From: Grist, May 1, 2007

*TAKING THE 'FUND' OUT OF SUPERFUND*

By Kate Sheppard

A drop-off <http://www.publicintegrity.org/Superfund/report.aspx?aid=851>
in both government action and funding has all but stopped
the push to clean up America's most toxic sites, posing health and
environmental threats all over the country, according to a
comprehensive series of reports
<http://www.publicintegrity.org/Superfund/> released last week by the
Center for
Public Integrity.

Under the Bush administration, the amount of money budgeted to clean
up these sites has plummeted and cleanup has stagnated
<http://www.publicintegrity.org/Superfund/report.aspx?aid=853>, while
the
list of sites that need environmental remediation continues to grow.

The detailed report chronicles the government's failure to clean up
our country's most toxic sites, and includes a leaked list
<http://www.publicintegrity.org/Superfund/report.aspx?aid=849> of the
most contaminated sites, an index
<http://www.publicintegrity.org/superfund/ListCompany.aspx> of the
companies linked to the
most dangerous sites, and mapping tools
<http://www.publicintegrity.org/Superfund/AllStates.aspx> that
indicate the 1,623
Superfund sites around the country. It also highlights some of the
slick tactics <http://www.publicintegrity.org/Superfund/report.aspx?aid=854>,
hobnobbing <http://www.publicintegrity.org/Superfund/report.aspx?aid=852>,
and back-scratching
<http://www.publicintegrity.org/Superfund/report.aspx?aid=850> that
helped bring
Superfund to this point.

It's been 27 years since the federal government launched Superfund, a
multi-billion dollar project to clean up more than 1,000 toxic sites
around the country in the wake of the Love Canal saga. In the
beginning, the program was funded by a tax on polluters that fed into
a pool of money used to pay for the cleanup of other sites where the
sources of the pollution were unknown or the polluter couldn't take
care of the problem.

That tax law expired in 1995 under a Republican-controlled Congress,
and by 2003 the $3.8 billion that had accumulated in the fund was
pretty much exhausted. Since then, taxpayer money and cash recovered
from polluters has powered the program. But the total amount in the
Superfund budget has not kept up with inflation. According to the
report, the program received $1.43 billion in appropriations in 1995,
but 12 years later, it received $1.25 billion. Adjusted for inflation,
funding has declined by 35 percent.

The EPA inspector general, the Government Accountability Office, and
Congress have all issued reports on the Superfund collapse, but EPA
officials in the Bush administration have done little to support the
program. The top-ranking Superfund official, Susan Bodine, has a
record of defunding the program she was appointed to head. In 1999,
she helped author a bill that would have decreased the Superfund
budget by $300 million (it failed), and just a month after her
confirmation Bodine supported a $7 million decrease to the cleanup
budget. She later stood beside the Bush administration's budget
request for 2008, which reduces the budget by another $7 million.

Collection from companies deemed responsible at specific sites has
also dropped off significantly. The amount coming in peaked in 1998
and 1999 at about $320 million each year. In 2004 that amount dropped
below $100 million, and in 2005 and 2006 the EPA collected just $60
million each year.

The EPA ranks sites, but usually does not disclose the ranking,
claiming it doesn't want polluters to know which sites are a priority
and which aren't. But according to the report, some EPA insiders say
the secrecy is intended to avoid provoking the public into demanding a
solution from Congress.

"Basically, the leash has been let off of these corporations and at
the end of the day, they are paying less money to clean up the sites,
and taking less action themselves to clean up the sites. And the
public bears the brunt of that," said Alex Knott, political editor at
CPI and project manger on the Superfund report.

The squeeze on funding has forced the remaining sites to compete for
money left over from previous cleanups. The less worrisome -- albeit
still toxic -- sites have fallen off the priorities list, leaving
millions of Americans at risk of exposure through air, soil, and
groundwater.

"It is like having four sick kids at a table, and you only have one
aspirin," Lois Gibbs, the housewife-turned-activist in Love Canal
known as the "Mother of Superfund," told CPI. "You can't decide which
one to give it to even though they all need assistance, and, like a
Superfund site, those illnesses are going to get worse and those
medical costs are going to get higher the longer it takes you to
address the problem."

The last few years have also seen a slowdown in the number of sites
added to the list -- down to 17 per year from 25 between 1995 and 2000
-- and longer cleanup times.

"I want the American public to understand what's really at stake,"
says Knott. "It's not just about some '60s dream of everybody becoming
sensible about the environment. It's about health. You know, we're
living at a time where over the last couple of decades, Americans have
become more and more conscious about the things that affect their
health. But they're not aware that one in five of them is living near
a Superfund site where the contaminants that can affect their water
and the air they breathe is not under control."



-- 
To give pleasure to a single heart by a single act is better than a thousand
heads bowing in prayer.
-- Mahatma Gandhi (1869-1948)

America believes in education: the average professor earns more money in a
year than a professional athlete earns in a whole week.
  - Evan Esar
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