For Polluter, EPA Times Libby Emergency Declaration Perfectly

W.R. Grace promotional products for asbestos-containing Zonolite Attic Insulation. Photo courtesy Anthony Rich.

W.R. Grace promotional products for asbestos-containing Zonolite Attic Insulation. Photo courtesy Anthony Rich.

by Paul Peters

Eight years ago, the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) tried to do what it finally did on June 17, 2009. That is, declare a public health emergency in the town of Libby, Montana.
In Libby, about 290 people have died and another 2,000 have been sickened due to asbestos exposure from a former W.R. Grace & Co. vermiculite mine just outside of town.
The declaration contains several flaws which you can read about here.
It does not, contrary to most reporting, provide any additional money to Libby. In answers to a host of questions from Asbestos Watch, the EPA stated that money for the cleanup is actually coming out of funds it had already received from W.R. Grace one year ago (EPA answered these questions on the condition that Asbestos Watch would not attribute them to any one official). There is no “new” money going to Libby as a result of this public health emergency declaration.
And it’s more than a little interesting that the declaration comes now, after W.R. Grace, the company responsible for releasing the contaminants that poisoned Libby, has safely cleared the deck of all lawsuits pertaining to its operations in Libby, and has reached a settlement with the federal government that protects the company from future health care and cleanup costs in Libby.
(story continues)

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  1. [...] and the OMB had stopped the emergency declaration and kept the Zonolite name out of the press. Click here to read more about the first attempt at an emergency declaration. Although the EPA finally declared [...]