In 2006, the city of Syracuse was named as the seventeenth greenest – or most environmentally friendly – city by National Geographic. National Geographic produces an annual list which assesses cities across the country on environmental proficiency. The magazine chose cities that “are providing energy-efficient, least polluting and healthy living spaces - those cities whose green achievements set the standard for others” (The Green Guide). National Geographic rates each city on eleven environmental criteria ranging from air quality to energy proficiency. Syracuse made the list because of “Good air, smoking bans and commitment to reduce greenhouse gases.” The ultimate irony of this accolade is that about five miles away is Onondaga Lake, the most polluted lake in the country.
Onondaga Lake was settled by the Iroquois Confederacy in the early 1800’s, however when the Industrial Revolution hit Syracuse, the lake’s western shore became a center for industrialization and factories (Onondaga Lake Partnership). Sewage disposal and industrial discharges augmented pollution and left the waters of Onondaga Lake hopelessly contaminated. Soon enough, the lake was so impure that people stopped using the lake for swimming and fishing and the lake was converted into a dumping ground of industrial waste.
In 1994, Onondaga Lake was added to the Superfund list, a program by the Environmental Protection Agency which was created to clean up extremely polluted areas. Superfund sites are all over and according to the Christian Science Monitor, not much has been done to clean them.
An article by the Christian Science Monitor divulges into the topic of Superfund effectiveness which I believe merits certain attention in order to interpret the logistics of the program as well as the efficiency of Superfund.
Superfund, an extremely effective program in theory, cannot possibly work to clean up polluted areas if more time is spent arguing about who should clean up rather than the actual clean-up. According to the article, “much (in some cases, most) of the cost of Superfund goes for lawyers, consultants, private investigators, and administrative overhead rather than for actual cleanup.” ( Knickerbocker) Because cost is a major factor in the clean-up of those sites, money has overshadowed the original intent of the program. Superfund is meant to clean up waste to make the area healthier and safer for the people and animals around it however because this does not come without a cost, businesses responsible for the pollution are not interested in clean-up because the money would be coming out of their pockets.
Instead, locals of the area are suffering from the burden of living near a contaminated site because of environmentally–caused diseases like asthma and they are forced to deal with the discharge of the Lake’s effluent. “During large storms or periods when snow melts rapidly, CSOs (excretions into rivers) occur, leading to the discharge of excess raw sewage into many of the lake’s tributaries. CSOs diminished water quality by increasing bacteria levels and introducing not only trash and grit but also organic material that depletes dissolved oxygen concentration” (Landers 70).
The people living near Superfund sites are left to deal with the consequences of years of pollution which they did not commit. Companies that are responsible for the pollution should pay for their actions because what they have done, specifically with dumping into water supplies possibly endangered the lives of the people living around them. Instead local taxpayers bear more of the burden, as a Superfund sites receive less compensation from industries.
Part of the Superfund program is the idea of “polluter pays” basically saying that if you made the mess, you should clean it up. If this held true, then dirty sites all over the country, including Onondaga Lake would be cleaned up however if the Superfund program does not enforce this, it turns the entire program and everything it stands for into farce. Empty threats to companies and empty promises to the people do not provoke change. If Superfund wants these sites cleaned, there needs to be some reinforcement of the ‘polluter pays’ policy.
In 2004, Aerospace giant Honeywell Inc. agreed to spend $451 million to clean up contaminated sediments in Onondaga Lake. Honeywell became the party responsible for the contamination after buying Allied-Signal in 1999. Onondaga County is also currently spending $500 million on a 15-year project to curb discharges of untreated sewage into the lake. The state has spent some $125 million since 1995 to improve water quality at the lake - the federal government has spent more than $100 million on the effort (CorpWatch).
State regulators required Honeywell Inc. to pay for the cleanup after the company tried to implement a more limited cleanup that would cost the company only $237 million, about half of the initial cost. Companies like Honeywell are trying to cut corners on cleanup by choosing a less expensive and as a result, less thorough cleaning of the polluted site (Urbina).
Efforts are being done to clean up Onondaga Lake however only after corporate companies or tax payers are roped into paying for it. If Superfund wants to continue being effective, the EPA needs to come up with a strict list of criteria about who is responsible for the cleanup. Onondaga Lake is one place where there has been some progress but there are other sites are that need assistance but are not receiving any. Onondaga Lake is notoriously known for being overly polluted with industrial waste while other areas might not have the same ostentatious circumstances. This makes me speculate about whether a contaminated body needs to hold the title of ‘the most polluted lake in America for there to be a response.
Works Cited
Knickerbocker, Brad. “Superfund Program: A Smaller Cleanup Rag.” Christian Science Monitor (14 November 2003) 4 October 2007.
Landers, Jay. “New Life for Onondaga Lake.” Civil Engineering. May 2006: 64-86. H.W. Wilson. Syracuse University Library, Syracuse, New York. 4 October 2007. <http://vnweb.hwwilsonweb.com />
Onondaga Lake Partnership. 2007. Onondaga Lake Partnership. 4 October 2007.
The Green Guide. 7 April 2006. National Geographic. 4 October 2007. <http://www.thegreenguide.com/doc/113/top10cities>
Urbina, Ian. “Lake cleanup to be ordered in Syracuse.” New York Times (29 November 2004) 10 October 2007.
“US: Honeywell Agrees to $451 Million Lake Cleanup” CorpWatch. (13 October 2006) 4 October 2007. http://www.corpwatch.org/article.php?id=14162
No comments:
Post a Comment