Pookster
Graduate Poster
- Joined
- May 10, 2007
- Messages
- 1,786
Here you go Justin...j
From the Union of Concerned Scientists
Other news reports suggest that the EPA was not fully forthcoming about the air quality at ground zero. EPA scientist Cate Jenkins argues that the agency plainly lied in its public declarations. Jenkins told CBS News in September 2006 that the EPA knew "this dust was highly caustic, in some cases as caustic and alkaline as Drano."9 In September 2006, CNN reported that an October 5, 2001 letter from the EPA to the New York City Health Department warned of threats to worker safety from exposure to hazardous materials.10 Yet this knowledge failed to affect the EPA's unworried public statements.
The EPA's September 18, 2001 news release stated that "EPA's primary concern is to ensure that rescue workers and the public are not being exposed to elevated levels of potentially hazardous contaminants in the dust and debris."11 Yet despite this, a 2006 study by Mount Sinai Hospital in New York found that "seven out of ten World Trade Center rescue and wreckage workers had new or worsened lung problems after the attacks."12 The New York City Department of Health has a database of 71,000 people exposed to dust and debris at Ground Zero—a database created in response to hundreds of people's complaints of breathing and lung problems. The health of these individuals may have been saved if not for the government's willingness to place politics above sound science in the aftermath of the 2001 World Trade Center attacks.
From the EPA:
"EPA is greatly relieved to have learned that there appears to be no significant levels of asbestos dust in the air in New York City," said Administrator Whitman. "We are working closely with rescue crews to ensure that all appropriate precautions are taken. We will continue to monitor closely."
Mark, perhaps you should try debunking the The Union of Concerned Scientists instead of Justin.
Pardon me, but could you quote the exact part of your post where the EPA officials specifically tells the Ground Zero workers that the air was safe to breathe there? The only thing I've found in all that has been posted regarding this in this thread is the EPA advised using protective gear because of the danger. I hardly think that is the EPA telling anyone the air at Ground Zero for the workers was safe to breath.
Thanks.