unsurprisingly, the problems caused by
industrial distribution of asbestos-containing products: chrysotile asbestos
often occurs with tremolite. The "dead zone" declaration recognizes the
scientific fact that there is no safe level of exposure, and even remote
exposures to asbestos can cause mesothelioma.
The begs the question of what in
the world the US Senate had in mind when it passed the Ban Asbestos Act,
allowing manufacturers to contaminate their products with up to 1% asbestos.
While the EPA, ever under assault from industry and from sham scientists, is
courageously declaring Clear Creek a dead zone, the senate seems hell-bent
on unleashing the devil's fiber into our homes and workplaces.
This strong stand by EPA
deserves our appreciation and respect. Industry shills will certainly attack
it, fearing that further federal imprimatur of danger on chrysotile will
make it even harder for them to begin legally tainting their goods. Let's
hope they're right
** POSTED MAY
21, 2008 **
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