Concerned Citizens in Cancer Alley Vow to Ramp up Battle Against Industrial Pollution in 2018

Julie-Dermansky-022
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This past year in Louisianaโ€™s St. John the Baptist Parish, a small groupย of residents began organizing their communityย toย compelย the state to protect themย against an invisible menace: the air they breathe. Their parish, the Louisiana equivalent of a county, is situated in whatโ€™s known asย Cancer Alley, an industrial corridor between Baton Rouge and New Orleans that hosts more than 100 petrochemicalย factories.

At the helm of the battle is the Concerned Citizens of St. John, a diverse group of parish residents pushing back against the areaโ€™s historically bad โ€” and worsening โ€” industrial pollution. โ€œOne thing we all have inย common is a desire for clean air,โ€ the groupโ€™s founder, Robert Taylor, told me. Next year, the burgeoning group plans to get political and broaden its reach by banding together with similar groups in theย region.

Taylor, a 76-year-old retired general contractor, recently spoke to me about the group from California, where he spent Christmas with his wife, who is recuperating from a stroke. Their extended family insisted Taylor keep his wife away from the Louisiana parishโ€™s pollutedย air.

Robert Taylor speaking at a Concerned Citizens of St. John meeting
Robert Taylor at a Concerned Citizens of St. John meeting at the Tchoupitoulas Chapel in Reserve, Louisiana, onย Juneย 27.

Lydia Gerard holding a new sign for the Concerned Citizens of St. John
Lydiaย Gerard, a member of the Concerned Citizens of St. John, holding up a new sign at their public meeting on Augustย 15.

Coming Together for Cleanerย Air

Taylor formed the Concerned Citizens of St. John after he and others learned that the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) determined residents in their area were at higher risk ofย cancer than anywhere else in the country. The EPA‘sย latest National Air Toxics Assessment, which evaluates air contaminants and estimates health risks, revealed that residents in sixย parish census tracts closest to the Denka Performance Elastomer factory in LaPlace have a lifetime risk of cancer from air pollution 800 times higher than theย nationalย average.

Denka Performance Elastomer plant in LaPlace, Louisiana
Denka Performance Elastomer factory in LaPlace,ย Louisiana.

Denkaโ€™s LaPlace factory, formerly owned by DuPont, emits chloroprene and 28 other chemicals used to make the synthetic rubber commonly known as Neoprene. In 2010 the EPAย reclassified chloroprene as a likely human carcinogen, but this fact only came to the communityโ€™s attention at the end of 2016.ย 

The Concerned Citizens of St. Johnย group holds bi-weekly public meetingsย at the Tchoupitoulas Chapel in the town of Reserve. At meetings throughout 2017, Wilma Subra, a technical advisorย toย the environmental advocacyย group Louisiana Environmental Action Network (LEAN), reviewed the results of EPA air monitoring from six sites in the parish, which she will continue thisย year.ย 

Wilma Subra speaks at a Concerned Citizens of St. John meeting
Wilma Subra,ย LEANโ€™s technical advisor, at a meeting of the Concerned Citizens of St. John the Baptist Parish in Reserve,ย Louisiana, on June 27,ย 2017.

After the EPAโ€™s concerns became public, Denka agreed to cut harmful emissions by up to 85 percent. Yet a year after air monitoring began, pollution levels were actually worse at five of the six sites. And that was despite the plant making costly improvements due to an agreement with regulators, according to CNN. On December 19, at theย groupโ€™s last meeting of 2017, Subra went over the latest EPA data: Chloroprene emissions are, at times, still well above EPA-recommended standards.

As I documentedย Concerned Citizensย throughout 2017 for DeSmog, I watched it grow into an advocacy force to be reckoned with โ€” a unity and power they acknowledged at a Christmas celebration following their lastย meeting.

Pastor Lionel Murphy Jr. at the pulpit of his church in Reserve, Louisiana
Pastor Lionel Murphy Jr. at the Tchoupitoulas Chapel in Reserve.ย Pastor Murphy made the church available as a meeting place for the Concerned Citizens of St. John.ย The church has been broken in to three times since the meetingsย began.

Robert Taylor plays the keyboard at a service in Reserve, Louisiana
Robert Taylor, playing organ at a service held at the Tchoupitoulas Chapel in Reserve, where the Concerned Citizens of St. John holds most of itsย meetings.

โ€œThe group had some growing pains over theย courseย of the year, but we are now stronger than ever,โ€ Taylor told me. โ€œOur group canโ€™t be influenced by anyone, which makes usย dangerous.โ€ย 

Shondrell Perrilloux holds a sign that reads 'We want our voices heard not just at election time'
Shondrell Perrilloux holding a sign up as she takes the podium at a parish councilย meeting.

All Politics Isย Local

In 2018 Concerned Citizens plans to find and back candidates to run for local offices in order to replace the politicians who brushed off their concerns in 2017. โ€œBlock by block, precinct byย precinct, we are planning to choose candidates who will represent our interests over the industryโ€™s,โ€ Taylorย said.ย 

Geraldine Watkins (center) is considering running for public office to get action on air pollution
Geraldine Watkins (center), shown here at the November 29, 2017 parish council meeting, lives in LaPlace, less than a half mile fromย Denkaโ€™sย plant.ย 

Aerial view of the Denka plant
Denka Performance Elastomer factory in LaPlace is close to the 5th Ward Elementary School and residentsโ€™ homes in Reserve and LaPlace, Louisiana. Flight made possible byย SouthWings.

Geraldine Watkins, a 76-year-old great grandmother and member of Concerned Citizens, is considering running for office herself. Protecting the children who are forced to breatheย the parishโ€™s toxic air has become her lifeโ€™s mission.ย 

She has no intention of giving up the fight for clean air until Denka adheres to the EPAโ€™s recommended emission standard of 0.2 micrograms per cubic meter, a figure printed on the red t-shirts the groupย wears.ย 

Wearing matching red t-shirts, the members of Concerned Citizens of St. John line up at a parish council meeting
Members of Concerned Citizens of St. John at a parish council meeting in LaPlace,ย Louisiana, on March 28 wearing red t-shirts printed with โ€œOnly 0.2 will do,โ€ emphasizing their point that chloroprene emissions should not exceed theย EPAโ€™sย recommendation.ย 

The EPA emissions limits are determined with the goal of keeping the cancer risk from air pollution to less than one in every million people. When that goal is not achievable, the agency setsย standards based on the โ€œupper limit of acceptability,โ€ which is a risk of 100 in a million people. That figure is the basis for the EPAโ€™s 0.2 micrograms per cubic meter standard in St. John the Baptistย Parish.

Louisiana Department of Environmental Quality Secretary Dr. Chuck Brown
Louisiana Department of Environmental Quality (LDEQ) Secretary Dr. Chuck Brown before addressing the parish council on Novemberย 14.

Parish council meeting packed with members of the Concerned Citizens of St. John
Members of the Concerned Citizens of St. John pack the Novemberย 14 parish council meeting the night LDEQ Secretary Dr. Chuck Brown updated the council, but the group members were not given a chance to ask himย questions.

Louisiana state health officer Dr. Jimmy Guidry
Louisianaโ€™s state health officer Dr. Jimmy Guidry at the November 14, 2017 parish council meeting, saying there is no health emergency in the parish. At a December 2016 council meeting, however, he acknowledged that โ€œno one should have toย breatheย chloroprene.โ€

Denka and Dr. Chuck Brown, the stateโ€™s top environmental regulator, have challenged the EPAโ€™s findings. Watkins and the other members of Concerned Citizens say they have no reason to believeย the EPA got it wrong.ย 

Though the EPA declined to comment when I asked if there were any problems with its findings on chloroprene, citing it as an open case, CNN reported that an EPA spokesperson said the science behind the agencyโ€™s findings wasย solid.

โ€œWe appreciate that the EPA warned us about the chloroprene,โ€ Watkins told me, but it is clear to her that she and other parish residents โ€œare mere guinea pigs in the scheme of things. The lack of action by theย government since the EPAโ€™s findings were released makes it complicit in allowing Denka and DuPont to poisonย us.โ€

In the new year, in addition to entering local politics, the Concerned Citizens of St. John also plan to form an alliance with other citizens groups in Cancer Alley which are also standing up to pollution.ย 

โ€œIโ€™m not just fighting for myself. Iโ€™m fighting for everyone in the parish, especially the children,โ€ Watkinsย said.

The Handy family sits in their home across from Denka's plant
The Handys, residents of LaPlace who live across from Denka’s plant. George Handy, a member of the Concerned Citizens of St. John, purchased the house before learning about the local chloropreneย emissions.

St. John the Baptist Parish councilmember Larry Sorapuru
Councilmemberย Larry Sorapuru, the only councilmemberย in St. John the Baptist Parish who the concerned citizen group feels is standing up for them, speaking at a town hall meeting on pollution in LaPlace on Novemberย 26.

Mary Hampton of the Concerned Citizens of St. John
Mary Hampton, a member of the Concernedย Citizens of St. John, listening to the results of the latest air monitoring test at a group meeting on Decemberย 18.

Main image: Robert Taylor next to one of the EPA air monitoring sites in LaPlace,ย Louisiana.

Julie-Dermansky-022
Julie Dermansky is a multimedia reporter and artist based in New Orleans. She is an affiliate scholar at Rutgers Universityโ€™s Center for the Study of Genocide and Human Rights. Visit her website at www.jsdart.com.

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