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at a Public Hearing before
Assembly Speaker Sheldon Silver, Assembly Standing
Committee on Environmental Conservation, Assembly Standing Committee
on Health,
and Assembly Standing Committee on Labor
April 12, 2002
Air Quality Issues in Lower Manhattan
in the Aftermath
of September 11
Thank you, Speaker Silver. I would like to thank you and the
chairs of the three committees for co-hosting this important public
hearing today. As the Congressman representing Ground Zero and
the surrounding area, I am deeply concerned about the environmental
and health effects posed by the collapse of the World Trade Center
for my constituents and for those who attend school and work in
the area. It has now been seven months since the terrorist attacks,
and the people in Lower Manhattan still are in the dark about
the safety of living and working here.
I would like first to review five of the critical points that
have been established over the past seven months:
· Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) Administrator
Christine Todd Whitman misled the public when she announced to
New Yorkers, shortly after the September 11th terrorist attacks,
that their ". . .air is safe to breathe" and that they
". . . need not be concerned about environmental issues as
they return to their homes and workplaces" as the EPA did
not have the proper information to make such assurances.
· The EPA also misled the public about air quality by
mischaracterizing its own data and ignoring or withholding other
critical data that contradicted Ms. Whitman's assurances.
· The EPA allowed the City of New York to handle indoor
air quality. The City, in turn, delegated indoor air matters
(testing and remediation) to individual building owners for indoor
public spaces, and to tenants for indoor private spaces. The
City provided little enforcement with respect to indoor public
spaces and no enforcement with respect to indoor private
spaces, and gave improper advice regarding hazardous materials
testing and remediation.
· As a result of the EPA's misleading statements about
air quality and because it allowed the City of New York to handle
matters related to indoor environments, there has been inadequate
hazardous materials testing and remediation inside residential
and commercial buildings downtown putting the public health
at risk.
· The EPA's inaction in New York City downtown residences
and commercial buildings stands in stark contrast to its response
in its own building at 290 Broadway, as well as at other non-Superfund
hazardous materials contamination sites around the country.
This sixth, and most egregious point is the following:
· By allowing indoor air quality in residential and
commercial buildings to be handled by the City of New York, and
by not properly exercising its oversight authority pursuant to
the National Contingency Plan (NCP), the EPA violated federal
law.
The EPA has the clear authority to respond to the release of
hazardous substances that may present an imminent and substantial
danger to public health. The National Contingency Plan, which
is administered by the EPA and authorized by the Comprehensive
Environmental Response, Compensation, and Liability Act, is the
federal plan for responding to such a release. The NCP lays out
specific procedures and guidelines, including the designation
of an On-Scene Coordinator who is responsible for directing response
efforts and coordinating all other efforts at the scene of a discharge
or release. The federal regulations make clear that the EPA has
the authority to respond to the release of hazardous substances
pursuant to the NCP, and that this authority is carried out by
EPA On-Scene Coordinators.
The counter terrorism policies of the United States dictate
that the NCP applies specifically to acts of terrorism. EPA's
responsibilities in this regard are supported by Presidential
Decision Directive 62, which reiterates that the EPA is the lead
agency for responding to the release of hazardous materials in
a terrorist attack, and that the EPA has the specific responsibility
to remediate inside buildings. On November 28, 2001, Administrator
Christine Todd Whitman outlined the EPA's role in counter terrorism
activities before the Senate Appropriations Subcommittee on VA,
HUD, and Independent Agencies. Administrator Whitman testified
"Under the provisions of PDD 62, signed by President Clinton
in 1998, the EPA is assigned lead responsibility for cleaning
up buildings and other sites contaminated by chemical or biological
agents as a result of an act of terrorism. This responsibility
draws on our decades of experience in cleaning up sites contaminated
by toxins through prior practices or accidents." Administrator
Whitman went on to say that "This role is a natural fit for
EPA's on-scene coordinators, managers who are experienced in assessing
contamination in structures," and who "have considerable
experience at sorting out hazards, quantifying risks, planning
and implementing emergency cleanups, and coordinating among other
agencies, state and local government, and the private sector."
This testimony was given to Congress over two months after
the September 11th terrorist attacks, at the same time that the
EPA told elected officials and citizens that New York City had
responsibility for indoor environments in Lower Manhattan. In
fact, Administrator Whitman wrote in a letter to me two months
ago, "I believe that Congress and the Administration need
to revisit the issue of authority and responsibility for indoor
environmental conditions in the wake of a terrorist attack. While
the current practice is to vest responsibility in local and state
government for indoor environmental conditions, perhaps this approach
is not appropriate in the wake of an event like September 11th."
This statement does not seem to comport with EPA's responsibilities
under the National Contingency Plan, an OMB Annual Report to Congress,
released just weeks before the terrorist attacks, or PDD 62, as
outlined by Administrator Whitman in testimony before Congress.
Furthermore, in Libby, Montana (a town only recently designated
a Superfund site), Administrator Whitman told residents at a September
7, 2001 town hall meeting that, "It has never [emphasis added]
been our plan to look to you to pay for any part of this clean-up,
including the clean-up of residential properties." Dr. Cate
Jenkins, an EPA scientist with 22 years experience, has asserted
that the levels of asbestos in lower Manhattan are comparable
or in excess of those found in Libby, Montana. Why, then, are
the residents of lower Manhattan, who were victims of the worst
terrorist attack in American history, not receiving similar assurances
from the EPA? How can the EPA continue to deny that it has jurisdiction
for indoor environments when only four days before 9/11, Administrator
Whitman asserted that very jurisdiction?
The citizens of Lower Manhattan -- residents, workers and building
owners -- have been victims of a terrorist attack on this nation,
and should not bear the burden of making their homes, offices,
and businesses safe again. The EPA must act in accordance with
the NCP, and take action immediately to systematically and properly
test and remediate all downtown buildings affected by the World
Trade Center tragedy, using properly trained personnel and the
best-available equipment and methods tied to genuine, established
health-based standards. Seven months after the attacks, it is
now clear that the EPA is the only governmental entity with the
authority, resources, expertise and mandate to do this job. This
is the only course of action if the EPA is to restore the public
trust and protect the public health.
I am hopeful that today's hearing will elicit the truth of
this entire matter. We need to ask of the EPA today, "Will
the agency begin a proper remediation under the National Contingency
Plan and Presidential Decision Directive 62? When will this begin?
If not, under what authority is the EPA relieved of its responsibilities?"
The State, too, must be clear and demand that the EPA immediately
begin operating in New York City under the NCP and PDD 62. Anything
less is unacceptable.
I am submitting for the record a
newly updated version of my White Paper on Lower Manhattan Air
Quality. I look forward to continuing to work with interested
parties to ensure that all our air quality concerns are properly
addressed.
The “This page was last updated on” line just below reflects the date on which this page was transferred to this redesigned website. The information in this page (as opposed to the design) was last updated on April 15, 2002.
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