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People in air pollution hot spots worry about kids development
Associated Press
Dick Wittberg knows that each year factories rain
hundreds of thousands of pounds of maganese dust over his home town
of Marietta. He also knows that manganese is a heavy metal that can
harm the brain and nervous system.
What worries Wittberg, a biologist who heads the
mid-Ohio Valley Health Department, is what he doesn't know and can't
find out: How all that toxic pollution is affecting the lives and
health of children in his community.
Wittberg has been pressing for a full-blown government
study of the manganese pollution's health impact since he took part
in a pilot study in the late 1990s that compared Marietta children
to those in a similar-sized Ohio town on academic and physical
tests. The Marietta kids fared significantly worse.
"We didn't do anything that in any respect proves that
this is manganese that has done this, because there are other
scenarios that are entirely possible," he said. "But in my opinion,
it really points to some environmental problem that is causing some
neurological differences, and one has to suspect manganese. Nobody
knows for kids how much is too much."
Similar concerns span the country, though communities
with the worst factories sometimes are frustrated they don't have
more research to rely on.
In the Detroit suburb of Ecorse, which has sued U.S.
Steel after enduring decades of air pollution, Mayor Larry Salisbury
wants the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention to investigate
how industrial toxins affect health.
"We think there have been citizens who had an early
death because of the health issues related to that steel plant, "
Salisbury said. "It would be great if the CDC would study certain
towns to make the case."
"Sometimes I think the government doesn't want to know the
answers," he said. "Once they do, they have a certain liability to
enforce."
U.S. Steel spokesman John Armstrong said his company
took over the Ecorse plant in 2003 from bankrupt National Steel and
has spent millions cleaning up problems. "We take great pride in our
environmental stewardship and are addressing thee issues as quickly
as possible," he said.
An Associated Press analysis of federal pollution,
health and Census data found that more than 30 neighborhoods around
the Great Steel Works plant in Ecorse rank among the worst 5 percent
nationally for potential health risks from industrial air pollution.
AP used health risk scores calculated by the
Environmental Protection Agency. The measures can be used to compare
the chronic health risk form industrial air pollution from one part
of the country to another.
The study found that eight states -- Ohio,
Pennsylvania, Illinois, Indiana, Texas, Michigan, Wisconsin, and
Missouri -- account for almost half the total risk nationally from
factory air. Nearly one-tenth of the total risk is concentrated in
Ohio, especially along the heavily industrialized Ohio River
corridor.
Farther east, Camden, N.J., has more than 100
contaminated industrial sites and seven minority neighborhoods that
rank among the top 1 percent in the nation for the long-term health
risk from factory pollution.
Dr. Robert Pedowitz said his Camden practice sees about
25 patients a day for asthma or allergy complaints, more than any
other private practice in New Jersey. One of the main triggers, he
said, is air pollution.
"It severely affects the quality of life," Pedowitz
said. " It makes people tired, affects their ability to function."
In the Ohio River Valley where Wittberg lives, nine
neighborhoods in and around Marietta and Wood County W.Va., rank
among the worst 100 nationally for health risks from factory
emissions. |
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There are more than 20 industrial plants along or near the Ohio
River in those two counties. The plants regularly spew tens of
thousands of pounds of manganese, chromium, sulfuric acid, and
formaldehyde.
"It's a toxic soup of contaminants because of all the
different facilities in the area," said Michelle Colledge, an
environmental health scientist with the federal Agency for Toxic
Substances and Disease Registry.
The river corridor also is a major contributor to
factory air pollution in West Virginia, which has the highest health
risk per person of any state. Indiana ranks second in per capita
health risk, followed by Ohio, Pennsylvania, Iowa and Alabama.
Residents around Marietta, with the help of Sen. Mike
Dewine, R-Ohio, petitioned the government several years ago to study
the health impact of the region's air.
Tina Trombley, president of Recover, a local
environmental group, said the community wanted to find out for sure
if the high incidence of asthma and several types of cancer are the
result of the air pollution.
The study found arsenic and manganese in the air
consistently exceeded levels that scientists believe harm health,
but provided no definitive link to disease. Further monitoring at
specific sites was ordered.
"We need to do a full-fledged study and we're hoping
that's what they will be able to do for us," Trombley said.
The initial federal study focused on an industrial complex south of
Marietta that includes four major facilities. The largest, the
Eramet Marietta metal refinery, released more than 550,000 pounds of
manganese compounds in 2000, and more than 25,000 pounds of chromium
compounds. Another facility, Eveready Battery, releases more than
16,000 pounds of manganese compounds a year.
Jeff McKinney, environmental manager at Eramet, said
neither the study nor any other data suggest "emissions from area
industry have adversely impacted the health of residents. Moreover,
we have not seen manganese exposure-related neurological effects in
our long-term employees."
For Colledge and Wittberg, the area offers a unique
opportunity to determine conclusively how long-term exposure to
manganese dust affects humans, particularly children.
The pilot study Wittberg participated in severla years
ago included an EPA researcher and a University of Quebec scientist.
They measured differences between children in Marietta and those in
Athens, a similar-sized Ohio town 45 miles away.
They gave a battery of 13 tests to fourth-graders in
both cities, who had been matched for age, sex, and parental
education. The tests measured such things as educational
proficiency, balance and short-term memory.
"The Marietta kids did worse on almost
everything," Wittberg said.
The implications are potentially far-reaching if
the Marietta children's IQ scores turn out to be 10-15 points lower
because of the manganese exposure, he said.
"Brilliant kids are now simply smart; smart kids
are average and average kids are not average anymore," Wittberg
said. "I believe it is the whole lives of the kids that are
affected. I don't think that the damage can be undone."
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